What Lucrezia Borgia’s Father and Brother Did to Her Was Worse Than Death
Night fell over the cobblestones of Via del Corso in Rome in the year 1493. Inside the Vatican Palace, a young girl sat before a mirror. She was thirteen years old, Lucrezia Borgia. Her long, honey-colored hair was carefully arranged by attendants, each strand placed with deliberate precision. Around her neck rested a ruby necklace, glowing softly in the candlelight. It was not hers. Her father had chosen it. Her father had ordered it. And her father intended it as a gift, not for her, but for the man she was about to be given to. That night, her engagement was formally announced. The groom, Giovanni Sforza, a member of the powerful Sforza family, was twenty-six. What Lucrezia felt in that moment, no record tells us. What survives are invitations to the wedding and diplomatic reports sent back to foreign courts. One envoy wrote a chilling line: “Tonight, it has been decided who will possess the Pope’s daughter.” Possess. In Rome at the time, everyone understood exactly what that word meant.
Even now, more than five hundred years later, the name Lucrezia Borgia has not faded. She is remembered as a poisoner, a conspirator in incest, a symbol of one of the most corrupt families of the Renaissance. But when we turn to the original documents preserved in Vatican archives, a very different outline begins to emerge. She was not the one mixing poison. She may have been the one being poisoned. This is not a story told to restore her honor; this is a record of what was done to her.
Lucrezia Borgia was born on April 18, 1480, in the Suburra district of Rome. Her father was Rodrigo Borgia, who would later become Pope Alexander VI. Her mother, Vannozza dei Cattanei, was his long-time mistress. She grew up as the youngest of four siblings. Her brothers, Cesare, Juan, and Jofre, each played their role in the ambitions of the Borgia family. And among them, it was often said that Lucrezia was her father’s favorite. But in the Borgia household, being loved did not mean what it usually does. As Rodrigo Borgia built his power in Rome, Lucrezia was assigned a role early in life, one that had nothing to do with childhood. The Borgias were originally from Spain. In Italy, they lacked deep political roots. That was a weakness Rodrigo needed to overcome, and one of the tools he chose was marriage. Lucrezia was not simply his daughter; she was a political asset. Her age did not matter, her desires did not matter. That fact remained unchanged.
By 1487, when she was not yet seven years old, records of marriage negotiations had already begun to appear. Documents discovered in the Spanish National Archives in the 1920s reveal that Rodrigo was simultaneously negotiating her future marriage with multiple noble families. A child was already being moved like a piece on a diplomatic board. In 1491, when Lucrezia was just eleven, her first official engagement was arranged. The groom was the son of Spanish nobleman, Don Gaspar de Procida. But within a year, the engagement was abruptly canceled. Why? Because her father had found a more valuable alliance. In 1493, a second engagement was arranged, this time to Giovanni Sforza, aligning the Borgias with Milan. It was a strategic decision, nothing more. Lucrezia was thirteen. By the following year, she was sent to live with her future husband, even before the wedding ceremony. The marriage was officially celebrated in June 1493. Rome erupted in celebration. The Pope spared no expense. Poets praised the beauty of the young bride. On the surface, it was a triumph. But behind the spectacle, something had already begun to shift.
Three years later, in 1497, everything changed. Rodrigo and Cesare Borgia no longer needed their alliance with the Sforza family. A new political opportunity had emerged: an alliance with the kingdom of Naples. Suddenly, Giovanni Sforza lost his value. There was only one solution: the marriage had to be erased. Giovanni was swiftly removed from the Vatican court. Proceedings began to annul the marriage. But there was a problem. Under canon law, a marriage could not simply be dissolved without cause. So, a reason had to be created. The reason chosen was impotence. Lucrezia was forced to declare that she had remained a virgin throughout the marriage, that the union had never been consummated. Giovanni Sforza, humiliated, did not accept this quietly. Copies of letters he sent to influential figures still survive in the Milan archives. In them, he made a shocking accusation that Rodrigo and Cesare Borgia sought to annul the marriage not because of impotence, but because they wanted to keep Lucrezia for themselves. The implication was explosive and it spread quickly. But the records stop there. What happened next disappears from official documentation for a time.
According to materials uncovered in the Vatican archives in the 1950s, Lucrezia was sent away during this period, removed from Rome and placed in the convent of San Sisto. The records describe her departure as voluntary, but silence fills the gaps around that word. During that same time, something else happened. In June 1497, Lucrezia’s brother Juan was murdered. His body was found in the Tiber River riddled with wounds. The killer was never officially identified, but a contemporary diplomat, Marin Sanudo, wrote in a report that Cesare Borgia was widely suspected of orchestrating the murder. Juan had been his rival, and now he was gone. What kind of man was Cesare Borgia? And how did he see his sister? Fragments of answers survive in diplomatic correspondence. In 1497, the ambassador of Ferrara wrote back to his court, “Lord Cesare shows toward his sister an attachment that exceeds that of a brother.” That single line tells us what observers at the time were witnessing. There is no document that states exactly what occurred, but multiple independent observers recorded at the same time that something was happening—something that could not be openly written.
In 1498, Lucrezia was brought back from the convent. Another marriage had already been arranged. Her next husband would be Alfonso of Aragon, the Duke of Bisceglie, just seventeen years old. For Lucrezia, this man was different. By all accounts, he was kind. And for the first time, there are suggestions, however faint, that she may have chosen to love someone of her own will. For a brief moment, her life may have felt her own. But it would not last. The marriage to Alfonso of Aragon began with something unfamiliar in Lucrezia’s life: gentleness. He was young, only seventeen. And by most accounts, he treated her with a kind of care she had never known. The political arrangement behind their union was still there, of course. It always was. But this time, there are traces, small, fragile traces that suggest something different. Some records hint that Lucrezia may have, for the first time, developed real affection. Not duty, not obedience—something closer to choice. For a brief period, she lived not as a bargaining piece, but as a wife.
But in Rome, stability never lasted long, especially for those tied to power. By the year 1500, the political landscape shifted once again. The Borgia alliances were changing, and with those changes came new calculations. Alfonso of Aragon, once useful, had become a liability. One night in Rome, he was attacked. Assassins struck without warning, leaving him gravely wounded. He survived, but only barely. His injuries were severe, and for weeks he hovered between life and death. Lucrezia did not leave his side. She remained with him constantly, nursing him, protecting him, watching over him through every uncertain hour. For weeks, she refused to step away, as if her presence alone might hold him in this world. And slowly, he began to recover.
It should have ended there, but it did not. When Alfonso finally showed signs of improvement, when it seemed he might survive, men entered the room. They were not strangers; they were Cesare’s men. And in front of Lucrezia, they finished what had been started. They strangled Alfonso to death. The official explanation would later describe it as an unfortunate complication, a tragic turn in his recovery. But the truth was recorded quietly. Johann Burchard, the Papal Master of Ceremonies, kept a private diary. In it, he wrote, “The Duke, who was recovering, died during the night. It is not permitted for me to write more. Not permitted.” Five centuries later, that silence speaks louder than any confession. Lucrezia’s reaction is one of the few things that was recorded. For three days, she did not leave her room. She refused food. She shut herself away from the world.
And then, just as before, the next arrangement arrived. A third marriage. This time, the proposal came from Ferrara. The groom was Alfonso d’Este, heir to one of the most respected noble houses in Italy. Lucrezia was twenty-two. And once again, she was being sent away. The Este family did not welcome the match. The Borgia reputation had spread across Italy. Rumors of corruption, violence, and scandal followed their name. The idea of bringing a Borgia into their house was met with open resistance. The Este court hesitated. They objected. They tried to refuse. But Rodrigo Borgia was still Pope, and Cesare Borgia still held power. Pressure was applied—political, financial, and personal. Negotiations were pushed forward with relentless force. Wealth was offered; alliances were promised. And eventually, resistance collapsed. In 1502, Lucrezia was sent to Ferrara.
But something changed there. The court of Ferrara was not like Rome. It operated under a different kind of order—one less chaotic, less suffocating. For the first time in her life, Lucrezia was given space. Not complete freedom, but something close enough to it. And within that space, she began to build something of her own. Alfonso d’Este was not an easy man. He was complex, distant at times, deeply focused on his own interests. But there was one crucial difference: he was not her father. He was not her brother. Their shadows did not follow her into Ferrara. And in their absence, Lucrezia began to emerge as something more than what she had been made into. She hosted gatherings of poets and scholars. She exchanged letters with intellectuals and artists. She became a patron of culture—someone who supported and shaped the artistic life of the court. The poet Ludovico Ariosto would later write about her. Her correspondence with Pietro Bembo sparked debates among historians. Some saw it as intellectual admiration, others as a form of restrained platonic love. For the first time, Lucrezia Borgia existed in records not as a pawn, but as a participant. As someone with influence. As someone with a voice.
But the past did not disappear. In 1503, her father, Rodrigo Borgia, Pope Alexander VI, died. Rumors spread that poison was involved. Some accounts suggest that Cesare himself fell ill at the same time, possibly from the same source. Whether by chance or design, the effect was the same. The Borgia era in Rome came to an end. And with it, Cesare’s power began to collapse. Stripped of his influence, weakened by illness and shifting alliances, he fell from the position he had once dominated. The world that had shaped Lucrezia, controlled her, used her, and silenced her began to unravel. But she remained. In Ferrara, she continued to live, to write, to build. She gave birth to children. She managed court affairs in her husband’s absence. She became, in many ways, what history had never allowed her to be before: a woman with agency.
And yet, even in this chapter of her life, the shadow of her past never fully left. It lingered in whispers, in rumors, in the stories told about her—stories that would outlive her. In 1519, at the age of thirty-nine, Lucrezia Borgia died. The cause was recorded as complications from childbirth, what was then called childbed fever. In the years leading up to her death, records show that she made significant donations to religious institutions. She supported convents. She aided the poor. Those who knew her in Ferrara mourned her deeply. Poets wrote of her passing with genuine grief. But what she believed, what she felt in those final years, remains largely unknown. Most of her personal writings are gone, lost, destroyed, or perhaps deliberately erased. What remains are the voices of others—her father, her brother, her husbands, diplomats, historians, men who wrote about her, but not for her. Her own voice survives only in fragments, and even those fragments are quiet.
What remains then is a question: Who was Lucrezia Borgia? It is a question that cannot be answered unless we first understand what was done to her. She was placed into marriage negotiations before she was even seven years old. At thirteen, she was sent to live with her first husband. When that marriage lost its political value, she was forced to swear to a lie, to declare herself untouched, to prove a fiction created for legal convenience. She was removed from public life and confined to a convent. The man she may have truly loved was taken from her, killed in front of her by men she could not oppose. And again and again, she was handed over, redirected, reassigned, and repositioned as if she were nothing more than a tool. These are not rumors. These are recorded events. And yet, none of this is what most people remember about her. Instead, history chose a different version: the poisoner, the schemer, the dangerous woman. Why? Because that version was easier. The myth of a villain is far more convenient than the truth of a victim. If Lucrezia is seen as a mastermind, then the question disappears. No one has to ask what was done to her. No one has to examine the power structures that shaped her life. The story becomes simple, comfortable, closed.
But the documents do not support that simplicity. In 2003, historian Maria Bellonci wrote, “Each time I examine the primary sources concerning Lucrezia Borgia, I am confronted with the same question: How much of what has been said about her is true? And how much was constructed by those for whom the truth was inconvenient?” There is no complete answer, not even now. But there are fragments. Among them, twenty-seven surviving letters written in Lucrezia’s own hand, preserved in the archives of Modena. Most are from her time in Ferrara. Routine correspondence, administrative matters, exchanges about literature and court life. They show competence, engagement, control. But one letter stands apart. It is dated June 1519, only weeks before her death. It is addressed to Pope Leo X. In it, she acknowledges that her life is nearing its end. She asks for protection, for consideration, for her children after she is gone. And then, near the end of the letter, she writes a single line: “I have, throughout my life, obeyed many things. Now, I obey only God.” That is all.
She does not explain what those many things were. She does not name the people she obeyed. She does not describe what obedience required of her. She leaves it unfinished. Or perhaps, she was never allowed to finish. “I have, throughout my life, obeyed many things.” When you read that line, what do you hear? Resignation, faith, relief, or something else entirely? History interprets, documents testify, but the full truth of what Lucrezia experienced, what she endured, remains something only she truly knew. And she carried most of it with her into silence.
Her story forces us to confront something larger. What does power do to people? And more specifically, what does power do when it exists within a family? When the ones who control your fate are the ones closest to you. Lucrezia Borgia’s life is not just a story of the Renaissance. It is not confined to the politics of the fifteenth-century Italy. It is a question that echoes forward, because the mechanisms that shaped her life—control, silence, reputation, narrative—are not unique to her time. They exist in every era, including ours.
The fact that you have followed this record to the end matters. Because to listen—to truly listen to what was left unsaid—is to give weight to a voice that history tried to bury. For centuries, history has been told by those who held the pen. But within the documents, between the lines, there is always another record. A quieter one. A buried one. This channel exists to uncover those records. To look again at what we think we know. And to ask the questions that were never meant to be asked. So, before you leave, tell me what part of Lucrezia Borgia’s story stayed with you the most? Because even after five hundred years, her story is still being read.
The weight of her legacy rests not in the accusations of her detractors, but in the harrowing persistence of her survival. Imagine a girl, just thirteen, standing in the cold, opulent silence of the Vatican, her body being draped in jewels that functioned as chains. This was not a wedding; it was a transaction. To understand Lucrezia, one must move past the lurid, sensationalized tales of poison rings and dark assignations. Those were the masks crafted by her enemies to justify her destruction. If she was a monster, then her victimization becomes a morality play rather than a tragedy. But if she was a woman—a daughter, a sister, a wife, a survivor—then her life becomes a mirror reflecting the brutality of absolute power.
Consider the complexity of her existence within the Borgia web. Rodrigo Borgia, her father, saw her as an instrument of statecraft. Her beauty was a commodity, her womb a bridge to new territories and stronger armies. Cesare, her brother, was the architect of the family’s terror. He understood that to hold power, one had to command fear. In that world, affection was a weakness. Yet, there are whispers in the archives that suggest Lucrezia was the one constant, the one anchor. Was there love between them, or was it merely the terrified proximity of two people trapped in a predatory orbit? The records imply a dark, distorted closeness. Her brother’s possessiveness was not the love of a protector, but the control of an owner. He destroyed the men she dared to cherish, not out of jealousy, but out of strategic necessity.
The murder of Alfonso of Aragon is perhaps the most defining tragedy of her youth. It was a cold, calculated strike. When he was attacked in the street, he was not just a husband; he was a political pivot point that had become stagnant. Lucrezia’s reaction—her days of weeping, her refusal to eat, the way she isolated herself in a room of mourning—was not that of a co-conspirator. It was the reaction of someone who had seen her only sanctuary systematically dismantled. When the assassins finished the work of the first attack in the dark of his sickroom, they did more than kill a man. They killed the girl who believed in the possibility of a different life.
It is easy for history to write her off as a participant in her family’s corruption. But consider the constraints. What choice did she have? When she was ordered to lie about the non-consummation of her marriage, she was standing before the highest authority in the Church. To defy that was not just to invite danger; it was to invite annihilation. She complied because she understood the rules of the game better than anyone. Her survival was not a triumph of malice, but a triumph of endurance. She lived through the collapse of a dynasty, the murder of her kin, and the betrayal of her own identity, all while maintaining the dignity required of a Duchess.
When she arrived in Ferrara, the shift in her personality is palpable, even across five centuries of distance. It was as if she had finally stepped out of a shadow. The court of the Este family was, by comparison, a garden. She cultivated it. She invited poets like Ariosto to grace her table. She became the mistress of her own narrative. The letters she wrote during this period reveal a woman of sharp intellect and administrative competence. She was no longer just the Pope’s daughter; she was Lucrezia, the Duchess of Ferrara. She handled complex legal disputes, she oversaw the upbringing of her children, and she built a network of intellectual exchange that made her court a beacon of the late Renaissance.
Yet, even in this era of relative autonomy, the ghost of her past remained. It haunted her in the pamphlets distributed in Rome, in the sneers of rival noblewomen, in the ink of chroniclers who could not help but mention her lineage whenever they recorded her charitable deeds. She lived with the knowledge that she was the most misunderstood woman in Italy. She knew what they said about her. She knew that in the minds of the public, she was already dead, replaced by a fictionalized caricature of vice.
Perhaps the most haunting aspect of her life is the deliberate erasure of her inner world. What would she have written had she been given a pen without a censor watching over her shoulder? What were the secrets of the nights she spent in silence? When she wrote to Pope Leo X, “I have, throughout my life, obeyed many things,” she was finally, in the twilight of her years, staking a claim to the only freedom she had ever truly possessed: the freedom of her own spirit. She was saying that the obedience that had defined her existence was a external imposition. The woman who sat before that mirror at thirteen had been molded into a monument of the Borgia regime, but the woman who died at thirty-nine was someone else entirely. She was a woman who had seen the worst of humanity and yet chose to dedicate her final days to the care of the poor, the building of convents, and the support of the weak.
Her life asks us to look beyond the surface of what is remembered. We are often told that history is written by the victors, but it is also written by the voyeurs. It is written by those who prefer a scandalous story over a complex reality. The story of Lucrezia Borgia is a reminder that we must be careful with the labels we assign to the dead. We must be willing to sift through the dust of archives, to read the letters that were never meant to be published, and to find the humanity in the fragments.
Every time we speak her name, we are participating in a conversation that began five hundred years ago. We are deciding, once again, who she was. By stripping away the layers of myth and acknowledging the reality of her victimization, we do not just change our understanding of the Renaissance; we change our understanding of ourselves. We acknowledge that power has always functioned to silence the inconvenient, to rewrite the narratives of the vulnerable, and to turn human lives into symbols of whatever it needs them to be at the time.
Lucrezia’s silence is her final, most potent act. By taking her secrets with her into the grave, she denied history the last word. She denied the chroniclers of the past the pleasure of fully understanding her. She remained an enigma, a flicker of light in a dark, vaulted room. And in that, she achieved a kind of victory that no Borgia prince ever could. She was not the poisoner they wanted her to be. She was simply a woman who had lived, who had endured, and who had learned, finally, to be her own judge.
As we reflect on her story, we are confronted with the fragility of truth. We see how quickly a reputation can be destroyed, and how agonizingly slow it is to rebuild it. We see how a woman’s life can be colonized by the interests of men, and how, even under such crushing weight, a sense of self can persist, hidden but alive. Lucrezia Borgia’s life was a testament to the fact that while we cannot always control the circumstances of our existence, we can, in the quietest, most private corners of our hearts, remain true to ourselves.
The echoes of her life are not just historical artifacts; they are warnings and reflections. In our modern age, where narratives are still constructed, where reputations are still subject to the whims of the crowd, and where the powerful still seek to control the stories of the marginalized, Lucrezia is more relevant than ever. She stands as a reminder that there is always a human being behind the headlines, a story behind the scandal, and a truth waiting to be found by those who are willing to look, not at what is said, but at what was done.
The path she traveled was narrow, fraught with traps, and littered with the debris of a broken world. Yet, she walked it with a grace that even her enemies could not entirely mask. When you walk through the galleries of a museum and see the portraits of the Renaissance, look for her. Look for the glint in her eye, the slight tilt of her head, the hidden complexity of her expression. She is there, not in the stories of blood and poison, but in the quiet, resolute silence of a woman who knew the cost of her life and chose to live it anyway.
She was a daughter of the Borgias, yes. But she was also a scholar, a patron, a mother, and a survivor. She was a human being who was caught in a tide that would have drowned lesser people. She was a woman of the Renaissance who had to fight for the right to exist on her own terms. And in the end, she remains. She remains in the archives, in the letters, and in the enduring fascination we have for her. She remains because her story is our story. It is the story of all those who have been misrepresented, misunderstood, and silenced by the weight of their own history.
So let us keep reading. Let us keep asking. Let us keep searching for the truth that lies between the lines. For in doing so, we honor not just Lucrezia Borgia, but the very act of seeking truth in a world that so often prefers the comfort of a lie. Her journey is complete, but our journey with her is just beginning. What will we find next time we open those dusty ledgers? What other truths are waiting in the quiet, forgotten corners of history? The search continues, and as long as we keep looking, the voice of the one who was forced to be silent will never truly be forgotten.
It is, perhaps, the most important lesson of the Borgia age. That power is not just about the ability to command; it is about the ability to control the story. And by reclaiming the story of Lucrezia, we are doing something revolutionary. We are taking back the power from those who once held it, and we are giving it back to the woman who was its first, and most enduring, casualty. She deserves that much. She deserves to be seen, not for the version of her that history created, but for the person she truly was.
As the sun sets over Rome today, just as it did in 1493, the stones of the city remember. They remember the girls who were given away as gifts, the men who traded blood for influence, and the quiet, lonely figures who stood in the center of it all. They remember Lucrezia. And through us, they tell her story. It is a story of darkness, yes. But it is also a story of a quiet, persistent light—a light that refused to be extinguished by the shadows of her family, her time, or the legends that followed her.
This is the legacy of Lucrezia Borgia. It is not one of poison or scandal. It is one of resilience. It is the story of a girl who was born into a storm and spent her life trying to find the shore. And in the end, she found it. She found it in the gardens of Ferrara, in the company of poets, and in the love she gave to her children. She found it in the silence that she claimed for herself, a silence that became her greatest strength.
Let us leave her there, in the peace she so rightfully earned. Let us respect her silence, even as we continue to learn from her life. Let us remember her, not as the woman the world made her, but as the woman she fought so hard to become. And in that, let us find our own strength. For if Lucrezia Borgia could survive the world she was born into, then surely, we can find the courage to face our own. Her story is not a tragedy; it is an inspiration. It is a reminder that even in the darkest of times, there is always a choice. There is always a path, no matter how narrow, that leads to a place where we can be ourselves.
So, tell me—as we close this chapter on her life—what will you remember of her? What will you carry with you? For as long as we remember her, she is not truly gone. She lives on in our curiosity, in our empathy, and in our refusal to accept the simple, comfortable lies that history often presents. She lives on in the questions we ask, and in the truths we dare to uncover. She lives on. And that, perhaps, is the most profound answer to the question: Who was Lucrezia Borgia?