Lamberto Grimaldi
| Lamberto Grimaldi | |
|---|---|
| Spouse(s) | Claudine Grimaldi |
| Noble family | House of Grimaldi |
| Father | NIcolas Grimaldi di Antibes |
| Mother | Cesarina Doria d’Oneglia |
| Born | c. 1420 |
| Died | 15 March 1494 |
Lamberto Grimaldi (c. 1420–March 1494) was a Lord of Monaco (since March 16, 1458). He was married to his cousin Claudine Grimaldi in 1465 in order to secure the Grimaldi inheritance of Monaco which by the small state's constitution could only pass to male heirs. Lamberto was of the branch of the Grimaldi family which had settled in Antibes while Claudia was of the more powerful Monaco branch. Thus their union legitimately kept her branch of the family in control of Monaco. At this period in Monaco's history the family had not yet attained the princely status; that was to come later.
Lamberto assumed the reins of power in Monaco at a difficult time in its often vulnerable history. Lamberto fought to preserve Monaco's independence, and is said to have "handled diplomacy and the sword with equal talent".[1] He also established the Grimaldi motto "With God's help."
He and Claudine had at least six children;
- Jean (1468 – 11 October 1505)
- Louis ; deemed insane and barred from the inheritance
- Bianca
- Augustino, Bishop of Grasse (1482 – 14 April 1532)
- Françoise (died before 1523); married Luc Doria, her son Bartholomew Doria murdered her brother Lucien
- Lucien (1487 – 22 August 1523)
[edit] Notes
- ^ The House of Grimaldi
[edit] References
- The House of Grimaldi retrieved 12 February 2007
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Lamberto Grimaldi
Born: c. 1420 Died: 15 March 1494 |
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| Preceded by Claudine |
Lord of Monaco 1458 - 1494 |
Succeeded by Jean II |
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