Captain General of the Church


The Captain General of the Church was the de facto commander-in-chief of the papal armed forces during the Middle Ages. The post was usually conferred on an Italian or other noble with a professional military reputation or a relative of the pope. The parallel office of Gonfalonier of the Church was more a formal and ceremonial honor than the responsibility of a tactical military leader. The office was at times made subordinate to temporary offices, Pope Callixtus III appointed Cardinal Rodrigo Borgia to the office "Chief and General Commissary of the Papal Army." A number of such offices under many titles were used as ministers of war by popes, the captain general operated as a field commander under these offices. Pope Innocent XII removed both ranks and replaced them with the position of Flag-bearer of the Holy Roman Church, which later became hereditary in the Naro Patrizi.
It was traditional for the Captain General to carry a baton of command, blessed by the pope.

List of Captains General

Captain GeneralPortraitAppointing PopeNotes
Charlemagne*Leo III
"It is safest to conclude that the pope desired that the royal patrician should regard himself as captain-general of the church, and that he should in that capacity be entitled to the military services of its subjects, when called on by the church to interfere for the protection of her temporary rights."
Guillaume DurandMartin IV
James II of AragonBoniface VIII
Gonfalonier, Admiral, and Captain General of the Church; compelled to wage war against his own brother
Philip VI of FranceBenedict XII Circa August 1336
Juan Fernández de HerediaInnocent VI
Daniele del CarrettoGregory XI
Carlo I MalatestaBoniface IX
"temporary vicar and captain-general of the church"
Braccio da MontoneGregory XII Appointed in 1414; "Used the army nominally belonging to the Pope to conquer Perugia for himself"
Ranuccio Farnese il VecchioEugene IV
Appointed 1435; grandfather of Pope Paul III
Niccolò PiccininoEugene IV
Appointed June 6, 1442; Condottiero; also the commander of the Duke of Milan's forces and thus "one of the first concrete indications" of the alliance between the pope and Milan
Jacques CœurNicholas V Died as Captain General
Ludovico TrevisanCallixtus III Trevisan played an important role in organizing the naval campaign against the Ottomans in December 1455, both responsible for the construction of the papal navy and appointed "apostolic legate, governor general, captain and general condottiere" in charge of it.
Giovanni I Ventimiglia, Marquess of Geraci -Callixtus III -
Pedro Luis de BorjaAlso Prefect of Rome Not to be confused with Pedro Luis de Borja Lanzol de Romaní-
Antonio PiccolominiPius II
Son of the sister of Pius II; lay relative; salary of 2000 ducats a year and castellan of Castel Sant'Angelo; hereditary principate as Duke of Amalfi, conferred through King Ferrante, an office held by later papal relatives as well
Girolamo RiarioSixtus IV
Pazzi conspirator; brother of cardinal-nephew Pietro Riario; title later removed
Franceschetto CyboInnocent VIII Illegitimate son of Innocent VIII
Roberto EustachioInnocent VIII Former condottiero for Milan; led the campaign against Alfonso of Calabria; later returned to the service of the Republic of Venice
Niccolò di Pitigliano Innocent VIII Appointed June 27, 1489, in the midst of a conflict with Ferrante
Giovanni BorgiaAlexander VI
Son; also Duke of Gandia and Gonfalonier; assassinated by an unknown perpetrator, most likely his political enemies.
Cesare BorgiaAlexander VI
Son; former cardinal-nephew, also Gonfalonier; often directly or indirectly accused of Giovanni's assassination, but unlikely to have been the actual culprit. Julius II, the "Warrior Pope", refused to confirm Cesare upon his election.
Francesco Maria I della RovereJulius II
Son of Julius II's brother, Giovanni, and the adopted heir of Guidobaldo, Duke of Urbino; retained for one year after Julius II's death, paid 13,844 ducats plus a 30,000 ducat allowance for his company of 200 men-at-arms and 100 light cavalry
Giuliano di Lorenzo de' MediciLeo X
Giuliano's cousin Giulio was papal legate to the army
Lorenzo II de' Medici, Duke of UrbinoLeo X
Appointed after the death of Giuliano in 1516; initially commanded the papal army in the War of Urbino
Bernardo DoviziLeo X
Appointed after the wounding of Lorenzo; commanded the papal army in the War of Urbino
Federico II, Duke of MantuaLeo X
Son of Isabella d'Este; also Gonfalonier; did not intervene in the Sack of Rome
Federico II, Duke of MantuaAdrian VI Son of Isabella d'Este; also Gonfalonier; did not intervene in the Sack of Rome
Francesco Maria I della RovereClement VII
Reappointed by Clement VII after his Dukedom had been stripped by Leo X and then reinstated by Adrian VI
Pier Luigi FarnesePaul III
Appointed February 2, 1537l; son of Paul III and former Gonfaloniere ; held both titles simultaneously
Giambattista del MonteJulius III
Nephew of Julius III
Guidobaldo II della Rovere
Giovanni CarafaPaul IV Appointed after the resignation of Guidobaldo; nephew of Paul IV; allegedly "affable and incompetent"
Marcantonio ColonnaGregory XIII Led the papal fleet during the Battle of Lepanto
Taddeo BarberiniUrban VIII
Brother of cardinal-nephew Antonio Barberini
Gaspare Altieri nephew of Pope Clement X, later Prince of Oriolo. Engraving by Abraham Brueghel and Nicolas Guerard of the "Wine of St. Martin: dedicated to Gaspare Altierti, Generale di Santa Chiesa.
Livio OdescalchiInnocent XI Nephew of Innocent XI; also Gonfalonier
Antonio OttoboniAlexander VIII