In the month of October 1502 Venafro represented Pandolfo Petrucci at the Diet of La Magione; and later he went to Imola with Paolo Orsini, where a peace agreement was signed between Cesare Borgia and the conspirators of La Magione represented by Paolo Orsini.
He was memorable as a hired assassin in Renaissance Italy opposite Welles's Cesare Borgia in Prince of Foxes (1949).
Lucrezia Borgia | Cesare Borgia | Cesare Ripa | Cesare Pavese | Cesare Beccaria | Cesare Zavattini | Cesare Lombroso | Cesare Siepi | Lucrezia Borgia (opera) | House of Borgia | De Borgia, Montana | Cesare Cremonini | Cesare Bonventre | Codex Borgia | Cesare Salvi | Cesare Prandelli | Cesare Danova | Cesare Cremonini (singer-songwriter) | Stefano Borgia | SS ''Giulio Cesare'' | Lucrezia Borgia (1926 movie) | ''Lucrezia Borgia'' | Lucrèce Borgia | Joseph Le Vasseur Borgia | Italian cruiser Cesare Rossarol | Giulio Cesare Croce | Francis Borgia, 4th Duke of Gandía | Francis Borgia | Cesare Vecellio | Cesare Tallone |
The town of Felletin is identified as the source from which came the Aubusson tapestries in the inventory of Charlotte d'Albret, duchess of Valentinois and widow of Cesare Borgia (1514).
He resigned the see just over a year later (April 17, 1499), in order to get the see of Elne, left vacant by the death of Cesare Borgia.
Gabrio is possibly best recalled for his roles as Jean Valjean in the 1925 Henri Fescourt-directed adaptation of Victor Hugo's Les Misérables, Cesare Borgia in the 1935 Abel Gance-directed biopic Lucrèce Borgia and as Carlos in the 1937 Julien Duvivier-directed gangster film Pépé le Moko, opposite Jean Gabin.
Gioffre de Candia Borgia, also known as Goffredo, in Italian, or Jofré Borja in Valencian, (1482–1518) was the youngest son of Pope Alexander VI and Vannozza dei Cattanei, and the youngest brother of Cesare Borgia, Giovanni Borgia, and Lucrezia Borgia.
In 1495, he fought in Italy on behalf of king Charles VIII of France, (- king 1483 - 1498), disputing Naples to the Spaniards getting then under the service of Cesare Borgia, (1475 - killed March 1507, at Viana, Navarre, now in Spain) .
In July 1501 Kemal Reis, accompanied by his nephew Piri Reis, set sail from the port of Modon with a force of 3 galleys and 16 fustas and went to the Tyrrhenian Sea, where he took advantage of the war between Jacopo d'Appiano, ruler of Piombino, and the Papal forces under the command of Cesare Borgia.
The previous conclave in September had been marked by the Italian Wars, surrounded by the forces of Louis XII of France, Ferdinand II of Aragon, and Cesare Borgia, the former cardinal-nephew of Pope Alexander VI.
Eventually, after interventions in France and Italy, Hugo Roger III, Count of Pallars, was imprisoned at the Royal Prison Castle of Xàtiva, occupied also by famous and ambitious Spanish-Italian Cesare Borgia, where he died in 1509.