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The Pope Who Owned a Pet Elephant? The Life of Leo X
In 1962, during maintenance works of the cooling system of the Vatican’s Belvedere Courtyard, a group of workers stumbled upon something unexpected: a set of bones. Though initially thought to belong to a dinosaur, the large tooth and fragments of jawbone were, in fact, the remains of a pet elephant owned by Pope Leo X. Named Hanno, the young animal was a gift of King Manuel I of Portugal to the newly elected pope. Besides delighting the Roman court, Hanno became intertwined with the troubled political and religious landscape of 16th-century Europe.
Pope Leo X: A Renaissance Ruler
Portrait of Leo X, by Raphael Sanzio, 1518. Source: Wikimedia Commons/Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy
In March 1513, the papal conclave gathered in Rome elected Cardinal Giovanni de’ Medici to be the successor of Pope Julius II. Born in Florence in 1475, the new Pope Leo X was the second son of Lorenzo de’ Medici, the head of the powerful Medici family and de facto ruler of the Republic of Florence.
Destined to take up a career in the Catholic Church, the young Giovanni was tutored by some of the best scholars of the Italian Renaissance, including Pico della Mirandola, Angelo Poliziano, and Marsilio Ficino, who educated their pupil according to the humanist ideals of the time. Besides taking lessons in rhetoric and classical subjects, Giovanni de’ Medici gained experience in diplomacy and governance, witnessing firsthand at his father’s court the power dynamics at play in the complex political landscape of 15th and 16th-century Italy.
In 1494, a 19-year-old Giovanni and his family fell victim to that volatile landscape. Forced to go into exile, the Medici left Florence following accusations of having betrayed the republic. Giovanni spent the following years traveling through Europe. He returned to Italy in 1500, where he settled in Rome. In 1512, he eventually restored his family’s control in Florence.
Michelangelo Showing Lorenzo il Magnifico the Head of a Faun, fresco by Ottavio Vannini, 1638-42. Source: Wikimedia Commons/Palazzo Pitti, Florence, Italy
As a pope, Giovanni quickly became the embodiment of the quintessential Renaissance ruler. In a time when politics, culture, and religion were deeply intertwined, Pope Leo X transformed Rome into a leading cultural center. His patronage of the arts led many scholars, musicians, and artists to settle in the city. During his time in office, Leo X commissioned Raphael to paint frescoes in the Vatican Apartments, expedited the construction of St. Peter’s Basilica, and enriched the collections of the Vatican Library.
Resembling more a temporal ruler than a spiritual leader, Pope Leo X also aimed to become an influential player in the Italian and international arenas, seeking to further the interests of the Papal States and the Medici family. In 1517, for example, he had young Cardinal Alfonso Petrucci imprisoned in Castel St. Angelo and killed in secret. Charged with masterminding an alleged conspiracy against Leo X, Cardinal Petrucci not coincidentally belonged to a family who threatened the Medici’s hold in Tuscany.
A Wondrous Gift
Portuguese map of Cochi (now Kochi), the city where Hanno was born, c. 1620-1640. Source: Wikimedia Commons
The exchange of extravagant gifts was a common practice in Renaissance diplomacy, with rulers hoping to secure political support and financial favors by impressing their allies. In the 16th century, as the discovery of direct trade routes to Africa and the Far East opened new markets, many European rulers started collecting “exotic” flora and fauna in the courts. Thus, along with luxury goods, pets and birds from Africa and India began to be a common sight in royal menageries throughout Europe. The members of the Habsburg dynasty, for example, became avid collectors of exotic pets.
Besides entertaining and dazzling guests, the exotic pets and birds were living symbols of their owner’s financial prestige and power in global trade. In particular, King Manuel I of Portugal was set to secure his monopoly on the spice trade. After Vasco da Gama reached India in 1498, Portugal started building trading posts, known as feitorias, to establish relations with the local authorities. King Manuel also developed a special interest in Indian elephants, bringing several pachyderms to his court. Soon, he also used them as diplomatic gifts. After all, elephants “were the ultimate gift a Western European ruler could hope for,” as historian Annemarie Jordan Gschwend remarks.
Lithograph of King Manuel I of Portugal, by anonymous, 1495. Source: Wikimedia Commons/MasiterDrucke/University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal
As Egypt, fearing that it would lose control of the overland trade with the Far East, sought to sway Leo X against Portugal, King Manuel decided to send an envoy to Rome to honor the newly elected pope with an array of precious gifts, including a gold chalice, parrots, and leopards. The most eye-catching gift, however, was a young albino elephant. Born in Cochi (now Kochi), a Portuguese-controlled town in southwestern India, the animal had arrived in Portugal in 1511 after a long sea voyage. In 1514, he embarked on a second journey.
During the first stops in Alicante, the island of Ibiza, and the port of Palma (Mallorca), the elephant immediately began to attract the attention of local residents, with large crowds clamoring to get a glimpse of the animal or even climb on the ship. To avoid delays or incidents, Nicolau de Faria, the equerry in charge of the pachyderm, eventually decided against making any more stops.
When the ship reached Porto Ercole, news of the famous elephant’s arrival had already reached the town on the Tuscan coast. As the Portuguese envoy began traveling to Rome, an ever-growing crowd followed it on foot or horseback, causing damage to fields and buildings. When the elephant and his keeper stayed overnight at a cardinal’s villa in Tarquinia (a town near Rome), so many locals climbed on the roof of a nearby inn that its roof collapsed. Finally, on March 19, 1514, the elephant arrived in Rome.
The Darling of the Pope’s Court
Sketch of Hanno by Raphael, c. 1516. Source: Wikimedia Commons/Kupferstichkabinett, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Wearing an elaborate decoration on his back, the elephant made a spectacular entry into the city, with residents rushing to witness his arrival. Having been trained as a performing animal, he also amazed the pope and the court during his first visit to the Vatican. In his 1533 account of the event, Pasquale Malaspina recalled, “with its trumpet so much noise it made that the entire place was deafened; and stretching itself on the ground to kneel it then straightened up in reverence to the Pope, and to his entourage.”
Leo X was immediately delighted by his gift and named him Annone (Hanno) after the Carthaginian seaman. “The sight of this quadruped provides us with the greatest amusement and has become for our people an object of extraordinary wonder,” wrote the pope to King Manuel, adding that “It was the elephant which excited the greatest astonishment to the whole world, as much from the memories it evoked of the ancient past, for the arrival of similar beast was fairly frequent in the days of ancient Rome.”
After Hanno’s arrival at the Vatican, he quickly became the darling of the pope’s court and the main attraction of Rome’s social life. The elephant resided in the Belvedere Courtyard, where he was cared for by his keeper, Giovanni Battista Branconio dell’Aquila, dubbed “il pedagogo de l’alifante” (the elephant’s pedagogue) by satirist Pietro Aretino. Pope Leo X paid Giovanni 100 ducati a year for looking after his beloved pet.
Baraballo and Hanno, 16th century. Source: Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana; with Hanno’s epitaph, drawing by Francisco d’Ollanda, 1538. Source: Wikimedia Commons/Escorial Library
During his stay at the Vatican, Hanno appeared in several events and performances organized to entertain the pope and his court. The elephant even took part in a cruel prank Leo X played at the expense of Cosimo Baraballo, the Abbot of Gaeta and an amateur poet. To humiliate the vain abbot, the pope planned a mock procession through the streets of Rome. The unsuspecting Baraballo agreed to be carried on Hanno’s back to the Campidoglio Square, where the pope promised he would be solemnly crowned “arch-poet.” On the day of the prank, however, the elephant, disturbed by the crowd’s noise, panicked and threw Baraballo to the ground.
Despite the pope’s attention, life at the Vatican did not benefit Hanno. In 1516, his health started to deteriorate. Alarmed, Leo X summoned his best doctors to examine him. Believing Hanno was suffering from constipation, they prescribed a laxative with a high dose of gold, a common treatment at the time. However, Hanno died shortly after on June 8.
Hanno in Art: Satirists and Artists
The Creation of the Animals by Raphael, 1518. Source: Wikimedia Commons/Raphael Loggia, Apostolic Palace, Vatican City
Pope Leo X mourned the death of his beloved companion, tasking artist Raphael Sanzio with creating a life-size fresco portrait to commemorate him. The fresco was unfortunately later destroyed. Leo himself had written the epitaph. In the following years, many artists depicted Hanno in their work. Giovanni da Udine, for example, built the Fontana dell’Elefante (Fountain of the Elephant) in the gardens of Villa Madama. Raphael’s assistants included Hanno in the fresco known as Creazione degli animali (Creation of the Animals) in the loggia of the Apostolic Palace.
At the same time, Pope Leo X’s love for Hanno did not escape the notice of satirists, who saw the elephant as a symbol of the papacy’s moral bankruptcy and penchant for luxury. In his The Last Will and Testament of the Elephant Hanno, Pietro Aretino, known as the “Scourge of Princes,” denounced the wrongdoings of Leo X and his followers. In the satirical text, for example, the elephant arranged to leave his jaws to a cardinal so that he could use them to devour “all the money of the republic of Christ.”
Pope Leo X, Hanno, & the Protestant Reformation
Portrait of Martin Luther by Lucas Cranach the Elder, 1528. Source: Wikimedia Commons/Coburg Fortress, Coburg, Germany
Pope Leo X’s lavish lifestyle, extravagant spending, and vast patronage of the arts required considerable resources, draining the already straining finances of the Papal States. As a result, the pope often resorted to controversial practices to raise funds.
Acting on instructions from Rome, in 1517, a year after the death of Hanno, Johann Tetzel, a Dominican friar, began to sell indulgences (a remission of believers’ sin) in northern Germany to finance the construction of St. Peter’s Basilica. Tetzel’s preaching sparked controversy, leading theologian Martin Luther to write his Ninety-five Theses, a critique of the Catholic Church’s amoral practices and his theological system. It was the beginning of the Protestant Reformation.
As the schism between the papacy and Luther’s followers worsened, the anti-papal press focused on Hanno, depicting the elephant as proof of Leo X’s frivolity. In an early essay, for example, Martin Luther described the pope as “indolently catching flies while his pet elephant cavorted before him.”
Pope Leo X ultimately failed to fully understand the call for reforms and growing discontent within the Catholic Church. In the 1520 bull Exsurge Domine (Arise O Lord), he condemned Martin Luther as a heretic. In 1521, he excommunicated him. When Leo X died in December of the same year, the Renaissance pope left behind religious turmoil that would permanently change Europe.