- After the French king occupies a deserted Milan, he tasks Cesare with killing Ludivico, and Lucretia becomes involved in Neapolitan palace intrigue.
- Cesare and his French army have taken control of a defenseless Milan but he is upset that the Duke, Ludovico Sforza, is nowhere is nowhere to be found. The King of France arrives displeased that someone else still has a claim to the city. The Pope orders Cesare to bring the Duke of Milan to him in chains. Arrangements are soon made not only deal with Ludovico but with his charge, Caterina Sforza's son Venito. Micheletto visits the absent Leonardo da Vinci's studio and finds a new lover who is more than he appears. In Rome, the Pope learns that Giulia Farnese has a new suitor, Vincenzo Salvatore, who she wishes to present to him.In Naples, Lucrezia's husband is third in line for the throne after his cousins Frederico and Raphael. When Raphael tells that as king he will ban her son from his court, she begins to plot against him.—garykmcd
- The French king is pleased to seize Milan duchy, but sends Cesare to hunt down duke Ludovico Sforza, who fled with Catherina Sforza's surviving son Benito. He offers trough Machiavelli to deliver the boy for a safe-conduct, but Cesare kills both, against papal instructions. From Milan, Michelotto takes Leonardo's lover-model to Rome as his own in secret, ignoring it's a stooge of Catherina's master spy Rufio, who has another secret. fatally pest-infected cardinal Costanzo confesses about the Sforza box and commits suicide while his infected palace is burnt down. In Naples, Lucrezia plots, unlike her unambitious husband, against best-placed throne pretender Federigo, who unlike his brother Raphael refuses to admit Paolo's son to court and clumsily employs poison, but may be controlled by papal enthronement privileges.—KGF Vissers
It looks like we don't have any synopsis for this title yet. Be the first to contribute.
Learn moreContribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content