Prospero Colonna

Prospero Colonna (1452–1523), sometimes referred to as Prosper Colonna, was an Italian condottiero who was active during the Italian wars and served France, Naples, Spain, the Duchy of Milan, the Papal States and the Holy Roman Empire

Along with his rival Bartolomeo d'Alviano, he is considered the best Italian generals of his generation. For his prowess at defensive and counteroffensive warfare, he was regarded as the new Quintus Fabius Maximus Cunctator, earning the nickname Cuntatore.

Biography
A member of the ancient noble family of the Colonna, he was born in Civita Lavinia, near Velletri (Lazio), in 1452. He was a cousin of Fabrizio Colonna.

His first notable action as a military leader was in 1484 when he defended the family castle of Paliano against an assault by the rival Orsini and Riario families. After some other battle deeds, Prospero, who had joined Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere's party, was imprisoned in Castel Sant'Angelo (Rome) by Pope Alexander VI. Once freed, he was soon imprisoned again for his allegiance to Charles VIII of France during his invasion of Italy. In the end, the King of France was victorious against the Pope and entered Rome, backed by Prospero and Fabrizio Colonna, in 1495.

During the brief French rule over the Kingdom of Naples, Prospero obtained the duchy of Traetto and the county of Forlì. However, when Charles returned beyond the Alps, Prospero helped King Ferdinand II of Naples to evict the French viceroy from Naples.

The situation changed again with the new French invasion of Louis XII. While the Neapolitan king Frederick IV fled to the island of Ischia, Fabrizio and Prospero Colonna tried to defend the kingdom. They were defeated and imprisoned in the Castel Nuovo of Naples. They were also excommunicated by Alexander VI, who took their castles in the Lazio. Eventually ransomed, both cousins then entered the service of the Spanish general Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba, viceroy of Naples.

Colonna had an important role in the Spanish victory at Cerignola (1503), which gave Spain the keys to Naples. After Alexander VI's death, he was also able to take back his territories in the Lazio. He commanded the light cavalry at the Battle of Garigliano. His relationship with Córdoba soured after Bartolomeo d'Alviano, a condottiero from the rival Orsini family, entered his service around this time, leading Colonna to become their political enemy within the ranks.

Around this time, he added Itri, Sperlonga, Ceccano, and Sonnino to his fiefs, becoming once again a great feudal lord in southern Italy.

In 1513, Colonna and his nephew Fernando d'Ávalos acted as advisors for Viceroy Ramón de Cardona in the Battle of La Motta, defeating the Venetian army led by Bartolomeo d'Alviano.

Two years later, serving the Duke of Milan Massimiliano Sforza, he was commander of the forces in north-western Italy near Villafranc when the army of Francis I, King of France, crossed the Alps preparatory to the Battle of Marignano. In a surprising and humiliating raid, Colonna and his staff were captured by a French cavalry force led by the Chevalier Bayard. As he was taken, he said jokingly of France, "It is a country I have always wanted to visit."

In 1521, he was chosen by Charles V and Pope Leo X as the commander of the combined Imperial-Spanish and Papal troops during the Four Years' War. Colonna had to join forces with d'Ávalos and the Papal representative Federico II Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua. They were also joined by Giovanni delle Bande Nere, who switched sides shortly after. After conquering and sacking Genoa, Colonna faced off against Giovanni and Odet of Foix, Viscount of Lautrec in northern Italy in 1522, achieving a decisive Imperial-Spanish and Papal victory in the subsequent Battle of Bicocca.

Colonna later successfully defended Milan from the army of Guillaume Gouffier, seigneur de Bonnivet. His health was declining, however, and he died in 1523 in l'Hôtel Clemenceau at Milan.

Issue
He married Covella di Sanseverino, who gave him an heir, Vespasiano.

"Confident in the constancy of the lady of his affections, Prospero took for his companion a gentleman of low degree, to whom she, unfortunately, transferred the love he thought was his own. Feeling that he had been the author of his own ruin, Prospero took for device the bull of Perillus, which had proved the death of its inventor, with the motto, Ingenio experior funera digna meo, "I suffer a death befitting my invention.""