Kochi king gifted it to Portugal
An elephant was shipped to Portugal from the Raja of Cochin, Unni Rama Koyil, in 1512, and it was gifted by King Manuel I of Portugal to Pope Leo X (1514-1521) at his coronation. This fascinating story appears in the book, Pope’s Elephant (2000) by Silvio A. Bedini. The white elephant, called Hanno (c. 1510 – 1516), came to Rome with the Portuguese ambassador Tristão da Cunha and became the pet of the Pope. It died two years later from complications of treatment for constipation with a gold-enriched laxative. Italians called the elephant, Annone.
Cunha was nominated as the first viceroy of Portuguese India in 1504, but could not take up this post owing to temporary blindness. Afonso de Albuquerque, later viceroy, was his cousin. Cunha's son Nuno da Cunha was the 9th Governor of Portuguese India in 1529.
Hanno, sketch by Raphael |
Bedini's fascinating glimpse at a forgotten sidenote to history gives us an elephant's-back view of early modern Europe and the inner workings of the Vatican at the height of its influence. A Vatican scholar and the author of numerous books, Bedini is Historian Emeritus at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., where he has worked for many years as Deputy Director of the National Museum of History and as Keeper of the Rare Books. While engaged in research in the Vatican museum and archives, he heard that once upon a time an elephant lived at the Vatican. Casual remarks, strange coincidences and a lot of research yielded the exotic story.
According to the book, King Manuel had either received Hanno as a gift from the Raja of Cochin or had asked Afonso de Albuquerque, his viceroy in India, to purchase him. At that time, in Portugal, King Manuel was basking in the glory of the victorious explorations to the East, including that of Vasco da Gama, to Kozhikode. He dented the Islamic monopoly of the spice trade and religious conversions to Islam. As the riches flowed in from Malabar to Portugal, the Pope communicated in a letter on January 18, 1514, to Manuel acknowledging that ''the Portuguese motive for conquest was not ambition, nor the acquisition of territory and extension of his lands, but the sincere desire to propagate the Law and the knowledge of the faith in those regions.''
Hanno and his mahout, 1575, Angers museum |
Hanno arrived by ship from Lisbon to Rome, aged about four years. The huge, luxurious embassy of 140 persons made its way through Alicante and Majorca, arriving on the outskirts of Rome in February. They walked the streets of Rome on March 12, 1514, in an extravagant procession of exotic wildlife and wealth of the Indies, with many dressed in "Indian style". Apart from Hanno, the procession featured 42 other beasts, including two leopards, a panther, some parrots, turkeys and rare Indian horses. Hanno carried a platform of silver on its back, shaped like a castle containing a safe with royal gifts, including vests embroidered with pearls and gems, and coins of gold minted for the occasion. The Pope received the procession in the Castel Sant'Angelo. The elephant knelt down thrice in reverence and then, following a wave of his Indian mahout, used its trunk to suck water from a bucket and sprayed it over the crowd and the Cardinals.
Raphael's portrait of Leo |
In 1514, Rome was the centre of the Christian world and the home and workshop of Raphael, Leonardo, and Michelangelo. Pope Leo X was a pleasure-loving pontiff whose court was infamous for its excess, frivolity and impropriety. Hanno became a star in processions and festivals, and the subject of countless paintings, sculptures and fountains.
In the Belvedere before the great Pastor
Was conducted the trained elephant
Dancing with such grace and such love
That hardly better would a man have danced:
And then with its trunk such a great noise
It made, that the entire place deafened:
And stretching itself on the ground to kneel
It then straightened up in reverence to the Pope,
And to his entourage.
Hanno became a darling of Renaissance Europe. Two years after, he fell ill suddenly, was given a purgative, and died on 8 June 1516, with the pope at his side. Hanno was interred in the Cortile del Belvedere at the age of seven.
Raphael, the great artist, designed a memorial fresco, but it does not survive. The Pope himself composed the epitaph:
Under this great hill, I lie buried
A mighty elephant which the King Manuel
Having conquered the Orient
Sent as a captive to Pope Leo X.
At which the Roman people marvelled,
A beast not seen for a long time,
And in my brutish breast, they perceived human feelings.
Fate envied me my residence in the blessed Latium
And had not the patience to let me serve my master a full three years.
But I wish, oh gods, that the time which Nature would have assigned to me,
and Destiny stole away,
You will add to the life of the great Leo.
He lived seven years
He died of angina
He measured twelve palms in height.
Giovanni Battista Branconio dell'Aquila
Privy chamberlain to the pope
And provost of the custody of the elephant,
Has erected this in 1516, the 8th of June,
In the fourth year of the pontificate of Leo X.
That which Nature has stolen away
Raphael of Urbino with his art has restored.
Italian playwright and blackmailer Pietro Aretino wrote a satirical pamphlet, The Last Will and Testament of the Elephant Hanno. It mocked the political and religious figures of Rome at the time, including the Pope. The successful pamphlet established him as a famous satirist, ultimately known as "the Scourge of Princes". Hanno's story is told at length in Bedini's book. According to American historian Robert Greene, it earned Aretino a post in the papal service.
Solomon and his keeper, Subhro, begin in dismal conditions, forgotten in a corner of the palace grounds. When it occurs to the king and queen that an elephant would be an appropriate wedding gift, everyone rushes to get them ready: Subhro is given two new suits of clothes and Solomon a long overdue scrub. They cross the border into Spain at Castelo Rodrigo and meet the Archduke at Valladolid.
Accompanied by the Archduke, his new wife, the royal guard, Soloman and Subhro cross a continent riven by the Reformation and civil wars. They make their way through the storied cities of northern Italy: Genoa, Piacenza, Mantua, Verona, Venice, and Trento, where the Council of Trent is in session. They brave the Alps and the terrifying Isarco and Brenner Passes; they sail from Rosas across the Mediterranean Sea and later up the Inn River. At last, they make their grand entry into the imperial city. The mahout's name, Subhro makes it clear that it was an Indian elephant.
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