Alleged portrait of Giovanni (Juan) Borgia, 2nd Duke of Gandia / Wikimedia Commons
By Samantha Morris / 12.09.2012
Archaeologist/Historian
Juan Borgia, 2nd Duke of Gandia, was never really cut out to be a soldier. He was arrogant and self centred, and failed more than succeeding at anything. Yet Pope Alexander VI wanted one son in the church and another in the military, giving Cesare the Cardinal’s robes and Juan the armour. As we already know, Cesare wasn’t best pleased with this and would much rather have been the one out on the battle field. If he had been made a soldier from the outset then none of the failures that Juan instigated would likely never have happened. But of course it didn’t happen like that, and Juan Borgia was really a big failure and really quite unpopular. His arrogance made him unpopular with his troops and the butt of some rather nasty practical jokes – one such example being at the battle of Bracciano in October 1496.