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In the Epilogue, Brucker recounts the aftermath of the trial. Soon after Archbishop Antoninus announces his judgment on the case, one of Giovanni’s procurators appeals the decision, asking Antoninus to reconsider the evidence. The appeal is transferred to Rome where a papal court examines the evidence and comes to a new conclusion about Giovanni and Lusanna’s marriage. Six months later, a letter from the Pope arrives for Antoninus, stating that the papal court has ruled that Giovanni and Lusanna’s marriage is not legal. The new ruling frees Giovanni from his obligation to treat Lusanna as his wife, and it absolves him from any financial restitutions.
Brucker notes that Giovanni’s close association with the Medici family may have helped reverse Antoninus’s judgement. In fifteenth-century Florence, the merchant Cosimo de’ Medici was a rich and powerful figure. He also had an extensive network of friends and allies in many governmental positions, which helped him influence society. Florentine citizens from every social class wrote to Cosimo asking for favors. Such favors would have included “loans, remission of taxes, cancellation or reduction of judicial penalties, and letters of recommendation” (112). Despite Cosimo’s influence, Antoninus was hostile toward the Medicis.
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