Agostino Chigi
  Agostino Chigi (29 November 1466 – 11 April 1520) was an Italian banker, and founder of Renaissance art. He was born in Siena, the son of prominent banker Mariano Chigi, and in 1487 moved to rome
to aid his father. There he lended large amounts of money to Pope Alexander VI ( and other rulers as well), and he strayed from common mercantile pratice after obtaining several monopolies such as, the salt monopoly in the papal states and The Kingdom of Naples. After the death of Rodrigo Borgia and his short time successor Chigi became Pope Julius II's expenses attendant upon his election, the latter awarded him, and he linked Chigi to the Della Rovere family and made him the Apostolic Camera's treasurer and notary. The two remained close allies, with Agostino occuping the pope in his military campaigns in 1506 and 1510, and in 1511 Agostino was sent to Venice for support for the papal forces in War of the League of Cambrai.
He was Rodrigo Borgia's regular banker. However, he was not the Borgias' only banker, as they also did business with Juan Borgia the Elder.