- Azzo VI of Este
Azzo VI ( _it. Arco; 1170 – November 1212), known as Azzolino, was the
Marquis of Este ("marchio Eystensis") from the death of his father, Azzo V, in 1190 until his death. He was heavily involved in the Guelph politics ofLombardy in the first decade of the 13th century, serving as "podestà " ofFerrara (1196, 1205, and 1208),Padua (1199),Verona (1206–1207), andMantua (1207–1208 and 1210–1211). On20 January 1210 he was created Marquis of Ancona and Count ofLoreto by theEmperor Otto IV . On10 May 1212 this was reaffirmed byPope Innocent III .In his capacity as a leading Guelph "
condottiero ". He fought a prolonged war withSalinguerra Torelli . In 1205 he conquered and razed the castle ofFrotta , residence of Salinguerra. His opponent responded by allying withEzzelino II da Romano and drove Azzo away, but the next year (1206) he had reconquered Frotta and held it until 1209.Azzo's court was a cultural centre in northern Italy, drawing poets and artists from afar. He played host and patron to the
troubadour sAimeric de Peguilhan ,Peire Raimon de Tolosa , andRambertino Buvalelli . Rambertino celebrated Azzo's daughter Beatrice in all of his love songs, an overtly political act in the climate of the times. Azzo's own character is captured in a contemporaryvernacular "vita " of his daughter: Azzo's first wife, a daughter of a count Aldobrandino, was dead by 1192, by which time he had remarried to a daughter ofHumbert III of Savoy , named either Sophia or Eleanor (as per the epitaph of her daughter Beatrice). She died on3 December 1202 . On22 February 1204 Azzo remarried for the third time to Alice, daughter ofReynald de Châtillon ,Prince of Antioch . WhileAlberic de Trois-Fontaines calls "Aleydem marchionis Eystensis in Italia" as the third of the three daughters of "Raynaldus de Castellione uxor ... relictam principis Raymundi", that is, by Reynald's first wife, the daughter ofRaymond of Antioch , it is unlikely that Alice could have been born before 1167, the latest possible date for Reynald's first wife's death. She was more likely the daughter of Reynald's last wife,Stephanie de Milly .By his first wife, Azzo had a son, Aldobrandino, who succeeded his father in 1212. By his second wife he his only daughter, the aforementioned Beatrice. By his final wife he left a son, Azzo VII, who eventually succeeded his elder brother and became head of the family.
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*cite book|last=Bertoni|first=Giulio|title=I Trovatori d'Italia: Biografie, testi, tradizioni, note|location=Rome|publisher=Società Multigrafica Editrice Somu|year=1915
*cite book|last=Cabré|first=Miriam|chapter=Italian and Catalan troubadours|pp. 127–140|title=The Troubadours: an Introduction|editor=Simon B. Gaunt and Sarah Kay|location=Cambridge|publisher= Cambridge University Press|year= 1999|id=ISBN 0521574730External links
*Foundation for Medieval Genealogy: Medieval Lands Project — [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/MODENA,%20FERRARA.htm Modena/Ferrara, D. Marchesi d'Este]
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