- Isabella d'Este
Isabella d'Este (
18 May 1474 –13 February 1539 ) was "marchesa" ofMantua and one of the leading women of the ItalianRenaissance and a major cultural and political figure.Family
Born in
Ferrara , she was the first daughter of Ercole I d'Este, Duke ofFerrara , andLeonora of Naples , daughter ofFerdinand I of Naples , the Aragonese King of Naples, andIsabella of Taranto .At the age of 16 she was married to Francesco Gonzaga, Marquis of
Mantua . Her younger sister was the equally famousBeatrice d'Este , Duchess ofMilan as consort toLudovico Sforza . Isabella was related by birth or marriage to almost every ruler in Italy and is known as "The First Lady of The Renaissance". She was also known as "The First Lady of the World" and "La Prima Donna."Biography
She was well-educated in her youth in
Ferrara , as her voluminous correspondence reveals. TheEste sisters were exposed to many of the new Renaissance ideas: later Isabella became a passionate, even greedy collector of Roman sculpture and commissioned modern sculptures in the antique style. It is also common knowledge, at least among collectors of coins and numismatists, that she was an avid collector of ancient coins. After her marriage to Francesco Gonzaga, she lived inMantua . They wereAriosto 's patrons while he was writing "Orlando Furioso " and both she and her husband were greatly influenced byBaldassare Castiglione , author of "Il Cortigiano" ('The Courtier') a model for aristocratic decorum for two hundred years, and it was at his suggestion thatGiulio Romano was summoned to Mantua to enlarge the Castello and other buildings.
Under her auspices the court of Mantua became one of the most cultured in Europe. Among the other important artists, writers, thinkers, and musicians being drawn to it wereRaphael ,Andrea Mantegna , and the composersBartolomeo Tromboncino andMarchetto Cara . Her court sculptor wasPier Jacopo Alari Bonacolsi , who re-interpreted works of antiquity in small finely-finished and often partly gilded bronzes that earned him the nickname "L'Antico". She was painted twice byTitian , while a portrait drawing byLeonardo da Vinci is at the Louvre.Though there is little evidence to support that he actually painted it. A keen musician, she considered stringed instruments, such as thelute , superior to winds, which were associated with vice and strife; she also considered poetry incomplete until it was set to music, and sought the most skilled composers of the day to complete the task.Later life
Isabella played an important role in Mantua during their time of need. When her husband was captured in 1509 and held hostage in Venice, she took control of Mantua's military forces and held off their invaders until his return in 1512. While ruling, she seemed to be much tougher than her husband. Therefore, upon his return he realized that he'd been shown up and grew angry at her, allowing her to travel and live glamourously until his death of disease in 1519.After the death of her husband, Isabella ruled Mantua as regent for her son, Frederick. She began to play an important role in Italian politics, steadily advancing Mantua's position. She played a role in advancing Mantua to a Duchy, which was obtained by wiseful political use of her son's marriage contracts, and also obtaining a cardinalate for her younger son. She also showed great diplomatic and political skill in her negotiations with
Cesare Borgia , who had dispossessedGuidobaldo da Montefeltro ,duke of Urbino , the husband of her sister-in-law and good friendElisabetta Gonzaga (1502).ee also
*"
Triumph of the Virtues ", a painting by Mantegna for Isabella's "studiolo"In media
* "The Secret Book of Grazia dei Rossi," by Jacqueline Park
* The historical novel, "Rinascimento privato", by Maria Bellonci, Mondadori, 2002, narrated from the viewpoint of Isabella d'Este, first published in 1985, winning the Strega Literary Award. An English translation, "Private Renaissance: a Novel", was published in 1989 by Morrow.
* Figures prominently in "Leonardo's Swans", a novel by Karen Essex, published in 2006 by Doubleday.
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