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Maria de' Medici (1540–1557)

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Possibly Maria de’ Medici with her younger brother Antonio in a posthumous portrait by Agnolo Bronzino.

Maria de' Medici (April 3, 1540 – November 19, 1557) was the eldest child of Cosimo I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany and Eleonora di Toledo. She was a member of the famous Medici family.

Life

She was engaged to Alfonso II, Duke of Ferrara, but died at the age of seventeen, before the marriage could take place. She was educated with her brothers and was among the brightest of the children. When her brother Francesco didn't understand his Greek lesson, his tutors called on Maria to explain it to him. Maria kept herself somewhat aloof from her younger brothers and sisters. She grew into an elegant, highly educated, and decorous young woman.

According to one unreliable legend, recounted in Edgcumbe Staley's The Tragedies of the Medici, Maria was lovely and kept closely guarded from men, but managed to meet a young lover, Malatesta de' Malatesti, in secret. According to the story, she was stabbed in the heart by her father after he caught the young lovers together. Cosimo then supposedly put out the story that she had died of a spotted fever and threw her young lover in prison.

Other more accurate accounts indicate that Maria's cause of death was probably malaria. She died in Livorno. Her father mourned for her deeply and kept her portrait in his bedroom until he died; he had now lost two of his daughters, Bia de' Medici—an illegitimate child born before Cosimo's marriage to Eleonora—being the other daughter. "She was of the same disposition as myself," said Cosimo, "and she was deprived of fresh air." Her sister Lucrezia di Cosimo de Medici later married Alfonso.

Portraits

Maike Vogt-Lüerssen argued in an article in Medicea – Rivista interdisciplinare di studi medicei that portraits of Maria have been misidentified by art historians during the past 500 years. She argued that a portrait by Bronzino that is usually identified as Maria depicts her younger half-sister Virginia de' Medici, while a Bronzino portrait of a young girl in a white dress depicts Maria rather than her older half-sister, Bia de' Medici. Vogt-Lüerssen also argued that a Bronzino portrait identified as an unknown noblewoman and her son is of a teenaged Maria and her younger brother, Antonio, both of whom died young. She identified the girl as Maria because of the similarity in facial features between the subjects of each of the latter two portraits.

Ancestry

Ancestors of Maria de' Medici (1540–1557)
16. Pierfrancesco di Lorenzo de' Medici
8. Giovanni di Pierfrancesco de' Medici
17. Laudomia Acciaiuoli
4. Ludovico di Giovanni de' Medici
18. Galeazzo Maria Sforza
9. Caterina Sforza
19. Lucrezia Landriani
2. Cosimo I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany
20. Giovanni Salviati
10. Jacopo Salviati
21. Maddalena Gondi
5. Maria Salviati
22. Lorenzo de' Medici
11. Lucrezia de' Medici
23. Clarice Orsini
1. Maria de' Medici
24. García Álvarez de Toledo y Carrillo
12. Fadrique Álvarez de Toledo y Enríquez de Guzmán
25. María Enríquez de Toledo y Guzmán
6. Pedro Álvarez de Toledo y Zúñiga
26. Álvaro de Zúñiga y Guzmán (pt)
13. Isabel de Zúñiga y Pimentel
27. Leonor Pimentel y Zúñiga
3. Eleanor of Toledo
28. Rodrigo Pimentel y Quiñones
14. Luis Pimentel y Pacheco
29. María Luisa Pacheco y Portocarrero
7. María Osorio y Pimentel
30. Pedro Osorio y Fernández
15. Juana Osorio y Bazán
31. María Bazán y Quiñones

Notes

  1. ^ "The Medici Granducal Archive and the Medici Archive Project" (PDF). p. 12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 January 2006.
  2. Murphy (2008), pp. 34, 41
  3. Staley, Edgcumbe The Tragedies of the Medici Archived 2007-12-17 at the Wayback Machine
  4. Murphy (2008), p. 63
  5. Vogt-Lüerssen, Maike: The True Faces of the Daughters and Sons of Cosimo I de' Medici
  6. ^ Cesati, Franco (1999). Medici. Firenze: La Mandragora. p. 75. ISBN 88-85957-36-6.
  7. ^ Ady, Cecilia Mary (1907). A History of Milan Under the Sforza. Methuen & Company. pp. 109, 334. Retrieved 26 June 2018.
  8. ^ Tomas, Natalie R. (5 July 2017). The Medici Women: Gender and Power in Renaissance Florence. Taylor & Francis. p. 248. ISBN 9781351885829. Retrieved 26 June 2018.
  9. ^ Brown, Alison (1979). "Pierfrancesco de' Medici, 1430-1476: A Radical Alternative to Elder Medicean Supremacy?". Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes. 42: 81–103. doi:10.2307/751086. JSTOR 751086.
  10. ^ Ehrenberg, Richard (1896). Die Geldmächte des 16. Jahrhunderts [The money powers of the 16th century] (in German). G. Fischer. p. 308. Retrieved 26 June 2018.
  11. ^ Staley, Edgcumbe. "The First Tyrannicide". The Tragedies of the Medici.

References

  • Murphy, Caroline P. (2008). Murder of a Medici Princess. USA: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-531439-5
  • Staley, Edgcumbe The Tragedies of the Medici
  • Schultes, Lothar (2017): "Der Tod und das Mädchen – Bia oder Maria de' Medici?" In: Mitteilungen der Gesellschaft für vergleichende Kunstforschung in Wien, 69, Nr. 1/2, February 2017, p. 1– 6.
Tuscan princesses by birth
1st generation
2nd generation
3rd generation
4th generation
  • none
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6th generation
  • none
7th generation
8th generation
9th generation
10th generation
11th generation
12th generation
* also an archduchess of Austria
^did not have a royal or noble birth
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