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Cosimo III de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany

Cosimo III de' Medici (14 August 1642 – 31 October 1723[1]) was Grand Duke of Tuscany from 1670 until his death in 1723, the sixth and penultimate from the House of Medici. He reigned from 1670 to 1723, and was the elder son of Grand Duke Ferdinando II. Cosimo's 53-year-long reign, the longest in Tuscan history, was marked by a series of laws that regulated prostitution and May celebrations.[clarification needed] His reign also witnessed Tuscany's deterioration to previously unknown economic lows. He was succeeded by his elder surviving son, Gian Gastone, when he died, in 1723.[2]

Cosimo III
Cosimo in granducal robes, with Tuscan regalia
Grand Duke of Tuscany
Reign23 May 1670 – 31 October 1723
PredecessorFerdinando II
SuccessorGian Gastone I
Born14 August 1642
Pitti Palace, Florence, Tuscany
Died31 October 1723(1723-10-31) (aged 81)
Pitti Palace, Florence, Tuscany
Burial
SpouseMarguerite Louise d'Orléans
Issue
Detail
Ferdinando, Grand Prince of Tuscany
Anna Maria Luisa, Electress Palatine
Gian Gastone, Grand Duke of Tuscany
Names
Cosimo de' Medici
HouseMedici
FatherFerdinando II de' Medici
MotherVittoria Della Rovere
ReligionCatholicism

He married Marguerite Louise d'Orléans, a cousin of Louis XIV. The marriage was solemnized by proxy in the King's Chapel at the Louvre, on Sunday, 17 April 1661. It was a marriage fraught with tribulation. Marguerite Louise eventually abandoned Tuscany for the Convent of Montmartre. Together, they had three children: Ferdinando in 1663, Anna Maria Luisa, Electress Palatine, in 1667, and Gian Gastone, the last Medicean ruler of Tuscany, in 1671.

In later life, he attempted to have Anna Maria Luisa recognised as the universal heiress of Tuscany, but Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, would not allow it because Tuscany was an imperial fief, and he felt he alone could alter the Tuscan laws of succession. All Cosimo's efforts to salvage the plan foundered, and in 1737, upon his younger son's death, Tuscany passed to the House of Lorraine.

Early life

Heir to the throne

Cosimo de' Medici was born on 14 August 1642, the eldest surviving son of Vittoria della Rovere of Urbino, and Ferdinando II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany. Their previous two children had died shortly after birth.[3] Grand Duke Ferdinando wished to give his son the finest scientific education available, but the pious Grand Duchess Vittoria opposed. The latter got her way. Volunnio Bandinelli, a Sienese theologian, was appointed Cosimo's tutor. His character was analogous to the Grand Duchess's.[4]

As a youth, Cosimo revelled in sports. His uncle Gian Carlo once wrote to another family member with "news that should surprise you....The young prince [Cosimo] has killed a goose in mid-air."[4] Cosimo, at the age of 11, killed five pigs with five shots.[4] The Luchese Ambassador praised the young Cosimo to the skies. His successor, however, noticed a somewhat different person, whom he described as "melancholy".[5]

By 1659, Cosimo had ceased smiling in public.[5] He frequently visited places of religious worship and surrounded himself with friars and priests, concerning Grand Duke Ferdinando.[5] Cosimo's only sibling, Francesco Maria de' Medici, the fruit of his parents' brief reconciliation, was born the next year.[6]

Marriage

 
Marguerite Louise d'Orléans, Cosimo's wife, after Louis Edouard Rioult

Marguerite Louise d'Orléans, a granddaughter of Henry IV of France, was married to Cosimo by proxy on 17 April 1661 at the Palais du Louvre.[7] She arrived in Tuscany on 12 June, disembarking at Livorno, and made her formal entry to Florence on 20 June to much pageantry.[8] As a wedding gift, Grand Duke Ferdinando presented her with a pearl the "size of a small pigeon's egg."[9]

The marriage was unhappy from the start.[10] A few nights following the formal entry, Marguerite Louise demanded the Tuscan crown jewels for her own personal use; Cosimo refused. The jewels that she did manage to extract from Cosimo were almost smuggled out of Tuscany by her attendants but for the efforts of Ferdinando's agents.[10] Marguerite Louise's extravagances perturbed Ferdinando because the Tuscan exchequer was nearly bankrupt; it was so empty that when the Wars of Castro mercenaries were paid for, the state could no longer afford to pay interest on government bonds.[11][12] Accordingly, the interest rate was lowered by 0.75%. The economy, too, was so decrepit that barter trade became prevalent in rural marketplaces.[13] In August 1663 Marguerite Louise delivered a boy: Ferdinando. Two more children followed: Anna Maria Luisa in 1667 and Gian Gastone in 1671.

Ferdinando beseeched Louis XIV to do something about his daughter-in-law's behaviour; he sent the Comte de Saint-Mesme. Marguerite Louise wanted to return to France, and Saint-Mesme sympathised with this, as did much of the French court, so he left without finding a solution to the heir's domestic disharmony, incensing both Ferdinando and Louis XIV.[14][15] She humiliated Cosimo at every chance she got: she insisted on employing French cooks, as she feared the Medici would poison her. In September 1664 Marguerite Louise abandoned her apartments in the Pitti, the grand ducal palace. Cosimo moved her into Villa Lapeggi. Here, she was watched by forty soldiers, and six courtiers, appointed by Cosimo, had to follow her everywhere.[16] The next year she reconciled with the grand ducal family, and gave birth to Anna Maria Luisa, future Electress Palatine, in August 1667. The delicate rapprochement that existed between Marguerite Louise and the rest of the family collapsed after Anna Maria Luisa's birth, when Marguerite Louise caught smallpox and decided to blame Cosimo for all her problems.[17]

European travels

 
Cosimo around 1660, by Sustermans

Grand Duke Ferdinando encouraged Cosimo to go on a European tour to distract him from Marguerite Louise's renewed hostility. On 28 October 1667 he arrived in Tyrol, where he was entertained by his aunt, Anna de' Medici, Archduchess of Further Austria. He took a barge down the Rhine to Amsterdam, where he was well received by the art community, meeting painter Rembrandt van Rijn.[18][19] From Amsterdam, he travelled to Hamburg, where awaiting him was the Queen of Sweden. He reached Florence in May 1668.[19]

The excursion did Cosimo good. His health was better than ever, as was his self-esteem.[17] His wife's unrelenting enmity towards him, however, undid the aforesaid progressions. Grand Duke Ferdinando, once again, feared for his health, so he sent him on a second tour in September 1668.[17]

When he went to Spain, the disabled King, Carlos II, received him in a private interview.[17] By January 1669, he had arrived in Portugal, and expelled due to an uncomfortable storm the ship landed in Kinsale, Ireland. From there they went to England, where he met Charles II. Samuel Pepys described him as "a very jolly and good comely man."[20] Cosimo was amiably welcomed by the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, for his father's perceived protection of Galileo from the Inquisition.[20] He met with scientists such as Robert Hooke, Henry Oldenburg, Isaac Newton, and Robert Boyle; Cosimo bought a machine, built by Samuel Morland. In London, he stayed at St. Albans House as a guest of the Earl of St Albans.[21]

On the return, he travelled again through the Dutch Republic; this time he bought a self-portrait which Rembrandt had finished in the meantime. Passing Aachen, Cosimo visited Louis XIV and his mother-in-law, Marguerite of Lorraine, in Paris. He arrived back in Florence on 1 November 1669.[22] His travels were described in a detailed journal by his travelling companion Lorenzo, Conte Magalotti (1637-1712).[23]

Reign

Departure of Marguerite Louise

Ferdinando II died on 23 May 1670 of apoplexy and dropsy and was interred in the Basilica of San Lorenzo, the Medicean necropolis.[24] At the time of his death, the population of the grand duchy was 720,594 souls; the streets were lined with grass and the buildings on the verge of collapse in Pisa, while Siena was virtually abandoned.[25]

Grand Duchess Marguerite Louise and Dowager Grand Duchess Vittoria vied with each other for power. The Dowager, after a protracted battle, triumphed:[25] The Grand Duke assigned his mother the day-to-day administration of the state. Cosimo III commenced his reign with the utmost fervour, attempting to salvage the sinking exchequer and allowing his subjects to petition him for arbitration in disputes.[26] The novelty soon wore off, however.[26] Vittoria, Cosimo having lost his taste for administration, was further empowered by admission to the Grand Duke's Consulta (Privy Council).[26] Marguerite Louise, deprived of any political influence, went about arranging Prince Ferdinando's education and arguing with Vittoria over precedence, which only further encamped Cosimo on his mother's side.[26][27] In the midst of this, on the first anniversary of Ferdinando II's death, Gian Gastone was born to the grand ducal couple.[28]

Marguerite Louise feigned illness at the start of 1672: Louis XIV send Alliot le Vieux, Anne of Austria's personal physician, to tend to her.[28] Dr. Alliot, unlike Saint-Mesmeê, did not comply with Marguerite Louise's plot to be sent to France, ostensibly for the thermal waters to ameliorate her "illness."[28] In December she went on a pilgrimage to Villa di Pratolino—she never returned.[29] Marguerite Louise, instead of going back to Florence, chose to live in semi-retirement at Poggio a Caiano. The Grand Duke eventually consented, but feared she may abscond, so she was not allowed to go to leave without his permission and when she went riding she was to be escorted by four soldiers. All the doors and windows of the villa had to be secured, too.[30] The saga between them continued until 26 December 1674, after all attempts at conciliation failed, a beleaguered Cosimo agreed to allow his wife to depart for the Convent of Montmartre, France. The contract signed that day renounced her rights as a Princess of the Blood and with them the dignity Royal Highness. Cosimo granted her a pension of 80,000 livres in compensation.[31] She departed the next June, after stripping bare Poggio a Caiano of any valuables.

Persecution of Jews and the Lorrainer succession

Without Marguerite Louise to occupy his attention, Cosimo turned to persecuting the Jewish population of Tuscany. Sexual intercourse between Jews and Christians was proscribed, and by a law promulgated on 1 July 1677, Christians could not work in establishments owned by Jews. If they did regardless, a fine of 50 crowns was incurred; if the person in question had insufficient funds, he was liable to be tortured on the rack; and if he was deemed unfit for torture, a four-month prison sentence was substituted.[32] The anti-Semitic roster was supplemented by further declarations on 16 June 1679 and 12 December 1680 banning Jews from visiting Christian prostitutes and co-habitation, respectively.[33]

Meanwhile, in Lorraine, Charles V was without an heir and Marguerite-Louise, as the daughter of a Lorrainer princess, delegated the right to succeed to the duchy to her elder son, Ferdinando. Grand Duke Cosimo tried to get his son international recognition as heir-apparent, to no avail.[34] Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor, supported Cosimo's claim, not wanting to see Lorraine revert to France. The Treaties of Nijmegen, which concluded the Franco-Dutch War, did not rubber stamp Cosimo's ambitions, as he had wished. The Lorrainer question was concluded with the birth of a son to Charles V in 1679, ending Cosimo's dream of a Medici cadet branch, dreams which were to be revived in 1697 by Gian Gastone's marriage to an heiress.[35]

1679–1685

 
A contemporary piastra bearing the effigy of Cosimo III. Latin inscription: COSMVS III D[EI] G[RATIA] MAG[NVS] DVX ETRVR[AE]. "Cosimo III, by the Grace of God, Grand Duke of Etruria (Tuscany)"

Cosimo kept himself apprised of his wife's conduct in France through the Tuscan emissary, Gondi.[36] Marguerite Louise frequently requested more money from the Grand Duke, while he was scandalised by her behaviour: she took up with a groom named Gentilly.[35][37] In January 1680 the Abbess of Montemarte asked Cosimo to pay for the construction of a reservoir, following a scandal at the convent: The Grand Duchess had placed her pet dog's basket in close proximity to the fire, and the basket burst into flames, but instead of trying to extinguish it, she urged her fellow nuns to flee for their lives. On previous occasions, she had explicitly stated that she would burn down the convent if the Abbess disagreed with her, too, making the Abbess view the accident as intentional.[38] Cosimo, unable to do much else for fear of upsetting Louis XIV, reproached her in a series of letters. Another scandal erupted that summer, the Grand Duchess bathed nude, as was the custom, in a local river. Cosimo exploded with anger upon hearing of this.[39] Louis XIV, tiring of Florence's petitions, retorted: "Since Cosimo had consented to the retirement of his wife into France, he had virtually relinquished all right to interfere in her conduct." Following Louis XIV's rebuff, Cosimo fell grievously ill, only to be roused by Francesco Redi, his physician, who helped him reform his ways so illness would never strike him again.[40] It was after this event that Cosimo finally stopped bothering with the Grand Duchess's life. In 1682 Cosimo III appointed his brother, Francesco Maria de' Medici, Governor of Siena.

 
Cosimo III, Grand Duke of Tuscany, engraving by Adriaen Haelwegh before 1691, from the collection of the National Gallery of Art

The Holy Roman Emperor requested Cosimo's participation in the Great Turkish War. At first, he resisted, but then sent a consignment of munitions to Trieste, and offered to join the Holy League.[41] They defeated the Turks at the Battle of Vienna in September 1683. To Cosimo's dismay, "many scandals and disorders continued to occur in the matter of carnal intercourse between Jews and Christian women, and especially putting their children out to be suckled by Christian nurses."[42] The Grand Duke, wishing to supplement the "foe of heretics" persona he acquired after Vienna, outlawed the practice of Jews using Christian wet nurses and declared that if a Christian father wished to have his half-Jewish child suckled by a Christian nurse he must first apply to the government for a permit in writing.[42] In addition, public executions increased to six per day.[43] Gilbert Burnet, Bishop of Salisbury and a famed memorialist, visited this Florence in November 1685, of which he wrote that "[Florence] is much sunk from what it was, for they do not reckon that there are fifty thousand souls in it; the other states, that were once great republic, such as Siena and Pisa, while they retained their liberty, are now shrunk almost into nothing..."[42]

Marriage of the Grand Prince Ferdinando

 
Ferdinando de' Medici, Cosimo's elder son, after Niccolò Cassana.

Cosimo went about arranging a marriage for his elder son, Ferdinando, in 1686. He ushered him into the marriage as the other Tuscan princes, Francesco Maria de' Medici and Gian Gastone de' Medici, were sickly and unlikely to produce children.[44] The main suitors were: Violante of Bavaria, a Bavarian princess, Isabel Luisa of Portugal (the heiress-apparent of Portugal), and the Elector Palatine's daughters.[44]

Negotiations with the Portuguese were intense, but stalled over certain clauses: Ferdinando and Isabel Luisa would live in Lisbon, Ferdinando would renounce his right to the Tuscan throne unless the Infanta's father, King Peter II, remarried and had male issue, and if Isabel Luisa became Queen of Portugal, and Cosimo III, Gian Gastone and Francesco Maria died without any male heirs, Tuscany would be annexed by Portugal.[44] Ferdinando rejected it outright with the fullest support of Louis XIV, his great-uncle. Cosimo's eyes now fell upon Violente of Bavaria. Choosing her would strengthen ties between France—where Violente's sister was the dauphine—and Bavaria. There was only one obstacle in the way, Ferdinando II, Cosimo's father, impartially advised Violente's father, Ferdinand Maria, to invest a huge sum into a bank. Soon after the Elector deposited the sum, the bank collapsed.[44] Ferdinand Maria still had sore feelings; Cosimo consented to the reduction of her dowry accordingly to reimburse the Elector. Ferdinando was unimpressed with his wife. Violente, however, electrified the Grand Duke. He wrote, "I have never known, nor do I think the world can produce, a disposition so perfect..."[45]

Royal Highness

Duke Victor Amadeus II of Savoy procured the style Royal Highness from Spain and the Holy Roman Empire in June 1689, infuriating Grand Duke Cosimo, who complained to Vienna that a duke was inferior status to a grand duke, and proclaimed it "unjustly exalted...since the House of Savoy had not increased to the point of vying with kings, nor had the House of Medici diminished in splendour and possessions, so there was no reason for promoting one and degrading the other." Cosimo also played upon all the times Tuscany provided financial and military assistance to the Empire. The Emperor, anxious to avoid friction, suggested that Anna Maria Luisa should marry the Elector Palatine to compensate for the affront.[46] The Elector Palatine, two years later, several months before his marriage to Anna Maria Luisa, went about acquiring the aforesaid style for Cosimo and his family, despite the fact that they had no claim to any kingdom.[47] Henceforth, Cosimo was His Royal Highness The Most Serene Grand Duke of Tuscany.[48]

1691–1694

 
Cosimo III in old age, by Jan Frans van Douven

Louis XIV was angered by Anna Maria Luisa's marriage to his sworn foe. Cosimo, after much coaxing, persuaded him otherwise.[49] On 9 October 1691, France, England, Spain, and the United Provinces guaranteed the neutrality of the Tuscan port of Livorno.[49] The Empire, meanwhile, was attempting to extract feudal dues from Cosimo, and ordering him to ally with Austria.[49] The Grand Duke replied that if he did so France would send a naval fleet from Toulon to occupy his state; the Emperor reluctantly accepted this excuse. Tuscany was not alone in its feudal ties to the Empire: The rest of Italy was also bound to pay the Emperor, but at a much higher magnitude than Cosimo, who merely paid on his few undisputed Imperial fiefs.[49]

Cosimo, not having much else to do, instituted more moral laws. Young men were not allowed to "enter into houses to make love to girls, and let them dally at doors and windows, is a great incentive to rapes, abortions, and infanticides..." If a man did not comply, he was liable to receive enormous fines.[50] This coincided with a new wave of taxes that stagnated Tuscany's already declining economy. Harold Acton recounts that a bale of wool "sent from Leghorn and Cortona had to pass through ten intermediate customs."[51] The Grand Duke oversaw the establishment of the Office of Public Decency, whose goal was to regulate prostitution, also.[52] Prostitutes were oft thrown into the Stinche, a jail for women of that profession, for years, with scant food, if they could not afford the fines levied on them by the Office of Public Decency. Evening permits and exemptions were available for those willing to pay six crowns per month.[53]

Cosimo resurrected a law from the regency of his father which banned Students from attending college outside Tuscany, thus strengthening the Jesuits' hold on education.[54] A contemporary wrote that not a single man in Florence could read or write Greek, a stark contrast to those of the old republic.[55] In a letter dated 10 October 1691, Cosimo's personal secretary wrote, "By the Serene Master's express command I must inform Your Excellencies that His Highness will allow no professor in his university at Pisa to read or teach, in public or in private, by writing or voice, the philosophy of Democritus, or of atoms, or any save that of Aristotle."[54]

Ferdinando and Violante, despite being married for over five years, had not produced any offspring as of 1694. The Grand Duke responded by declaring special days of devotion, and erecting a "fertility column" in the Cavour district of Florence, an act which attracted popular ridicule.[56] Ferdinando would not attend to Violante, instead lavishing his attentions on his favourite, a castrated Venetian, Cecchino de Castris. The same year, Dowager Grand Duchess Vittoria, who had once exercised a great deal of influence over Cosimo, died. Her allodial possessions, the Duchies of Montefeltro and Rovere, inherited from her grandfather, the last Duke of Urbino, were bestowed upon her younger son, Francesco Maria de' Medici.[57]

Marriage of Gian Gastone

Cosimo became perturbed by the question of the Tuscan Succession following the death of his mother. Ferdinando was lacking any children, as was Anna Maria Luisa. The latter, who was high in her father's estimation, put forward a German princess to marry Gian Gastone. The lady in question, Anna Maria Franziska of Saxe-Lauenburg, nominal heiress of the Duchy of Saxe-Lauenburg, was extremely wealthy. Cosimo once again dreamed of a Medici cadet branch in a foreign land. They were married on 2 July 1697. Gian Gastone and herself did not get along; he eventually abandoned her in 1708.[57]

Dawn of the 18th century

 
Portrait of Gian Gastone de' Medici

The 17th century did not end well for the Grand Duke: he still had no grandchildren, France and Spain would not acknowledge his royal status and the Duke of Lorraine declared himself King of Jerusalem without any opposition.[58] In May 1700 Cosimo embarked on a pilgrimage to Rome. Pope Innocent XII, after much persuasion, created Cosimo a Canon of Saint John in the Lateran, in order to allow him to view the Volto Santo, a cloth thought to have been used by Christ before his crucifixion. Delighted by his warm reception from the Roman people, Cosimo left Rome with a fragment of Saint Francis Xavier's bowels.[59]

Carlos II of Spain died in November 1700. His death, without any ostensible heir, brought about the War of the Spanish Succession, which involved all of the European powers. Tuscany, however, remained neutral.[60] Cosimo recognised Philip, duc d'Anjou, as Carlos's successor, whose administration refused to sanction the Trattamento Reale reserved for the royal family.[61] The Grand Duke, soon after the royal altercation, accepted the investiture of the nominal Spanish fief of Siena from Philip, thereby confirming his status as a Spanish vassal.[62]

Gian Gastone was consuming money at a rapid pace in Bohemia, wracking up titanic debts. The Grand Duke, alarmed, sent the Marquis Rinnuci to scrutinise the Prince's debts. Rinnuci was abhorred to discover that Jan Josef, Count of Breuner and Archbishop of Prague, was among his creditors.[63] In an attempt to salvage Gian Gastone from shipwreck, Rinnuci tried to coerce Anna Maria Franziska to return to Florence, where Gian Gastone longed to be.[64] She blankly refused. Her confessor, hoping to keep her in Bohemia, regaled her with tales of the "poisoned" Eleanor of Toledo and Isabella Orsini, other Medici consorts.

Tuscan succession and later years

 
The Grand Duke in the latter years of life

Cosimo's piety had not faded in the slightest since his youth. He visited the Florentine Convent of Saint Mark on a daily basis. A contemporary recounted that "The Grand Duke knows all the monks of Saint Mark at least by sight..."[65] This, however, did not occupy all his efforts: He was still trying to coax Anna Maria Franziska to Florence, where he believed her caprices would cease.[66] Additionally, in 1719, he claimed that God asked him to pledge the Grand Duchy to "the governance and absolute dominion of the most glorious Saint Joseph".[67]

Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor, died in May 1705. His successor, Joseph I, took to government with a burst of ebullience. Following the Battle of Turin, a decisive Imperial victory, the Emperor sent an envoy to Florence to collect feudal dues, amounting to 300,000 doubloons, an exorbitant sum; and to force Cosimo to recognise the Archduke Charles as King of Spain. Fearing a Franco-Dutch invasion, Cosimo III refused to recognise Charles's title, but he did pay a fraction of the dues.[68]

The Grand Prince Ferdinando was grievously ill with syphilis; he had become prematurely senile, not recognising anybody who came to see him. Cosimo despaired. He successfully requisitioned the assistance of Pope Clement XI with Anna Maria Franziska. He sent the Archbishop of Prague to reproach her. She cited the example of Marguerite-Louise, adding that the Pope did not bother himself to machinate a reconciliation.[69] Cosimo wrote desperate missives to the Electress Palatine: "I can tell you now, in case you are not informed, that we have no money in Florence..." He added that "two or three-quarters of my pension are fallen into arrears".[69]

Gian Gastone arrived in Tuscany, without his wife, in 1708.[70] The Emperor, thinking it unlikely that any male heirs were to be born to the Medici, prepared to occupy Tuscany, under the pretext of Medici descent.[71] He intimated that upon the Grand Prince's death the Tuscans would rebel against Cosimo's autocratic government. Cosimo, in an act of desperation, had Francesco Maria, the Medici family cardinal, renounce his religious vows and marry Eleanor of Gonzaga, the youngest child of the incumbent Duke of Guastalla. Two years later, Francesco Maria died, taking with him any hope of an heir.

 
The Electress Anna Maria Luisa, after van Douven

Without any ostensible heir, Cosimo contemplated restoring the Republic of Florence.[72] However, this presented many obstacles. Florence was nominally an Imperial fief, and Siena a Spanish one.[73] The plan was about to be approved by the powers convened at Geertruidenberg when Cosimo abruptly added that if himself and his two sons predeceased the Electress Palatine she should succeed and the republic be re-instituted following her death.[74] The proposal sank, and was ultimately put on hold following Emperor Joseph's death.

Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, agreed to an audience with the Electress Palatine in December 1711.[75] He concluded that the Electress's succession brought no quandary, but added that he must succeed her. Cosimo and herself were abhorred by his reply. Realising how unforthcoming he had been, Charles wrote to Florence agreeing to the project, mentioning but one clause: the Tuscan state must not be bequeathed to the enemies of the House of Austria.[76] At the culmination of the War of the Spanish Succession, at the Treaties of Utrecht and Rattstatt, Cosimo did not vie for international assurances for the Electress's succession. An inaction he would later grow to lament.

The Grand Prince finally succumbed to syphilis on 30 October 1713. Cosimo deposited a succession bill in the Senate, Tuscany's nominal legislature, on 26 November. The bill promulgated that if Gian Gastone predeceased the Electress Palatine, she should ascend to all the states of the Grand Duchy. It was greeted with a standing ovation by the senators. Charles VI was furious. He retorted that the Grand Duchy was an Imperial fief, and that he alone had the prerogative to choose who would succeed. Elisabeth Farnese, heiress to the Duchy of Parma and the second wife of Philip V of Spain, as a great-granddaughter of Margherita de' Medici, exercised a claim to Tuscany.[77]

In May 1716, the Emperor assured the Electress and the Grand Duke that there was no insurmountable obstacle preventing her accession, but that Austria and Tuscany must soon reach an agreement regarding which royal house which was to succeed the Medici.[78] As an incentive to accelerate Cosimo's reply, the Emperor hinted that Tuscany would reap territorial advancements.[79] In June 1717 Cosimo declared his wish that the House of Este should succeed. Charles VI's promises never materialised. In 1718 he repudiated Cosimo's decision, declaring a union between Tuscany and Modena (the Este lands) unacceptable. On 4 April 1718 England, France and the Dutch Republic (and later Austria) selected Don Carlos of Spain, the eldest child of Elisabeth Farnese and Philip V of Spain, as the Tuscan heir. By 1722 the Electress was not even acknowledged as heiress, and Cosimo was reduced to a spectator at the conferences for Tuscany's future.[80]

Johann Wilhelm, Elector Palatine died in June 1717. Anna Maria Luisa returned home in October 1717, bringing with her vast treasures. Cosimo created his elder son's widow, Violante of Bavaria, Governess of Siena as to clearly define her precedence. That did not stop the two ladies from quarrelling, as was his intention.[81] Cosimo discontinued hunting following an accident in January 1717. He accidentally shot, and killed, a man. He was so distraught, that he wished to be tried by the Knights of the Order of Saint Stephen.[81] The state of the Grand Duchy reflected the decay of its ruler; in a 1718 military review, the army numbered less than 3000 men, some of whom were infirm, and aged 70.[82] The navy composed of three galleys, and the crew 198.[83] In September 1721, the Grand Duchess died; instead of willing her possessions to her children, as prescribed by the 1674 agreement; they went to the Princess of Epinoy.

Death and legacy

 
Bust of Cosimo III de' Medici, 1717-1718 CE. By Giovanni Battista Figgini. Marble, from Italy, Florence. The Victoria and Albert Museum, London

On 22 September 1723, the Grand Duke experienced a two-hour-long fit of trembling. His condition steadily deteriorated. Cosimo was attended by the Papal nuncio and the Archbishop of Pisa on his deathbed. The latter pronounced, "that this Prince required little assistance in order to die well, for he had studied and cared for nothing else throughout the long course of his life, but to prepare himself for death". On 25 October 1723, six days before his death, Grand Duke Cosimo disseminated a final proclamation commanding that Tuscany shall stay independent; Anna Maria Luisa shall succeed uninhibited to Tuscany after Gian Gastone; the Grand Duke reserves the right to choose his successor,[84] but these stanzas were completely ignored. Six days later, on All Hallow's Eve, he died.[citation needed] He was interred in the Basilica of San Lorenzo, the Medici necropolis.[citation needed]

Cosimo III left Tuscany one of the poorest nations in Europe; the treasury empty and the people weary of religious bigotry, the state itself was reduced to a gaming chip in European affairs. Among his enduring edicts is the establishment of the Chianti wine region. Gian Gastone repealed Cosimo's Jewish persecution laws, and eased tariffs and customs. Cosimo's inability to uphold Tuscany's independence led to the succession of the House of Lorraine upon Gian Gastone's death in 1737.

Issue

Cosimo III had three children with Marguerite Louise d'Orléans, a granddaughter of Henry IV of France:

  1. Ferdinando de' Medici, Grand Prince of Tuscany (b.1663 d.1713) married Violante Beatrice of Bavaria, no issue;
  2. Anna Maria Luisa de' Medici, Electress Palatine (b.1667 d.1743) married Johann Wilhelm, Elector Palatine, no issue;
  3. Gian Gastone de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany (b.1671 d.1737) married Anna Maria Franziska of Saxe-Lauenburg, no issue.

Cosimo did not enjoy a harmonious relationship with his elder son, Ferdinando. They disagreed about Cosimo's bigoted ideology and his monthly allowance.[85] Cosimo married him to a Bavarian princess, Violante Beatrice. This union was exceedingly discontent, and produced no offspring. Anna Maria Luisa was the Grand Duke's favourite child. She married Johann Wilhelm, Elector Palatine, and like her brother, had no issue. Gian Gastone, Cosimo's eventual successor, despised his father and his court. Anna Maria Luisa arranged for him to marry Anna Maria Franziska of Saxe-Lauenburg, a union that produced no children.

Honours

Styles of
Cosimo III de' Medici, Most Serene Grand Duke of Tuscany
 
Reference styleHis Royal Highness[48]
Spoken styleYour Royal Highness

  23 May 1670 – 31 October 1721: Grand Master of the Holy Military Order of St. Stephen Pope and Martyr[86]

Ancestors

Citations

  1. ^ Guarini, Elena Fasano (1984). "COSIMO III de' Medici, granduca di Toscana". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani. Vol. 30.
  2. ^ Hale, pp. 185–186.
  3. ^ Acton, p. 25.
  4. ^ a b c Acton, p. 44.
  5. ^ a b c Acton, p. 45.
  6. ^ Acton, p. 46.
  7. ^ Acton, p. 62.
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Bibliography

  • Acton, Harold: The Last Medici, Macmillan, London, 1980, ISBN 0-333-29315-0
  • Strathern, Paul: The Medici: Godfathers of the Renaissance, Vintage books, London, 2003, ISBN 978-0-09-952297-3
  • Hale, J. R.: Florence and the Medici, Orion books, London, 1977, ISBN 1-84212-456-0
  • van de Wetering, Ernst: Rembrandt: The Painter at Work, Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam, 1997 ISBN 978-90-5356-239-0
  • Setton, Kenneth M.: Western Hostility to Islam and Prophecies of Turkish Doom, Amer Philosophical Society, 1992, ISBN 978-0-87169-201-6

External links

  • Timeline of the events of Cosimo III's reign by Google
Cosimo III de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany
Born: 14 August 1642 Died: 31 October 1723
Regnal titles
Preceded by Grand Duke of Tuscany
1670–1723
Succeeded by

cosimo, medici, grand, duke, tuscany, cosimo, medici, august, 1642, october, 1723, grand, duke, tuscany, from, 1670, until, death, 1723, sixth, penultimate, from, house, medici, reigned, from, 1670, 1723, elder, grand, duke, ferdinando, cosimo, year, long, rei. Cosimo III de Medici 14 August 1642 31 October 1723 1 was Grand Duke of Tuscany from 1670 until his death in 1723 the sixth and penultimate from the House of Medici He reigned from 1670 to 1723 and was the elder son of Grand Duke Ferdinando II Cosimo s 53 year long reign the longest in Tuscan history was marked by a series of laws that regulated prostitution and May celebrations clarification needed His reign also witnessed Tuscany s deterioration to previously unknown economic lows He was succeeded by his elder surviving son Gian Gastone when he died in 1723 2 Cosimo IIICosimo in granducal robes with Tuscan regaliaGrand Duke of TuscanyReign23 May 1670 31 October 1723PredecessorFerdinando IISuccessorGian Gastone IBorn14 August 1642Pitti Palace Florence TuscanyDied31 October 1723 1723 10 31 aged 81 Pitti Palace Florence TuscanyBurialBasilica of San Lorenzo TuscanySpouseMarguerite Louise d OrleansIssueDetailFerdinando Grand Prince of TuscanyAnna Maria Luisa Electress PalatineGian Gastone Grand Duke of TuscanyNamesCosimo de MediciHouseMediciFatherFerdinando II de MediciMotherVittoria Della RovereReligionCatholicismHe married Marguerite Louise d Orleans a cousin of Louis XIV The marriage was solemnized by proxy in the King s Chapel at the Louvre on Sunday 17 April 1661 It was a marriage fraught with tribulation Marguerite Louise eventually abandoned Tuscany for the Convent of Montmartre Together they had three children Ferdinando in 1663 Anna Maria Luisa Electress Palatine in 1667 and Gian Gastone the last Medicean ruler of Tuscany in 1671 In later life he attempted to have Anna Maria Luisa recognised as the universal heiress of Tuscany but Charles VI Holy Roman Emperor would not allow it because Tuscany was an imperial fief and he felt he alone could alter the Tuscan laws of succession All Cosimo s efforts to salvage the plan foundered and in 1737 upon his younger son s death Tuscany passed to the House of Lorraine Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Heir to the throne 1 2 Marriage 1 3 European travels 2 Reign 2 1 Departure of Marguerite Louise 2 2 Persecution of Jews and the Lorrainer succession 2 3 1679 1685 2 4 Marriage of the Grand Prince Ferdinando 2 5 Royal Highness 2 6 1691 1694 2 7 Marriage of Gian Gastone 2 8 Dawn of the 18th century 2 9 Tuscan succession and later years 2 10 Death and legacy 3 Issue 4 Honours 5 Ancestors 6 Citations 7 Bibliography 8 External linksEarly life EditHeir to the throne Edit Ferdinando II de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany Cosimo III s father and Vittoria Della Rovere his mother by Justus Sustermans Cosimo de Medici was born on 14 August 1642 the eldest surviving son of Vittoria della Rovere of Urbino and Ferdinando II de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany Their previous two children had died shortly after birth 3 Grand Duke Ferdinando wished to give his son the finest scientific education available but the pious Grand Duchess Vittoria opposed The latter got her way Volunnio Bandinelli a Sienese theologian was appointed Cosimo s tutor His character was analogous to the Grand Duchess s 4 As a youth Cosimo revelled in sports His uncle Gian Carlo once wrote to another family member with news that should surprise you The young prince Cosimo has killed a goose in mid air 4 Cosimo at the age of 11 killed five pigs with five shots 4 The Luchese Ambassador praised the young Cosimo to the skies His successor however noticed a somewhat different person whom he described as melancholy 5 By 1659 Cosimo had ceased smiling in public 5 He frequently visited places of religious worship and surrounded himself with friars and priests concerning Grand Duke Ferdinando 5 Cosimo s only sibling Francesco Maria de Medici the fruit of his parents brief reconciliation was born the next year 6 Marriage Edit Marguerite Louise d Orleans Cosimo s wife after Louis Edouard Rioult Marguerite Louise d Orleans a granddaughter of Henry IV of France was married to Cosimo by proxy on 17 April 1661 at the Palais du Louvre 7 She arrived in Tuscany on 12 June disembarking at Livorno and made her formal entry to Florence on 20 June to much pageantry 8 As a wedding gift Grand Duke Ferdinando presented her with a pearl the size of a small pigeon s egg 9 The marriage was unhappy from the start 10 A few nights following the formal entry Marguerite Louise demanded the Tuscan crown jewels for her own personal use Cosimo refused The jewels that she did manage to extract from Cosimo were almost smuggled out of Tuscany by her attendants but for the efforts of Ferdinando s agents 10 Marguerite Louise s extravagances perturbed Ferdinando because the Tuscan exchequer was nearly bankrupt it was so empty that when the Wars of Castro mercenaries were paid for the state could no longer afford to pay interest on government bonds 11 12 Accordingly the interest rate was lowered by 0 75 The economy too was so decrepit that barter trade became prevalent in rural marketplaces 13 In August 1663 Marguerite Louise delivered a boy Ferdinando Two more children followed Anna Maria Luisa in 1667 and Gian Gastone in 1671 Ferdinando beseeched Louis XIV to do something about his daughter in law s behaviour he sent the Comte de Saint Mesme Marguerite Louise wanted to return to France and Saint Mesme sympathised with this as did much of the French court so he left without finding a solution to the heir s domestic disharmony incensing both Ferdinando and Louis XIV 14 15 She humiliated Cosimo at every chance she got she insisted on employing French cooks as she feared the Medici would poison her In September 1664 Marguerite Louise abandoned her apartments in the Pitti the grand ducal palace Cosimo moved her into Villa Lapeggi Here she was watched by forty soldiers and six courtiers appointed by Cosimo had to follow her everywhere 16 The next year she reconciled with the grand ducal family and gave birth to Anna Maria Luisa future Electress Palatine in August 1667 The delicate rapprochement that existed between Marguerite Louise and the rest of the family collapsed after Anna Maria Luisa s birth when Marguerite Louise caught smallpox and decided to blame Cosimo for all her problems 17 European travels Edit Cosimo around 1660 by Sustermans Grand Duke Ferdinando encouraged Cosimo to go on a European tour to distract him from Marguerite Louise s renewed hostility On 28 October 1667 he arrived in Tyrol where he was entertained by his aunt Anna de Medici Archduchess of Further Austria He took a barge down the Rhine to Amsterdam where he was well received by the art community meeting painter Rembrandt van Rijn 18 19 From Amsterdam he travelled to Hamburg where awaiting him was the Queen of Sweden He reached Florence in May 1668 19 The excursion did Cosimo good His health was better than ever as was his self esteem 17 His wife s unrelenting enmity towards him however undid the aforesaid progressions Grand Duke Ferdinando once again feared for his health so he sent him on a second tour in September 1668 17 When he went to Spain the disabled King Carlos II received him in a private interview 17 By January 1669 he had arrived in Portugal and expelled due to an uncomfortable storm the ship landed in Kinsale Ireland From there they went to England where he met Charles II Samuel Pepys described him as a very jolly and good comely man 20 Cosimo was amiably welcomed by the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge for his father s perceived protection of Galileo from the Inquisition 20 He met with scientists such as Robert Hooke Henry Oldenburg Isaac Newton and Robert Boyle Cosimo bought a machine built by Samuel Morland In London he stayed at St Albans House as a guest of the Earl of St Albans 21 On the return he travelled again through the Dutch Republic this time he bought a self portrait which Rembrandt had finished in the meantime Passing Aachen Cosimo visited Louis XIV and his mother in law Marguerite of Lorraine in Paris He arrived back in Florence on 1 November 1669 22 His travels were described in a detailed journal by his travelling companion Lorenzo Conte Magalotti 1637 1712 23 Reign EditDeparture of Marguerite Louise Edit Ferdinando II died on 23 May 1670 of apoplexy and dropsy and was interred in the Basilica of San Lorenzo the Medicean necropolis 24 At the time of his death the population of the grand duchy was 720 594 souls the streets were lined with grass and the buildings on the verge of collapse in Pisa while Siena was virtually abandoned 25 Grand Duchess Marguerite Louise and Dowager Grand Duchess Vittoria vied with each other for power The Dowager after a protracted battle triumphed 25 The Grand Duke assigned his mother the day to day administration of the state Cosimo III commenced his reign with the utmost fervour attempting to salvage the sinking exchequer and allowing his subjects to petition him for arbitration in disputes 26 The novelty soon wore off however 26 Vittoria Cosimo having lost his taste for administration was further empowered by admission to the Grand Duke s Consulta Privy Council 26 Marguerite Louise deprived of any political influence went about arranging Prince Ferdinando s education and arguing with Vittoria over precedence which only further encamped Cosimo on his mother s side 26 27 In the midst of this on the first anniversary of Ferdinando II s death Gian Gastone was born to the grand ducal couple 28 Marguerite Louise feigned illness at the start of 1672 Louis XIV send Alliot le Vieux Anne of Austria s personal physician to tend to her 28 Dr Alliot unlike Saint Mesmee did not comply with Marguerite Louise s plot to be sent to France ostensibly for the thermal waters to ameliorate her illness 28 In December she went on a pilgrimage to Villa di Pratolino she never returned 29 Marguerite Louise instead of going back to Florence chose to live in semi retirement at Poggio a Caiano The Grand Duke eventually consented but feared she may abscond so she was not allowed to go to leave without his permission and when she went riding she was to be escorted by four soldiers All the doors and windows of the villa had to be secured too 30 The saga between them continued until 26 December 1674 after all attempts at conciliation failed a beleaguered Cosimo agreed to allow his wife to depart for the Convent of Montmartre France The contract signed that day renounced her rights as a Princess of the Blood and with them the dignity Royal Highness Cosimo granted her a pension of 80 000 livres in compensation 31 She departed the next June after stripping bare Poggio a Caiano of any valuables Persecution of Jews and the Lorrainer succession Edit Without Marguerite Louise to occupy his attention Cosimo turned to persecuting the Jewish population of Tuscany Sexual intercourse between Jews and Christians was proscribed and by a law promulgated on 1 July 1677 Christians could not work in establishments owned by Jews If they did regardless a fine of 50 crowns was incurred if the person in question had insufficient funds he was liable to be tortured on the rack and if he was deemed unfit for torture a four month prison sentence was substituted 32 The anti Semitic roster was supplemented by further declarations on 16 June 1679 and 12 December 1680 banning Jews from visiting Christian prostitutes and co habitation respectively 33 Meanwhile in Lorraine Charles V was without an heir and Marguerite Louise as the daughter of a Lorrainer princess delegated the right to succeed to the duchy to her elder son Ferdinando Grand Duke Cosimo tried to get his son international recognition as heir apparent to no avail 34 Leopold I Holy Roman Emperor supported Cosimo s claim not wanting to see Lorraine revert to France The Treaties of Nijmegen which concluded the Franco Dutch War did not rubber stamp Cosimo s ambitions as he had wished The Lorrainer question was concluded with the birth of a son to Charles V in 1679 ending Cosimo s dream of a Medici cadet branch dreams which were to be revived in 1697 by Gian Gastone s marriage to an heiress 35 1679 1685 Edit A contemporary piastra bearing the effigy of Cosimo III Latin inscription COSMVS III D EI G RATIA MAG NVS DVX ETRVR AE Cosimo III by the Grace of God Grand Duke of Etruria Tuscany Cosimo kept himself apprised of his wife s conduct in France through the Tuscan emissary Gondi 36 Marguerite Louise frequently requested more money from the Grand Duke while he was scandalised by her behaviour she took up with a groom named Gentilly 35 37 In January 1680 the Abbess of Montemarte asked Cosimo to pay for the construction of a reservoir following a scandal at the convent The Grand Duchess had placed her pet dog s basket in close proximity to the fire and the basket burst into flames but instead of trying to extinguish it she urged her fellow nuns to flee for their lives On previous occasions she had explicitly stated that she would burn down the convent if the Abbess disagreed with her too making the Abbess view the accident as intentional 38 Cosimo unable to do much else for fear of upsetting Louis XIV reproached her in a series of letters Another scandal erupted that summer the Grand Duchess bathed nude as was the custom in a local river Cosimo exploded with anger upon hearing of this 39 Louis XIV tiring of Florence s petitions retorted Since Cosimo had consented to the retirement of his wife into France he had virtually relinquished all right to interfere in her conduct Following Louis XIV s rebuff Cosimo fell grievously ill only to be roused by Francesco Redi his physician who helped him reform his ways so illness would never strike him again 40 It was after this event that Cosimo finally stopped bothering with the Grand Duchess s life In 1682 Cosimo III appointed his brother Francesco Maria de Medici Governor of Siena Cosimo III Grand Duke of Tuscany engraving by Adriaen Haelwegh before 1691 from the collection of the National Gallery of Art The Holy Roman Emperor requested Cosimo s participation in the Great Turkish War At first he resisted but then sent a consignment of munitions to Trieste and offered to join the Holy League 41 They defeated the Turks at the Battle of Vienna in September 1683 To Cosimo s dismay many scandals and disorders continued to occur in the matter of carnal intercourse between Jews and Christian women and especially putting their children out to be suckled by Christian nurses 42 The Grand Duke wishing to supplement the foe of heretics persona he acquired after Vienna outlawed the practice of Jews using Christian wet nurses and declared that if a Christian father wished to have his half Jewish child suckled by a Christian nurse he must first apply to the government for a permit in writing 42 In addition public executions increased to six per day 43 Gilbert Burnet Bishop of Salisbury and a famed memorialist visited this Florence in November 1685 of which he wrote that Florence is much sunk from what it was for they do not reckon that there are fifty thousand souls in it the other states that were once great republic such as Siena and Pisa while they retained their liberty are now shrunk almost into nothing 42 Marriage of the Grand Prince Ferdinando Edit Ferdinando de Medici Cosimo s elder son after Niccolo Cassana Cosimo went about arranging a marriage for his elder son Ferdinando in 1686 He ushered him into the marriage as the other Tuscan princes Francesco Maria de Medici and Gian Gastone de Medici were sickly and unlikely to produce children 44 The main suitors were Violante of Bavaria a Bavarian princess Isabel Luisa of Portugal the heiress apparent of Portugal and the Elector Palatine s daughters 44 Negotiations with the Portuguese were intense but stalled over certain clauses Ferdinando and Isabel Luisa would live in Lisbon Ferdinando would renounce his right to the Tuscan throne unless the Infanta s father King Peter II remarried and had male issue and if Isabel Luisa became Queen of Portugal and Cosimo III Gian Gastone and Francesco Maria died without any male heirs Tuscany would be annexed by Portugal 44 Ferdinando rejected it outright with the fullest support of Louis XIV his great uncle Cosimo s eyes now fell upon Violente of Bavaria Choosing her would strengthen ties between France where Violente s sister was the dauphine and Bavaria There was only one obstacle in the way Ferdinando II Cosimo s father impartially advised Violente s father Ferdinand Maria to invest a huge sum into a bank Soon after the Elector deposited the sum the bank collapsed 44 Ferdinand Maria still had sore feelings Cosimo consented to the reduction of her dowry accordingly to reimburse the Elector Ferdinando was unimpressed with his wife Violente however electrified the Grand Duke He wrote I have never known nor do I think the world can produce a disposition so perfect 45 Royal Highness Edit Duke Victor Amadeus II of Savoy procured the style Royal Highness from Spain and the Holy Roman Empire in June 1689 infuriating Grand Duke Cosimo who complained to Vienna that a duke was inferior status to a grand duke and proclaimed it unjustly exalted since the House of Savoy had not increased to the point of vying with kings nor had the House of Medici diminished in splendour and possessions so there was no reason for promoting one and degrading the other Cosimo also played upon all the times Tuscany provided financial and military assistance to the Empire The Emperor anxious to avoid friction suggested that Anna Maria Luisa should marry the Elector Palatine to compensate for the affront 46 The Elector Palatine two years later several months before his marriage to Anna Maria Luisa went about acquiring the aforesaid style for Cosimo and his family despite the fact that they had no claim to any kingdom 47 Henceforth Cosimo was His Royal Highness The Most Serene Grand Duke of Tuscany 48 1691 1694 Edit Cosimo III in old age by Jan Frans van Douven Louis XIV was angered by Anna Maria Luisa s marriage to his sworn foe Cosimo after much coaxing persuaded him otherwise 49 On 9 October 1691 France England Spain and the United Provinces guaranteed the neutrality of the Tuscan port of Livorno 49 The Empire meanwhile was attempting to extract feudal dues from Cosimo and ordering him to ally with Austria 49 The Grand Duke replied that if he did so France would send a naval fleet from Toulon to occupy his state the Emperor reluctantly accepted this excuse Tuscany was not alone in its feudal ties to the Empire The rest of Italy was also bound to pay the Emperor but at a much higher magnitude than Cosimo who merely paid on his few undisputed Imperial fiefs 49 Cosimo not having much else to do instituted more moral laws Young men were not allowed to enter into houses to make love to girls and let them dally at doors and windows is a great incentive to rapes abortions and infanticides If a man did not comply he was liable to receive enormous fines 50 This coincided with a new wave of taxes that stagnated Tuscany s already declining economy Harold Acton recounts that a bale of wool sent from Leghorn and Cortona had to pass through ten intermediate customs 51 The Grand Duke oversaw the establishment of the Office of Public Decency whose goal was to regulate prostitution also 52 Prostitutes were oft thrown into the Stinche a jail for women of that profession for years with scant food if they could not afford the fines levied on them by the Office of Public Decency Evening permits and exemptions were available for those willing to pay six crowns per month 53 Cosimo resurrected a law from the regency of his father which banned Students from attending college outside Tuscany thus strengthening the Jesuits hold on education 54 A contemporary wrote that not a single man in Florence could read or write Greek a stark contrast to those of the old republic 55 In a letter dated 10 October 1691 Cosimo s personal secretary wrote By the Serene Master s express command I must inform Your Excellencies that His Highness will allow no professor in his university at Pisa to read or teach in public or in private by writing or voice the philosophy of Democritus or of atoms or any save that of Aristotle 54 Ferdinando and Violante despite being married for over five years had not produced any offspring as of 1694 The Grand Duke responded by declaring special days of devotion and erecting a fertility column in the Cavour district of Florence an act which attracted popular ridicule 56 Ferdinando would not attend to Violante instead lavishing his attentions on his favourite a castrated Venetian Cecchino de Castris The same year Dowager Grand Duchess Vittoria who had once exercised a great deal of influence over Cosimo died Her allodial possessions the Duchies of Montefeltro and Rovere inherited from her grandfather the last Duke of Urbino were bestowed upon her younger son Francesco Maria de Medici 57 Marriage of Gian Gastone Edit Cosimo became perturbed by the question of the Tuscan Succession following the death of his mother Ferdinando was lacking any children as was Anna Maria Luisa The latter who was high in her father s estimation put forward a German princess to marry Gian Gastone The lady in question Anna Maria Franziska of Saxe Lauenburg nominal heiress of the Duchy of Saxe Lauenburg was extremely wealthy Cosimo once again dreamed of a Medici cadet branch in a foreign land They were married on 2 July 1697 Gian Gastone and herself did not get along he eventually abandoned her in 1708 57 Dawn of the 18th century Edit Portrait of Gian Gastone de Medici The 17th century did not end well for the Grand Duke he still had no grandchildren France and Spain would not acknowledge his royal status and the Duke of Lorraine declared himself King of Jerusalem without any opposition 58 In May 1700 Cosimo embarked on a pilgrimage to Rome Pope Innocent XII after much persuasion created Cosimo a Canon of Saint John in the Lateran in order to allow him to view the Volto Santo a cloth thought to have been used by Christ before his crucifixion Delighted by his warm reception from the Roman people Cosimo left Rome with a fragment of Saint Francis Xavier s bowels 59 Carlos II of Spain died in November 1700 His death without any ostensible heir brought about the War of the Spanish Succession which involved all of the European powers Tuscany however remained neutral 60 Cosimo recognised Philip duc d Anjou as Carlos s successor whose administration refused to sanction the Trattamento Reale reserved for the royal family 61 The Grand Duke soon after the royal altercation accepted the investiture of the nominal Spanish fief of Siena from Philip thereby confirming his status as a Spanish vassal 62 Gian Gastone was consuming money at a rapid pace in Bohemia wracking up titanic debts The Grand Duke alarmed sent the Marquis Rinnuci to scrutinise the Prince s debts Rinnuci was abhorred to discover that Jan Josef Count of Breuner and Archbishop of Prague was among his creditors 63 In an attempt to salvage Gian Gastone from shipwreck Rinnuci tried to coerce Anna Maria Franziska to return to Florence where Gian Gastone longed to be 64 She blankly refused Her confessor hoping to keep her in Bohemia regaled her with tales of the poisoned Eleanor of Toledo and Isabella Orsini other Medici consorts Tuscan succession and later years Edit The Grand Duke in the latter years of life Cosimo s piety had not faded in the slightest since his youth He visited the Florentine Convent of Saint Mark on a daily basis A contemporary recounted that The Grand Duke knows all the monks of Saint Mark at least by sight 65 This however did not occupy all his efforts He was still trying to coax Anna Maria Franziska to Florence where he believed her caprices would cease 66 Additionally in 1719 he claimed that God asked him to pledge the Grand Duchy to the governance and absolute dominion of the most glorious Saint Joseph 67 Leopold I Holy Roman Emperor died in May 1705 His successor Joseph I took to government with a burst of ebullience Following the Battle of Turin a decisive Imperial victory the Emperor sent an envoy to Florence to collect feudal dues amounting to 300 000 doubloons an exorbitant sum and to force Cosimo to recognise the Archduke Charles as King of Spain Fearing a Franco Dutch invasion Cosimo III refused to recognise Charles s title but he did pay a fraction of the dues 68 The Grand Prince Ferdinando was grievously ill with syphilis he had become prematurely senile not recognising anybody who came to see him Cosimo despaired He successfully requisitioned the assistance of Pope Clement XI with Anna Maria Franziska He sent the Archbishop of Prague to reproach her She cited the example of Marguerite Louise adding that the Pope did not bother himself to machinate a reconciliation 69 Cosimo wrote desperate missives to the Electress Palatine I can tell you now in case you are not informed that we have no money in Florence He added that two or three quarters of my pension are fallen into arrears 69 Gian Gastone arrived in Tuscany without his wife in 1708 70 The Emperor thinking it unlikely that any male heirs were to be born to the Medici prepared to occupy Tuscany under the pretext of Medici descent 71 He intimated that upon the Grand Prince s death the Tuscans would rebel against Cosimo s autocratic government Cosimo in an act of desperation had Francesco Maria the Medici family cardinal renounce his religious vows and marry Eleanor of Gonzaga the youngest child of the incumbent Duke of Guastalla Two years later Francesco Maria died taking with him any hope of an heir The Electress Anna Maria Luisa after van Douven Without any ostensible heir Cosimo contemplated restoring the Republic of Florence 72 However this presented many obstacles Florence was nominally an Imperial fief and Siena a Spanish one 73 The plan was about to be approved by the powers convened at Geertruidenberg when Cosimo abruptly added that if himself and his two sons predeceased the Electress Palatine she should succeed and the republic be re instituted following her death 74 The proposal sank and was ultimately put on hold following Emperor Joseph s death Charles VI Holy Roman Emperor agreed to an audience with the Electress Palatine in December 1711 75 He concluded that the Electress s succession brought no quandary but added that he must succeed her Cosimo and herself were abhorred by his reply Realising how unforthcoming he had been Charles wrote to Florence agreeing to the project mentioning but one clause the Tuscan state must not be bequeathed to the enemies of the House of Austria 76 At the culmination of the War of the Spanish Succession at the Treaties of Utrecht and Rattstatt Cosimo did not vie for international assurances for the Electress s succession An inaction he would later grow to lament The Grand Prince finally succumbed to syphilis on 30 October 1713 Cosimo deposited a succession bill in the Senate Tuscany s nominal legislature on 26 November The bill promulgated that if Gian Gastone predeceased the Electress Palatine she should ascend to all the states of the Grand Duchy It was greeted with a standing ovation by the senators Charles VI was furious He retorted that the Grand Duchy was an Imperial fief and that he alone had the prerogative to choose who would succeed Elisabeth Farnese heiress to the Duchy of Parma and the second wife of Philip V of Spain as a great granddaughter of Margherita de Medici exercised a claim to Tuscany 77 Charles VI Holy Roman Emperor by Johann Gottfried Auerbach In May 1716 the Emperor assured the Electress and the Grand Duke that there was no insurmountable obstacle preventing her accession but that Austria and Tuscany must soon reach an agreement regarding which royal house which was to succeed the Medici 78 As an incentive to accelerate Cosimo s reply the Emperor hinted that Tuscany would reap territorial advancements 79 In June 1717 Cosimo declared his wish that the House of Este should succeed Charles VI s promises never materialised In 1718 he repudiated Cosimo s decision declaring a union between Tuscany and Modena the Este lands unacceptable On 4 April 1718 England France and the Dutch Republic and later Austria selected Don Carlos of Spain the eldest child of Elisabeth Farnese and Philip V of Spain as the Tuscan heir By 1722 the Electress was not even acknowledged as heiress and Cosimo was reduced to a spectator at the conferences for Tuscany s future 80 Johann Wilhelm Elector Palatine died in June 1717 Anna Maria Luisa returned home in October 1717 bringing with her vast treasures Cosimo created his elder son s widow Violante of Bavaria Governess of Siena as to clearly define her precedence That did not stop the two ladies from quarrelling as was his intention 81 Cosimo discontinued hunting following an accident in January 1717 He accidentally shot and killed a man He was so distraught that he wished to be tried by the Knights of the Order of Saint Stephen 81 The state of the Grand Duchy reflected the decay of its ruler in a 1718 military review the army numbered less than 3000 men some of whom were infirm and aged 70 82 The navy composed of three galleys and the crew 198 83 In September 1721 the Grand Duchess died instead of willing her possessions to her children as prescribed by the 1674 agreement they went to the Princess of Epinoy Death and legacy Edit Bust of Cosimo III de Medici 1717 1718 CE By Giovanni Battista Figgini Marble from Italy Florence The Victoria and Albert Museum London On 22 September 1723 the Grand Duke experienced a two hour long fit of trembling His condition steadily deteriorated Cosimo was attended by the Papal nuncio and the Archbishop of Pisa on his deathbed The latter pronounced that this Prince required little assistance in order to die well for he had studied and cared for nothing else throughout the long course of his life but to prepare himself for death On 25 October 1723 six days before his death Grand Duke Cosimo disseminated a final proclamation commanding that Tuscany shall stay independent Anna Maria Luisa shall succeed uninhibited to Tuscany after Gian Gastone the Grand Duke reserves the right to choose his successor 84 but these stanzas were completely ignored Six days later on All Hallow s Eve he died citation needed He was interred in the Basilica of San Lorenzo the Medici necropolis citation needed Cosimo III left Tuscany one of the poorest nations in Europe the treasury empty and the people weary of religious bigotry the state itself was reduced to a gaming chip in European affairs Among his enduring edicts is the establishment of the Chianti wine region Gian Gastone repealed Cosimo s Jewish persecution laws and eased tariffs and customs Cosimo s inability to uphold Tuscany s independence led to the succession of the House of Lorraine upon Gian Gastone s death in 1737 Issue EditCosimo III had three children with Marguerite Louise d Orleans a granddaughter of Henry IV of France Ferdinando de Medici Grand Prince of Tuscany b 1663 d 1713 married Violante Beatrice of Bavaria no issue Anna Maria Luisa de Medici Electress Palatine b 1667 d 1743 married Johann Wilhelm Elector Palatine no issue Gian Gastone de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany b 1671 d 1737 married Anna Maria Franziska of Saxe Lauenburg no issue Cosimo did not enjoy a harmonious relationship with his elder son Ferdinando They disagreed about Cosimo s bigoted ideology and his monthly allowance 85 Cosimo married him to a Bavarian princess Violante Beatrice This union was exceedingly discontent and produced no offspring Anna Maria Luisa was the Grand Duke s favourite child She married Johann Wilhelm Elector Palatine and like her brother had no issue Gian Gastone Cosimo s eventual successor despised his father and his court Anna Maria Luisa arranged for him to marry Anna Maria Franziska of Saxe Lauenburg a union that produced no children Honours EditStyles of Cosimo III de Medici Most Serene Grand Duke of Tuscany Reference styleHis Royal Highness 48 Spoken styleYour Royal Highness 23 May 1670 31 October 1721 Grand Master of the Holy Military Order of St Stephen Pope and Martyr 86 Ancestors EditAncestors of Cosimo III de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany8 Ferdinando I de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany 89 4 Cosimo II de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany 87 9 Christina of Lorraine 89 2 Ferdinando II de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany10 Charles II of Austria 90 5 Maria Magdalena of Austria 87 11 Maria Anna of Bavaria 90 1 Cosimo III de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany12 Francesco Maria II della Rovere 91 6 Federico Ubaldo della Rovere Duke of Urbino 88 13 Livia della Rovere 91 3 Vittoria Della Rovere14 Ferdinando I de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany 92 8 7 Claudia de Medici 88 15 Christina of Lorraine 92 9 Citations Edit Guarini Elena Fasano 1984 COSIMO III de Medici granduca di Toscana Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Vol 30 Hale pp 185 186 Acton p 25 a b c Acton p 44 a b c Acton p 45 Acton p 46 Acton p 62 Acton p 70 Acton p 71 a b Acton p 73 Hale p 180 Acton p 86 Hale p 181 Acton pp 91 92 Acton p 93 Acton p 94 a b c d Acton p 103 van de Wetering p 281 a b Acton p 102 a b Acton p 104 Sheppard F H W Survey of London St James s Square No 31 Norfolk House British History Online Retrieved 6 August 2020 Acton p 105 Magalotti Lorenzo Conte 1637 1712 Travels of Cosmo the Third Grand Duke of Tuscany through England during the Reign of King Charles the Second 1669 translated from the Italian manuscript in the Laurentian library at Florence To which is Prefixed a Memoir of his Life London 1821 pp 128 132 1 Acton p 108 a b Acton p 112 a b c d Acton p 113 Acton p 114 a b c Acton p 115 Acton p 121 Acton p 122 Acton pp 133 135 Acton pp 140 141 Acton p 141 Acton p 142 a b Acton p 143 Acton p 151 Acton p 149 Acton p 152 Acton p 154 Acton p 155 Acton p 157 a b c Acton p 159 Acton p 201 a b c d Acton p 162 Acton p 172 Acton p 181 Acton p 182 a b Hale p 187 a b c d Acton p 183 Acton p 184 Acton p 185 Acton p 203 Acton p 204 a b Acton p 192 Acton p 194 Acton p 197 a b Acton p 208 Acton p 221 Acton p 224 Strathern p 394 Acton p 232 Acton p 233 Acton pp 223 224 Acton p 234 Acton p 240 Acton p 239 Hale p 186 Acton p 243 a b Acton p 244 Acton 245 Strathern p 400 Acton p 254 Francois Velde 4 July 2005 The Grand Duchy of Tuscany heraldica org Retrieved 19 August 2009 Acton p 255 Acton pp 255 256 Acton p256 Acton p 261 Acton p 262 Acton p 267 Acton p 175 a b Acton p 265 Acton pp 272 273 Acton p 272 Acton pp 275 276 Acton p 160 Setton p 37 a b Stumpo Irene Cotta 1996 FERDINANDO II de Medici granduca di Toscana Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Vol 46 a b Vittoria Della Rovere granduchessa di Toscana Enciclopedie on line Treccani a b Guarini Elena Fasano 1984 COSIMO II de Medici granduca di Toscana Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Vol 30 a b Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1861 Habsburg Maria Magdalena Herzogin von Florenz Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 7 p 56 via Wikisource a b Benzoni Gino 1995 FEDERICO UBALDO Della Rovere duca di Urbino Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Vol 45 Archived from the original on 30 October 2018 Retrieved 30 October 2018 a b Benzoni Gino 1982 CLAUDIA de Medici duchessa di Urbino Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Vol 26 Bibliography EditActon Harold The Last Medici Macmillan London 1980 ISBN 0 333 29315 0 Strathern Paul The Medici Godfathers of the Renaissance Vintage books London 2003 ISBN 978 0 09 952297 3 Hale J R Florence and the Medici Orion books London 1977 ISBN 1 84212 456 0 van de Wetering Ernst Rembrandt The Painter at Work Amsterdam University Press Amsterdam 1997 ISBN 978 90 5356 239 0 Setton Kenneth M Western Hostility to Islam and Prophecies of Turkish Doom Amer Philosophical Society 1992 ISBN 978 0 87169 201 6External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cosimo III Grand Duke of Tuscany Timeline of the events of Cosimo III s reign by GoogleCosimo III de Medici Grand Duke of TuscanyHouse of MediciBorn 14 August 1642 Died 31 October 1723Regnal titlesPreceded byFerdinando II de Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany1670 1723 Succeeded byGian Gastone de Medici Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cosimo III de 27 Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany amp oldid 1135544196, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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