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Eleonora Gonzaga (1630–1686)

Eleonora Gonzaga (18 November 1630 – 6 December 1686), was by birth Princess of Mantua, Nevers and Rethel from the Nevers branch of the House of Gonzaga and was Holy Roman Empress, German Queen, Queen consort of Hungary and Bohemia by marriage to Emperor Ferdinand III.

Eleonora Gonzaga
Portrait by Frans Luycx, ca. 1650.
Holy Roman Empress
Tenure30 April 1651 – 2 April 1657
Coronation4 August 1653
Born(1630-11-18)18 November 1630
Mantua, Duchy of Mantua
Died6 December 1686(1686-12-06) (aged 56)
Vienna, Austria
Burial
Imperial Crypt, Vienna, Austria
Spouse
(m. 1651; died 1657)
Issue
Detail
HouseGonzaga
FatherCharles Gonzaga, Duke of Nevers
MotherMaria Gonzaga, Duchess of Montferrat

Nicknamed the Younger (de: Jüngere) to distinguish herself from her namesake grandaunt,[1] she was considered one of the most educated and virtuous women of her time. Fascinated by religious poetry, she founded a literary academy and was also a patron of musical theater. As Holy Roman Empress, she promoted the development of cultural and spiritual life at the Imperial court in Vienna, and despite being a staunch Catholic and benefactress of several monasteries, she had a tolerant attitude towards Protestantism.

She established two female orders: the Order of Virtuosity (1662) and the Order of the Starry Cross (1668).

Life edit

Early years edit

Eleonora was born on 18 November 1630 in Mantua,[2] as the second child of Charles Gonzaga, styled Duke of Nevers (heir of the Duchy of Mantua) and his wife and cousin Maria Gonzaga (heiress to the Duchy of Montferrat).[3] On her father's side her grandparents were Charles Gonzaga, Duke of Nevers and Rethel and Catherine of Mayenne –a member of the House of Lorraine[4] and on her mother's side her grandparents were Francesco IV Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua and Margaret of Savoy.[5]

She was named after her mother's paternal aunt Holy Roman Empress Eleonora, who was also her godmother. The marriage of Eleonora's parents was made with the purpose to reinforce the claims of the Nevers branch of the House of Gonzaga to the duchies of Mantua and Montferrat when the main line would become extinct. The duke of Nevers, a vassal of the Kingdom of France, had to face the opposition of Ferrante II Gonzaga, Duke of Guastalla, who counted with the support of the Holy Roman Empire, the Kingdom of Spain and Duchy of Savoy, and thus started the War of the Mantuan Succession, during which infant Eleonora, with her parents and older brother Charles had to leave Mantua, but returned one year later after the signing of the Treaty of Cherasco (19 June 1631), under which were recognized the rights of Duke Charles of Nevers over the duchies of Mantua (as the closest male relative of the extinct main line of the House of Gonzaga) and Montferrat (due to the marriage of his heir with Maria Gonzaga, the last surviving scion of the main Gonzaga line and heiress of that duchy, which was demonstrably heritable by females since the Gonzagas had acquired it through marriage to Margherita Paleologa in 1540); however one month later (30 August 1631), Eleonora's father died of tuberculosis, and began a series of political conflicts between Duke Charles and her daughter-in-law, who ended with the banishment of Margaret of Savoy (Maria's mother) from Mantua.[6][7]

During this time, Eleonora lived in the Church of Sant'Orsola, where she remained with her mother until 1637, when after the death of her grandfather, her older brother became in the new duke of Mantua and Montferrat under the regency of their mother Maria. The princess received an excellent education, being fluent in French, Spanish and Italian, well versed in literature, music and art, and expert in dances and embroidery. Already in the adolescence she manifested a poetic talent, which was expressed in her compositions of philosophical and religious poems.[6][8]

Marriage and children edit

Eleonora's marriage was arranged by her godmother and namesake, the dowager Holy Roman Empress, who maintained close ties with her niece, the Duchess-Regent Maria (Eleonora's mother), and became the main supporter of her election as wife of Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor; previously, the dowager empress was also able to arrange the marriage of Duke Charles II of Mantua (Eleonora's brother) with Archduchess Isabella Clara of Austria (a member of the Tyrolese branch of the House of Habsburg) in 1649.[6][9]

During the nuptial negotiations, the emperor promoted the following conditions: the Duchy of Mantua would continue its loyalty to the interests of the Holy Roman Empire, the bride would retain her possible inheritance rights over the Duchy of Montferrat, and a dowry of 400,000 thalers. Duke Charles II agreed with only minor changes: Mantua would maintain its loyalty to the Holy Roman Empire only if the alliance didn't bring negative consequences to the duchy, and the bride's dowry would be paid in several installments in the next years.[6]

 
Empress Eleonora as Diana, by Frans Luycx, ca. 1651.

The marriage by proxy was solemnized on 2 March 1650 at the Basilica palatina di Santa Barbara, in which the emperor was represented by his ambassador, Count Johann Maximilian von Lamberg. The celebrations lasted until 22 March, when Eleonora, accompanied by some relatives, traveled from Mantua to Vienna. The cortege arrived at the Austrian city of Villach, where the bride said goodbye to her relatives and in the company of her godmother the dowager empress continued the trip to Wiener Neustadt, where on 30 April 1651 there took place the official wedding ceremony between Eleonora and Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand III. After the ceremony, the emperor gave his new wife the family jewels and a gift of 50,000 florins. For Ferdinand III, this was his third marriage; he had had children from both previous unions.[6][10]

In spite of the great difference in age, the marriage was a happy one.[11] The active and sweet nature of the young empress helped her gain the sympathy of all members of the Imperial family. She established an excellent relationship with all her stepchildren. She learned German, and the emperor Italian.[12] Together they participated in religious and secular ceremonies. Genuine piety of both spouses did not prevent them from patronizing literature and music activities, like visits to theaters or hunting, which was one of the passions of the empress.[6] In her portrait by Frans Luycx, Eleonora is depicted in the image of Diana, the ancient goddess of hunting.[13]

During her marriage, Eleonora gave birth four children, two of whom survived into adulthood:[14][15]

Holy Roman Empress and German Queen edit

Eleonora was a cultured woman. Together with her husband she founded a literary academy, and, despite their religious and strict adherence to Catholicism, would not discriminate enrolled Protestants. The empress has always been in a society of educated people, encouraged the development of science. After her arrival to Vienna, increased the influence of the Italians, and her native language became in the most used among the German aristocracy. Italian aristocrats and clergy held high positions. The Imperial court was, thanks to her, dominated by Italian fashion. The enormous influence of Italian culture was also noted in the local literature, music, theater, architecture and painting.[6][12][16]

From the beginning her married life Eleonora accompanied her husband during his trips to the Holy Roman Empire. In 1652–1654 she was with him in Regensburg during the Reichstag. While her husband was engaged in public affairs, she was responsible for organizing celebrations such as the Carnival before Lent, culminating in the premiere of the opera L’Inganno d’amore (the Cheating of Love) by Antonio Bertali. On 4 August 1653 she was crowned Holy Roman Empress in Regensburg Cathedral; in 1655, she was crowned Queen of Hungary[17] and on 11 September 1656 was crowned Queen of Bohemia.[18] In April 1657 Eleonora became a widow, and a year later her only son also died.[6]

Widowhood edit

Archduke Leopold Wilhelm, Ferdinand III's younger brother, thought to marry Eleonora (who enjoyed the respect of her subjects) to strengthen his position as a candidate for the Imperial crown. However, the dowager empress put all her efforts to ensure the election of her stepson Leopold I as the new Holy Roman Emperor. Under the will of Ferdinand III, Eleonora assumed the guardianship of all his children. Her dower was provided by the cities of Graz and Linz and also was determined for her an annual pension of 200,000 florins (later increased to 230,000). During the summer she spent in the Favorita palace, which, together with Schönbrunn and Laxenburg she received from her godmother the late dowager empress. Under her supervision, was added an extension to the Hofburg, which then suffered a fire and was rebuilt again.[6][15]

The small court of the empress dowager was a meeting place for politicians and diplomats. There were often visitors like Minister Václav Eusebius František, Prince of Lobkowicz, ambassadors Jacques Bretel de Grémonville and Lorenzo Magalotti, and General Raimondo Montecuccoli. For some time was considered the possibility of a second marriage for Eleonora, with the Polish King John II Casimir Vasa, but this project was never implemented.[6][15]

Eleonora enjoyed great respect from Leopold I, who consulted with his stepmother on many political and personal issues. The dowager empress established good relations with her stepson's first wife, Infanta Margaret Theresa of Spain. The relationship with Leopold I's second wife Archduchess Claudia Felicitas of Austria were tense, but didn't last long due to her early death. Finally, she had a friendly relation with Leopold I's third and final wife, Countess Palatine Eleonor Magdalene of Neuburg, who became, thanks to her protection, the emperor's wife.[6][19]

The dowager empress engaged in politics only when on behalf to her family's interests. In 1669, Eleonora had to resolve the conflict between the Imperial court in Vienna and the Holy See, which arose due to the fact that the Pope didn't appoint any cardinal of the candidates proposed by the emperor. Then, Leopold I resorted to the mediation of his stepmother to solve the crisis.[6] In 1671 she arranged the marriage of her nephew Ferdinando Carlo Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua and Montferrat with Anna Isabella Gonzaga, the heiress of the Guastalla line with the purpose to unite the two Gonzaga rival families. She tried that Charles V, Duke of Lorraine (suitor and later second husband of her eldest daughter) could be elected King of Poland, but he was defeated by John Sobieski in 1674.[20]

Besides her political activity, Eleonora spent most of her time on works of charity and piety. In 1680 she invited the missionary and preacher Capuchin friar Marco d'Aviano to Linz. She was a patron of the Bavarian poet and painter Johann Georg Seidenbusch. She ordered the building in Vienna of a Baroque facade for the Kirche am Hof and the Jesuits. The Discalced Carmelites were also under her special patronage, and in Wiener Neustadt she helped them to build a monastery. To raise the level of education among girls, in 1663 Eleonora invited the Ursulines to Vienna, where they built a complex that included a monastery, a church and a school. She also established two Orders for women: the Order of Virtuosity (de: Sklavinnen der Tugend) in 1662 and the Order of the Starry Cross (de: Sternkreuzorden) in 1668.[12][21][22]

Death edit

The last years of Eleonora's life were overshadowed by the epidemic of plague in 1679 and beginning of the Great Turkish War in 1683, in which, although the empire won, serious material damage was inflicted on the possessions of the dowager empress. In both cases, she had to flee from Vienna: the first time to Prague and Linz, and in the second to Linz and Innsbruck. Eleanora died in Vienna on 6 December 1686 and was buried in the Imperial Crypt.[6]

Ancestry edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Braun, Keller & Schnettger 2016, p. 117.
  2. ^ Louda & MacLagan 1999, table 80
  3. ^ George Perceval, Esq.:The History of Italy: From the Fall of the Western Empire to the commencement of the Wars of the French Revolution, vol. II, G. B. Whittaker Ave-Maria Lane 1825, p. 479 Chapter X Part I: Mantua 1600-1700, Austrian National Library [Retrieved 6 November 2016].
  4. ^ Louda & MacLagan 1999, table 80; and Morby 1989, p. 107
  5. ^ a b "GONZAGA: LINEA SOVRANA DI MANTOVA". Enciclopedia genealogica del Mediterraneo (in Italian). Società Genealogica Italiana [Italian Genealogical Society]. Retrieved 29 August 2018.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m BDI staff 1993, "Eleonora Gonzaga..."
  7. ^ Braun, Keller & Schnettger 2016, p. 120.
  8. ^ Braun, Keller & Schnettger 2016, p. 12.
  9. ^ Hengerer 2012, p. 280.
  10. ^ Hengerer 2012, pp. 280–281.
  11. ^ Hengerer 2012, p. 282.
  12. ^ a b c Mutschlechner Italians.
  13. ^ Museum of Fine Arts Vienna.
  14. ^ Mutschlechner Marriage.
  15. ^ a b c Braun, Keller & Schnettger 2016, p. 125.
  16. ^ Braun, Keller & Schnettger 2016, p. 127–128, 133–134.
  17. ^ Braun, Keller & Schnettger 2016, p. 132.
  18. ^ Hengerer 2012, p. 330.
  19. ^ Braun, Keller & Schnettger 2016, pp. 125–126.
  20. ^ Braun, Keller & Schnettger 2016, p. 139.
  21. ^ Braun, Keller & Schnettger 2016, p. 130.
  22. ^ Starry Cross Order in: Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary, vol. 82, St. Petersburg 1890–1907, p. 365 total: 86 vol. –Russian source–.
  23. ^ a b "Le Royaume d'Italie, vol. I.". Les Manuscrits du C.e.d.r.e: Dictionnaire Historique et Généalogique. Les manuscrits du C.E.D.R.E. (Cercle d'Études des Dynasties Royales Européennes): Dictionnaire Historique et Généalogique: 80–81, 129–132, 152–154. 1992. ISSN 0993-3964.

References edit

  • Braun, Bettina; Keller, Katrin; Schnettger, Matthias (4 April 2016). Nur die Frau des Kaisers?: Kaiserinnen in der Frühen Neuzeit (in German). Böhlau Verlag Wien. p. 117. ISBN 978-3-205-20085-7.
  • Hengerer, Mark (2012) [2008]. Mazohl, Brigitte (chair); Rumpler, Helmut (deputy chair); et al. (eds.). (PDF). Publications Commission for Recent History of Austria. Vienna: Böhlau. pp. 4, 79. ISBN 978-3-205-77765-6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
    • Louda, Jirí; MacLagan, Michael (1999). Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe (2nd ed.). London, U.K.: Little, Brown and Company. table 80.
    • Morby, John (1989). Dynasties of the World: a chronological and genealogical handbook. Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Press. p. 107. ISBN 978-0-19-215872-7.
  • "Eleonore von Gonzaga (1628 — 1686) als Diana, Kaiserin, 3. Gemahlin von Ferdinand III". Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien (Museum of Fine Arts Vienna). Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  • Mutschlechner, Martin. "Ferdinand III, Eleonora of Gonzaga and the Italians in Vienna". The world of the Habsburgs (www.habsburger.net/en). Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  • Mutschlechner, Martin. "Ferdinand III: marriage and offspring". The world of the Habsburgs (www.habsburger.net/en). Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  • BDI staff (1993). (in Italian). Vol. 42. Archived from the original on 5 October 2016. Retrieved 4 November 2016. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |journal= ignored (help)

Further reading edit

  •   Media related to Eleonora Gonzaga, Holy Roman Empress (1686) at Wikimedia Commons
  • Wurzbach, C. von (2012) [1860]. "Eleonore Gonzaga". Biographisches Lexikon des Kaisertums Österreich (in German). Austria: Austrian Literature Online, University of Innsbruck. p. 161–162, 458.
  • Hamann, Brigitte (Hg.) (1988). "Eleonore". Die Habsburger (in German). 79.

Royal titles edit

Eleonora Gonzaga (1630–1686)
Born: 18 November 1630 Died: 6 December 1686
Royal titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Maria Leopoldine of Austria
Holy Roman Empress; German Queen;
Queen consort of Hungary and Bohemia;
Archduchess consort of Austria

1651–1657
Vacant
Title next held by
Margaret Theresa of Spain

eleonora, gonzaga, 1630, 1686, eleonora, gonzaga, november, 1630, december, 1686, birth, princess, mantua, nevers, rethel, from, nevers, branch, house, gonzaga, holy, roman, empress, german, queen, queen, consort, hungary, bohemia, marriage, emperor, ferdinand. Eleonora Gonzaga 18 November 1630 6 December 1686 was by birth Princess of Mantua Nevers and Rethel from the Nevers branch of the House of Gonzaga and was Holy Roman Empress German Queen Queen consort of Hungary and Bohemia by marriage to Emperor Ferdinand III Eleonora GonzagaPortrait by Frans Luycx ca 1650 Holy Roman Empress more Tenure30 April 1651 2 April 1657Coronation4 August 1653Born 1630 11 18 18 November 1630Mantua Duchy of MantuaDied6 December 1686 1686 12 06 aged 56 Vienna AustriaBurialImperial Crypt Vienna AustriaSpouseFerdinand III Holy Roman Emperor m 1651 died 1657 wbr IssueDetailEleonore Maria Josefa Queen of Poland Maria Anna Josepha Electoral Princess of the PalatinateHouseGonzagaFatherCharles Gonzaga Duke of NeversMotherMaria Gonzaga Duchess of Montferrat Nicknamed the Younger de Jungere to distinguish herself from her namesake grandaunt 1 she was considered one of the most educated and virtuous women of her time Fascinated by religious poetry she founded a literary academy and was also a patron of musical theater As Holy Roman Empress she promoted the development of cultural and spiritual life at the Imperial court in Vienna and despite being a staunch Catholic and benefactress of several monasteries she had a tolerant attitude towards Protestantism She established two female orders the Order of Virtuosity 1662 and the Order of the Starry Cross 1668 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early years 1 2 Marriage and children 1 3 Holy Roman Empress and German Queen 1 4 Widowhood 1 5 Death 2 Ancestry 3 Notes 4 References 5 Further reading 5 1 Royal titlesLife editEarly years edit Eleonora was born on 18 November 1630 in Mantua 2 as the second child of Charles Gonzaga styled Duke of Nevers heir of the Duchy of Mantua and his wife and cousin Maria Gonzaga heiress to the Duchy of Montferrat 3 On her father s side her grandparents were Charles Gonzaga Duke of Nevers and Rethel and Catherine of Mayenne a member of the House of Lorraine 4 and on her mother s side her grandparents were Francesco IV Gonzaga Duke of Mantua and Margaret of Savoy 5 She was named after her mother s paternal aunt Holy Roman Empress Eleonora who was also her godmother The marriage of Eleonora s parents was made with the purpose to reinforce the claims of the Nevers branch of the House of Gonzaga to the duchies of Mantua and Montferrat when the main line would become extinct The duke of Nevers a vassal of the Kingdom of France had to face the opposition of Ferrante II Gonzaga Duke of Guastalla who counted with the support of the Holy Roman Empire the Kingdom of Spain and Duchy of Savoy and thus started the War of the Mantuan Succession during which infant Eleonora with her parents and older brother Charles had to leave Mantua but returned one year later after the signing of the Treaty of Cherasco 19 June 1631 under which were recognized the rights of Duke Charles of Nevers over the duchies of Mantua as the closest male relative of the extinct main line of the House of Gonzaga and Montferrat due to the marriage of his heir with Maria Gonzaga the last surviving scion of the main Gonzaga line and heiress of that duchy which was demonstrably heritable by females since the Gonzagas had acquired it through marriage to Margherita Paleologa in 1540 however one month later 30 August 1631 Eleonora s father died of tuberculosis and began a series of political conflicts between Duke Charles and her daughter in law who ended with the banishment of Margaret of Savoy Maria s mother from Mantua 6 7 During this time Eleonora lived in the Church of Sant Orsola where she remained with her mother until 1637 when after the death of her grandfather her older brother became in the new duke of Mantua and Montferrat under the regency of their mother Maria The princess received an excellent education being fluent in French Spanish and Italian well versed in literature music and art and expert in dances and embroidery Already in the adolescence she manifested a poetic talent which was expressed in her compositions of philosophical and religious poems 6 8 Marriage and children edit Eleonora s marriage was arranged by her godmother and namesake the dowager Holy Roman Empress who maintained close ties with her niece the Duchess Regent Maria Eleonora s mother and became the main supporter of her election as wife of Ferdinand III Holy Roman Emperor previously the dowager empress was also able to arrange the marriage of Duke Charles II of Mantua Eleonora s brother with Archduchess Isabella Clara of Austria a member of the Tyrolese branch of the House of Habsburg in 1649 6 9 During the nuptial negotiations the emperor promoted the following conditions the Duchy of Mantua would continue its loyalty to the interests of the Holy Roman Empire the bride would retain her possible inheritance rights over the Duchy of Montferrat and a dowry of 400 000 thalers Duke Charles II agreed with only minor changes Mantua would maintain its loyalty to the Holy Roman Empire only if the alliance didn t bring negative consequences to the duchy and the bride s dowry would be paid in several installments in the next years 6 nbsp Empress Eleonora as Diana by Frans Luycx ca 1651 The marriage by proxy was solemnized on 2 March 1650 at the Basilica palatina di Santa Barbara in which the emperor was represented by his ambassador Count Johann Maximilian von Lamberg The celebrations lasted until 22 March when Eleonora accompanied by some relatives traveled from Mantua to Vienna The cortege arrived at the Austrian city of Villach where the bride said goodbye to her relatives and in the company of her godmother the dowager empress continued the trip to Wiener Neustadt where on 30 April 1651 there took place the official wedding ceremony between Eleonora and Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand III After the ceremony the emperor gave his new wife the family jewels and a gift of 50 000 florins For Ferdinand III this was his third marriage he had had children from both previous unions 6 10 In spite of the great difference in age the marriage was a happy one 11 The active and sweet nature of the young empress helped her gain the sympathy of all members of the Imperial family She established an excellent relationship with all her stepchildren She learned German and the emperor Italian 12 Together they participated in religious and secular ceremonies Genuine piety of both spouses did not prevent them from patronizing literature and music activities like visits to theaters or hunting which was one of the passions of the empress 6 In her portrait by Frans Luycx Eleonora is depicted in the image of Diana the ancient goddess of hunting 13 During her marriage Eleonora gave birth four children two of whom survived into adulthood 14 15 Theresa Maria Josepha 27 March 1652 26 July 1653 Archduchess of Austria Eleonora Maria Josepha 21 May 1653 17 December 1697 Archduchess of Austria she married first Michael Korybut Wisniowiecki King of Poland and then Charles V Duke of Lorraine Maria Anna Josepha 30 December 1654 4 April 1689 Archduchess of Austria she married John William Elector Palatine Ferdinand Joseph Alois 11 February 1657 16 June 1658 Archduke of Austria Holy Roman Empress and German Queen edit Eleonora was a cultured woman Together with her husband she founded a literary academy and despite their religious and strict adherence to Catholicism would not discriminate enrolled Protestants The empress has always been in a society of educated people encouraged the development of science After her arrival to Vienna increased the influence of the Italians and her native language became in the most used among the German aristocracy Italian aristocrats and clergy held high positions The Imperial court was thanks to her dominated by Italian fashion The enormous influence of Italian culture was also noted in the local literature music theater architecture and painting 6 12 16 From the beginning her married life Eleonora accompanied her husband during his trips to the Holy Roman Empire In 1652 1654 she was with him in Regensburg during the Reichstag While her husband was engaged in public affairs she was responsible for organizing celebrations such as the Carnival before Lent culminating in the premiere of the opera L Inganno d amore the Cheating of Love by Antonio Bertali On 4 August 1653 she was crowned Holy Roman Empress in Regensburg Cathedral in 1655 she was crowned Queen of Hungary 17 and on 11 September 1656 was crowned Queen of Bohemia 18 In April 1657 Eleonora became a widow and a year later her only son also died 6 Widowhood edit Archduke Leopold Wilhelm Ferdinand III s younger brother thought to marry Eleonora who enjoyed the respect of her subjects to strengthen his position as a candidate for the Imperial crown However the dowager empress put all her efforts to ensure the election of her stepson Leopold I as the new Holy Roman Emperor Under the will of Ferdinand III Eleonora assumed the guardianship of all his children Her dower was provided by the cities of Graz and Linz and also was determined for her an annual pension of 200 000 florins later increased to 230 000 During the summer she spent in the Favorita palace which together with Schonbrunn and Laxenburg she received from her godmother the late dowager empress Under her supervision was added an extension to the Hofburg which then suffered a fire and was rebuilt again 6 15 The small court of the empress dowager was a meeting place for politicians and diplomats There were often visitors like Minister Vaclav Eusebius Frantisek Prince of Lobkowicz ambassadors Jacques Bretel de Gremonville and Lorenzo Magalotti and General Raimondo Montecuccoli For some time was considered the possibility of a second marriage for Eleonora with the Polish King John II Casimir Vasa but this project was never implemented 6 15 Eleonora enjoyed great respect from Leopold I who consulted with his stepmother on many political and personal issues The dowager empress established good relations with her stepson s first wife Infanta Margaret Theresa of Spain The relationship with Leopold I s second wife Archduchess Claudia Felicitas of Austria were tense but didn t last long due to her early death Finally she had a friendly relation with Leopold I s third and final wife Countess Palatine Eleonor Magdalene of Neuburg who became thanks to her protection the emperor s wife 6 19 The dowager empress engaged in politics only when on behalf to her family s interests In 1669 Eleonora had to resolve the conflict between the Imperial court in Vienna and the Holy See which arose due to the fact that the Pope didn t appoint any cardinal of the candidates proposed by the emperor Then Leopold I resorted to the mediation of his stepmother to solve the crisis 6 In 1671 she arranged the marriage of her nephew Ferdinando Carlo Gonzaga Duke of Mantua and Montferrat with Anna Isabella Gonzaga the heiress of the Guastalla line with the purpose to unite the two Gonzaga rival families She tried that Charles V Duke of Lorraine suitor and later second husband of her eldest daughter could be elected King of Poland but he was defeated by John Sobieski in 1674 20 Besides her political activity Eleonora spent most of her time on works of charity and piety In 1680 she invited the missionary and preacher Capuchin friar Marco d Aviano to Linz She was a patron of the Bavarian poet and painter Johann Georg Seidenbusch She ordered the building in Vienna of a Baroque facade for the Kirche am Hof and the Jesuits The Discalced Carmelites were also under her special patronage and in Wiener Neustadt she helped them to build a monastery To raise the level of education among girls in 1663 Eleonora invited the Ursulines to Vienna where they built a complex that included a monastery a church and a school She also established two Orders for women the Order of Virtuosity de Sklavinnen der Tugend in 1662 and the Order of the Starry Cross de Sternkreuzorden in 1668 12 21 22 Death edit The last years of Eleonora s life were overshadowed by the epidemic of plague in 1679 and beginning of the Great Turkish War in 1683 in which although the empire won serious material damage was inflicted on the possessions of the dowager empress In both cases she had to flee from Vienna the first time to Prague and Linz and in the second to Linz and Innsbruck Eleanora died in Vienna on 6 December 1686 and was buried in the Imperial Crypt 6 Ancestry editAncestors of Eleonora Gonzaga 1630 1686 5 unless otherwise noted 8 Louis Gonzaga Duke of Nevers4 Charles I Duke of Mantua9 Henriette of Cleves2 Charles Gonzaga10 Charles Duke of Mayenne5 Catherine de Lorraine11 Henriette of Savoy Marquise de Villars1 Eleonora Gonzaga12 Vincenzo I Gonzaga6 Francesco IV Gonzaga13 Eleonora de Medici3 Maria Gonzaga14 Charles Emmanuel I Duke of Savoy 23 7 Margaret of Savoy15 Catherine Michaela of Spain 23 Notes edit Braun Keller amp Schnettger 2016 p 117 Louda amp MacLagan 1999 table 80 George Perceval Esq The History of Italy From the Fall of the Western Empire to the commencement of the Wars of the French Revolution vol II G B Whittaker Ave Maria Lane 1825 p 479 Chapter X Part I Mantua 1600 1700 Austrian National Library Retrieved 6 November 2016 Louda amp MacLagan 1999 table 80 and Morby 1989 p 107 a b GONZAGA LINEA SOVRANA DI MANTOVA Enciclopedia genealogica del Mediterraneo in Italian Societa Genealogica Italiana Italian Genealogical Society Retrieved 29 August 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m BDI staff 1993 Eleonora Gonzaga Braun Keller amp Schnettger 2016 p 120 Braun Keller amp Schnettger 2016 p 12 Hengerer 2012 p 280 Hengerer 2012 pp 280 281 Hengerer 2012 p 282 a b c Mutschlechner Italians Museum of Fine Arts Vienna Mutschlechner Marriage a b c Braun Keller amp Schnettger 2016 p 125 Braun Keller amp Schnettger 2016 p 127 128 133 134 Braun Keller amp Schnettger 2016 p 132 Hengerer 2012 p 330 Braun Keller amp Schnettger 2016 pp 125 126 Braun Keller amp Schnettger 2016 p 139 Braun Keller amp Schnettger 2016 p 130 Starry Cross Order in Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary vol 82 St Petersburg 1890 1907 p 365 total 86 vol Russian source a b Le Royaume d Italie vol I Les Manuscrits du C e d r e Dictionnaire Historique et Genealogique Les manuscrits du C E D R E Cercle d Etudes des Dynasties Royales Europeennes Dictionnaire Historique et Genealogique 80 81 129 132 152 154 1992 ISSN 0993 3964 References editBraun Bettina Keller Katrin Schnettger Matthias 4 April 2016 Nur die Frau des Kaisers Kaiserinnen in der Fruhen Neuzeit in German Bohlau Verlag Wien p 117 ISBN 978 3 205 20085 7 Hengerer Mark 2012 2008 Mazohl Brigitte chair Rumpler Helmut deputy chair et al eds Kaiser Ferdinand III 1608 1657 Eine Biographie PDF Publications Commission for Recent History of Austria Vienna Bohlau pp 4 79 ISBN 978 3 205 77765 6 Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 5 November 2016 Louda Jiri MacLagan Michael 1999 Lines of Succession Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe 2nd ed London U K Little Brown and Company table 80 Morby John 1989 Dynasties of the World a chronological and genealogical handbook Oxford U K Oxford University Press p 107 ISBN 978 0 19 215872 7 Eleonore von Gonzaga 1628 1686 als Diana Kaiserin 3 Gemahlin von Ferdinand III Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien Museum of Fine Arts Vienna Retrieved 4 November 2016 Mutschlechner Martin Ferdinand III Eleonora of Gonzaga and the Italians in Vienna The world of the Habsburgs www habsburger net en Retrieved 4 November 2016 Mutschlechner Martin Ferdinand III marriage and offspring The world of the Habsburgs www habsburger net en Retrieved 4 November 2016 BDI staff 1993 Eleonora Gonzaga Nevers imperatrice in Italian Vol 42 Archived from the original on 5 October 2016 Retrieved 4 November 2016 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a journal ignored help Further reading edit nbsp Russian Wikisource has original text related to this article Enciklopedicheskij slovar Brokgauza i Efrona nbsp Media related to Eleonora Gonzaga Holy Roman Empress 1686 at Wikimedia Commons Wurzbach C von 2012 1860 Eleonore Gonzaga Biographisches Lexikon des Kaisertums Osterreich in German Austria Austrian Literature Online University of Innsbruck p 161 162 458 Hamann Brigitte Hg 1988 Eleonore Die Habsburger in German 79 Royal titles edit Eleonora Gonzaga 1630 1686 House of GonzagaBorn 18 November 1630 Died 6 December 1686 Royal titles VacantTitle last held byMaria Leopoldine of Austria Holy Roman Empress German Queen Queen consort of Hungary and Bohemia Archduchess consort of Austria1651 1657 VacantTitle next held byMargaret Theresa of Spain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eleonora Gonzaga 1630 1686 amp oldid 1217565331, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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