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Margaret of Austria, Duchess of Savoy

Archduchess Margaret of Austria (German: Margarete; French: Marguerite; Dutch: Margaretha; Spanish: Margarita; 10 January 1480 – 1 December 1530) was Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands from 1507 to 1515 and again from 1519 to 1530. She was the first of many female regents in the Netherlands.

Margaret of Austria
Princess of Asturias
Portrait of Margaret as a widow painted by Bernard van Orley
Duchess consort of Savoy
Tenure2 December 1501 - 10 September 1504
Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands
Reign1507–1530
PredecessorWilliam de Croÿ
SuccessorMary of Austria
Born10 January 1480
Died1 December 1530(1530-12-01) (aged 50)
Mechelen, Duchy of Brabant
Spouse
(m. 1497; d. 1497)
(m. 1501; d. 1504)
HouseHabsburg
FatherMaximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor
MotherMary, Duchess of Burgundy
ReligionRoman Catholic
Signature

Childhood and life in France

 
Portrait of Margaret aged ten by Jean Hey, c. 1490

Margaret was born on 10 January 1480 and named after her stepgrandmother, Margaret of York. She was the second child and only daughter of Maximilian of Austria (future Holy Roman Emperor) and Mary of Burgundy, co-sovereigns of the Low Countries. In 1482, her mother died and her three-year-old brother Philip the Handsome succeeded her as sovereign of the Low Countries, with her father as his regent.

The same year her mother died, King Louis XI of France signed the Treaty of Arras, whereby her father promised to give her hand in marriage to Louis' son, Dauphin Charles. The engagement took place in 1483. With Franche-Comté and Artois as her dowry, Margaret was transferred to the guardianship of Louis XI, who died soon after. She was raised as a fille de France and prepared for her future role as Queen of France.

Under the supervision of her governess Madame de Segré, and Charles' sister, regent of France Anne de Beaujeu, Margaret received a fine education alongside several noble children, amongst whom was Louise of Savoy.[1]

Although their union was political, the young Margaret developed a genuine affection for Charles. However, he renounced the treaty in the autumn of 1491 and forcibly married Margaret's former stepmother Anne, Duchess of Brittany, for political reasons. The French court had ceased treating Margaret as their future queen but she could not return to her ex-stepmother's (Anne of Brittany) court until June 1493 after the Treaty of Senlis had been signed in May that year. She was hurt by Charles' actions and was left with a feeling of enduring resentment towards the House of Valois.

Marriages

Princess of Asturias

 
Pieter van Coninxloo, Philip the Handsome and Margaret of Austria, c. 1493–1495. Betrothal diptych, National Gallery, London.

To achieve an alliance with Queen Isabella I of Castile and King Ferdinand II of Aragon, Maximilian started negotiating the marriage of their only son and heir, John, Prince of Asturias, to Margaret, as well as the marriage of their daughter Juana to Philip. Margaret left the Netherlands for Spain late in 1496. Her engagement to the Prince of Asturias seemed doomed when the ship carrying her to Spain hit a storm in the Bay of Biscay. In haste, she wrote her own epitaph should she not reach Spain:

"Here lies Margaret, the willing bride,
Twice married - but a virgin when she died."

However, Margaret survived the storm, and according to the Calendar of State Papers, Spain, Volume 1, 1485-1509, in February 1497 her entire fleet still waited in Southampton in England for weather to clear up. Margaret actually married Prince John on 3 April 1497 in Burgos Cathedral. Tragically, John died of a fever after only six months, on 4 October. Margaret was left pregnant but gave birth to a premature stillborn daughter on 2 April 1498.[2] Margaret stayed in Spain until September 1499 before returning home. In meantime it was suggested that she should teach Catherine of Aragon French.

Duchess of Savoy

 
Tomb of Philibert II of Savoy inside the Church of Brou (Bourg-en-Bresse, Ain, France)

In 1501, Margaret married Philibert II, Duke of Savoy (1480–1504), whose realm played a decisive role in the rivalry between France and the Habsburgs in Italy on account of its strategic position in the Western Alps. They had a very stable relationship for those 3 years. When Margaret came to Savoy, the government was in the hands of René, Philibert's bastard brother. Margaret fought hard to strip away his powers and possessions, even involving Maximilian (as Holy Roman Emperor, he was overlord of Savoy) to nullify the letters that gave René legitimacy. René, being declared a traitor, took refuge in France and was welcomed by his half-sister Louise of Savoy, mother of Francis I. She then took hold of the government, while her husband focused on private hobbies like hunting (which she did share with him). She summoned councils, appointed officers, and when her brother Philip visited, she discussed and approved his plan regarding a continued reapproachement with France.[3]

By 1504, however, Philibert died of pleurisy. Grief-stricken, Margaret threw herself out of a window, but was saved. After being persuaded to bury her husband, she had his heart embalmed so she could keep it with her forever.[4] Her court historian and poet Jean Lemaire de Belges gave her the title "Dame de deuil" (Lady of Mourning).[5]

Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands

 
Margaret's return to her father in 1493, marble relief (created by Alexander Colin, based on woodcuts from The Triumphal Arch by Albrecht Dürer) inside his cenotaph in Innsbruck. Clive Holland remarks that it must have required courage to place the scene next to depictions of the father's triumphs, as at the time the rejection was a bitter experience for them both.[6]
 
Engraving of Margaret of Austria as Governor of the Netherlands

Queen Isabella died in late 1504, and Philip and Juana went to Castile to claim the crown. After Philip's death, Charles was the new sovereign of the Low Countries, but he was young and alone. Juana could not return to act as regent because her unstable mental state and her Castilian subjects would not allow their[7][circular reference] ruler to abandon the kingdom. Preoccupied with German affairs, her father, ruler of the Holy Roman Empire Maximillian I,[8] named Margaret governor of the Low Countries and guardian of Charles in 1507, along with her nieces Eleanor, Isabella and Mary. She became the only woman elected as its ruler by the representative assembly of Franche-Comté, with her title confirmed in 1509.

Some report that Margaret was considered a foreigner because of her childhood at the French court.[citation needed] According to Blockmans and others though, Margaret, Philip as well as Charles V were considered autochthonous; only Maximilian was always a foreigner.[9][10] The Governess served as an intermediary between her father and her nephew's subjects in the Netherlands from her newly built palace at Mechelen. During a remarkably successful career, she broke new ground for women rulers.[11]

 
A letter by Charles V to his aunt, Margaret of Austria, 19 October 1518, after she had returned to her previous position as his governess for the Netherlands

In 1520, Charles made Margaret his governor-general in gratitude for her services. She was the only regent he ever re-appointed indefinitely from 1519 until her death in on 1 December 1530.[12]

Tupu Ylä-Anttila opines that Margaret acted as defacto queen consort in a political sense, first to her father and then Charles V, "absent rulers" who needed a representative dynastic presence that also complemented their characteristics. Her queenly virtues helped her to play the role of diplomat and peace-maker, as well as guardian and educator of future rulers, whom Maximilian called "our children" or "our common children" in letters to Margaret. This was a model that developed as part of the solution for the emerging Habsburg composite monarchy and would continue to serve later generations. As an older relative and former guardian, she had more power with Charles than with her father Maximilian, who treated her cordially but occasionally acted in a threatening manner.[13]

Authors of The Promised Lands: The Low Countries Under Burgundian Rule, 1369-1530 credit Margaret with keeping the provinces together as well as fulfilling the demands for peace from the Netherlandish Estates. Despite Louis XII's attempts to regain control of certain territories and interfered in Guelders, Friesland and Liege, cooperation between the regent, the Privy Council and the Estates General maintained the integrity of the Burgundian inheritance.[14]

Foreign policy

 
Margaret of Austria, pearwood, by Conrat Meit, circa 1518

Margaret soon found herself at war with France over the question of Charles's requirement to pay homage to the French king for the County of Flanders (which was outside the Empire; and while a long-standing portion of the inherited Burgundian titles & provinces, legally still within France). In response, she persuaded Emperor Maximilian to end the war with King Louis XII. On November 1508, she journeyed to Cambrai to assist in the formation of the League of Cambrai, which ended (for a time) the possibility of a French invasion of the Low Countries, redirecting French attention to Northern Italy.[15][16]

The Estates preferred to maintain peace with France and Guelders. But Charles of Egmont, the defacto lord of Guelders continued to cause trouble. In 1511, she made an alliance with England and besieged Venlo, but Charles of Egmont invaded Holland so the siege had to be lifted.[17] When she asked her father (who had fought Guelders even without the Low Countries's help during the time of Philip, and then helped Philip to achieve his 1505 victory over Guelders) to come to help, he suggested to her that the Estates in the Low Countries should defend themselves, forcing her to sign the 1513 treaty with Charles, recognizing him as Duke of Guelders and Count of Zutphen. In 1514, he marched into Arnhem – a clear breach of the treaty. The Habsburg Netherlands would only be able to incorporate Guelders and Zutphen under Charles V.[18][19][20][21]

According to James D. Tracy, Maximilian and Margaret were reasonable in demanding more stern measures against Guelders, but their critics in the Estates General (that had continuously voted against providing funds for wars against Guelders) and among the nobles naively thought that Charles of Egmont could be controlled by maintaining the peaceful relationship with the King of France, his patron. After Charles's brief personal rule (1514-1517), Margaret returned to witness Guelders's most stunning military success in decades, together with a horrible trail of destruction their Black Band mercenaries left through Friesland and Holland. Many of Charles V's Netherlands subjects, including leading Humanists like Erasmus and Hadrianus Barlandus unreasonably mistrusted their government, suspecting that princes (Maximilian, in particular) were concocting clever schemes just to expand the Habsburg dominion and extracting money (in fact, Maximilian also did hope to employ the wealth of the Low Countries to finance his projects elsewhere – he hardly succeeded though). The inaction of the experienced commander Rudolf von Anhalt during the sacking of the town of Tienen in Brabant, in particular, made Barlandus suspect a sinister motive (in reality, von Anhalt was ordered by Margaret to avoid direct engagement until he had more troops).[22][23][24]

By 1512, she told her father that the Netherlands existed on peace and trade, and thus she would declare neutrality while using foreign armies and funds to wage wars. She played the key role in bringing together the participants of Holy League: the pope, the Swiss, Henry VIII, Ferdinand of Aragon and her father Maximilian (he joined the League only as Emperor, as not as guardian of his grandson Charles and thus, the Low Countries' neutrality was maintained). The league targeted France. The treaty also would not prevent the more adventurous Netherlands seigneurs from serving under Maximilian and Henry when they attacked the French later.[25][17]

Following this strategy, in 1513, at the head of Henry VIII's army, Maximilian gained a victory against the French at the Battle of the Spurs, at little cost to himself or his daughter (in fact according to Margaret, the Low Countries got a profit of one million of gold from supplying the English army).[26][17] For the sake of his grandson Charles's Burgundian lands, he ordered Therouanne's walls to be demolished (the stronghold had often served as a backdoor for French interference in the Low Countries).[26][27]

After Maximillian I's death in 1518, Margaret and young Charles (all of 18) began to negotiate the latter's election as Holy Roman Emperor despite the opposition of the papacy and France. The Governess instead supported her younger nephew Ferdinand. However, Charles refused to withdraw. Using a combination of diplomacy and bribery, Margaret played a crucial role in the election of Charles as Holy Roman Emperor in 1519, defeating the candidacy of King Francis I of France, who from this day forward became Charles' great rival in the struggle for pre-eminence in Europe.[15][16]

 
Louise of Savoy, with whom Margaret negotiated the terms of the Treaty of Cambrai.

As Emperor, Charles V inherited the long-running disputes with the Kings of France over possession of the Duchy of Milan and the Kingdom of Naples. Though Charles preferred the Netherlands to many of his possessions, his many kingdoms (and many wars) required him to travel throughout Europe. His great victory at Pavia over Francis I in 1525 (Battle of Pavia) in which he took the French King prisoner and then freed him in exchange for his sons as hostages, led once more to French invasion of the Low Countries. Francis reneged on promises to renounce overlordship of Artois, Flanders and the Franche-Cômté, much less return the much-desired Burgundian core territory, the Duchy itself centered at Dijon (Duchy of Burgundy) as soon as he was safely back in France.

Once again, Margaret proved a remarkably capable ruler of the Netherlands, holding off the forces of the League of Cognac -- i.e. the French (1526-29) and then negotiating the "Paix de Dames/ Ladies Peace". Journeying to Cambrai again, Margaret reunited with Louise of Savoy, her sister-in-law and mother of Francis I. They negotiated the end of a war that France could no longer sustain; the Habsburgs lost Burgundy proper forever, but France gave up its claims to legal overlordship of Flanders, Artois and the "Free County" of Burgundy (Franche-Comté).[28]

Economy

 
The Palace of Coudenberg from a 17th-century painting. Brussels served as one of the main revenues of the Imperial court of Charles V in the Low Countries.

Margaret had an aptitude for business, and maintained the prosperity of the Netherlands. She negotiated the restoration of Intercursus Magnus with England, which was favorable to the Flemish textile interests and brought huge profits.[15][16] Because of the trade, industry and wealth of the regions and cities she oversaw, the Low Countries was an important source of income for the Imperial treasury.

In 1524, she signed a trade agreement with Frederick I of Denmark (the condition was that Holland would not support Christian II) that ensured the regular supply of grain into the Netherlands. Christian later managed to get the support from Charles V thanks to the efforts of his secretary Cornelis de Schepper, but Margaret refused to follow even Charles's order and insisted on placing the economical interests of the Netherlands above dynastic interests (Christian was the husband of Isabella of Austria, thus brother-in-law to Charles sister of Charles and nephew-in-law to Margaret).[29]

Margaret provided funds and war supplies for her nephew's troops, especially against King Francis I of France and the German Protestants. In following years, Habsburg forces consolidated their hold over Tournai, Friesland, Utrecht, and Overijssel, which became part of the Netherlands.

Internal conflict

Although the Low Countries was not previously centralized, Margaret's reign was a period of relative peace for the Netherlands. The exception was the beginning of the Protestant Reformation, especially in the north. The first martyrs were burnt at the stake in 1523.

Patronage of the arts

 
Inner courtyard of Margaret of Austria's Palace, an early 16th-century building in Mechelen, Belgium. It was one of the first Renaissance buildings in northern Europe.

Once she was declared Governor of the Netherlands, Margaret purchased the Hof van Savoye, located in the Korte Maagdenstraat (Short Virgins Street) in Mechelen. She found the residence too small and started an ambitious expansion campaign in 1507. From 1517 to 1530, the architect Rombout II Keldermans furthered the project along the Keizerstraat (Emperor Street) and modified what became the rear wing, which faces the Palace of Margaret of York. The Governess kept several painters at her court, including the Master of the Legend of the Magdalen and Pieter van Coninxloo.

Margaret possessed a rich library, consisting mostly of missals, poetry, historical and ethical treatises, which included the works of Christine de Pizan and the famous illuminated Très Riches Heures du duc de Berry.[30] She possessed several Chansonniers[31] which contained works by Josquin des Prez, Johannes Ockeghem, Jacob Obrecht and Pierre de la Rue, who was her favourite composer. In his 1517-1518 travel journal, Italian canon Antonio de Beatis described Margaret's highly decorated library for women. The books are all written in French and bound in velvet with silver-gilt clasps.[32]

Margaret ended up raising her nephew and nieces in her palace. Her court was visited by the great humanists of her time, including Erasmus, Adrian of Utrecht (later Pope Adrian VI), and Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa.[33][34] Agrippa dedicated his arguably feminist work "Declamation on the Nobility and Preeminence of the Female Sex" to her.[35] The Governor was so impressed with diplomat Thomas Boleyn's charm that she offered his daughter Anne Boleyn (future Queen consort of England) a temporary place in her household. She reported to the English nobleman that the little girl was "so presentable and so pleasant, considering her youthful age, that I am more beholden to you for sending her to me, than you to me."

Margaret ordered several splendid music manuscripts from Pierre Alamire to send them as gifts to her relatives and political relations.[36] She had one of the earliest collections of objects from the New World. Hernán Cortés had presented Charles V with treasures received from the Aztec King Moctezuma in 1519. Several of these treasures were sent to Mechelen as a gift from her nephew in 1523.[37]

Portraits

Death and Burial

 
Tomb of Margaret of Austria, Monastery of Brou, Bourg-en-Bresse
 
Statue of Margaret of Austria, located at the market square of Mechelen. The background is the St. Rumbold's Cathedral

On 15 November 1530, Margaret stepped on a piece of broken glass. She initially thought little of the injury but gangrene set in and the leg had to be amputated. She decided to arrange all her affairs first, designating Charles V as her sole heir and writing him a letter in which she asked him to maintain peace with France and England. On the night of 30 November, the doctors came to operate on her. They gave her a dose of opium to lessen the pain, but it was reportedly so strong that she would not wake up again. She died between midnight and one o'clock.[38]

She was buried alongside her second husband at Bourg-en-Bresse, in the mausoleum of the Royal Monastery of Brou that she previously commissioned.[39] There is a statue of the Governess next to the St. Rumbold's Cathedral in Mechelen, Belgium.

Heraldry

Depiction in media

Margaret of Austria is portrayed by Spanish actress Úrsula Corberó in the TV show Isabel.[40]

A fictionalized version of Margaret can be found in the play The Unhappy Penitent by Catharine Trotter, where she appears as the character 'Margarite'. In the play, Margarite is in love with René II, Duke of Lorraine, although this may be a historical inaccuracy since there is no indication available today that the two ever met. Also, the Duke of Brittany is in love with Margarite, but this likely another historical inaccuracy since he died in 1488, three years before Anne came to France to marry Charles VIII; her father's death is what spurred the various betrothals of Anne.

In the White Princess series she is portrayed by Zazie Hayhurst.

Ancestry

References

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Bibliography

  • Margarete - Maximilian I. Musik um 1500, Capilla Flamenca with La Caccia, Schola Cantorum Cantate Domino Aalst, Schola Gregoriana Lovaniensis, 1998, ORF Shop CD 265 (2 CDs).
  • Dulcis Melancholia, Biographie musicale de Marguerite d'Autriche, Capilla Flamenca, 2005 (MEW 0525).
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  • Diana Maury Robin, Anne R. Larsen and Carole Levin (2007). Encyclopedia of women in the Renaissance: Italy, France, and England. ABC-CLIO, Inc.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
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  • Margaret of Austria (1480–1530) Encyclopedia
Margaret of Austria, Duchess of Savoy
Born: 10 January 1480 Died: 1 December 1530
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands
1507–1530
Succeeded by
Italian nobility
Preceded by Duchess consort of Savoy
1501–1504
Vacant
Title next held by
Beatrice of Portugal

margaret, austria, duchess, savoy, other, people, named, margaret, austria, margaret, austria, disambiguation, archduchess, margaret, austria, german, margarete, french, marguerite, dutch, margaretha, spanish, margarita, january, 1480, december, 1530, governor. For other people named Margaret of Austria see Margaret of Austria disambiguation Archduchess Margaret of Austria German Margarete French Marguerite Dutch Margaretha Spanish Margarita 10 January 1480 1 December 1530 was Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands from 1507 to 1515 and again from 1519 to 1530 She was the first of many female regents in the Netherlands Margaret of AustriaPrincess of AsturiasPortrait of Margaret as a widow painted by Bernard van OrleyDuchess consort of SavoyTenure2 December 1501 10 September 1504Governor of the Habsburg NetherlandsReign1507 1530PredecessorWilliam de CroySuccessorMary of AustriaBorn10 January 1480Died1 December 1530 1530 12 01 aged 50 Mechelen Duchy of BrabantSpouseJohn Prince of Asturias m 1497 d 1497 wbr Philibert II Duke of Savoy m 1501 d 1504 wbr HouseHabsburgFatherMaximilian I Holy Roman EmperorMotherMary Duchess of BurgundyReligionRoman CatholicSignature Contents 1 Childhood and life in France 2 Marriages 2 1 Princess of Asturias 2 2 Duchess of Savoy 3 Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands 3 1 Foreign policy 3 2 Economy 3 3 Internal conflict 4 Patronage of the arts 4 1 Portraits 5 Death and Burial 6 Heraldry 7 Depiction in media 8 Ancestry 9 References 10 BibliographyChildhood and life in France Edit Portrait of Margaret aged ten by Jean Hey c 1490 Margaret was born on 10 January 1480 and named after her stepgrandmother Margaret of York She was the second child and only daughter of Maximilian of Austria future Holy Roman Emperor and Mary of Burgundy co sovereigns of the Low Countries In 1482 her mother died and her three year old brother Philip the Handsome succeeded her as sovereign of the Low Countries with her father as his regent The same year her mother died King Louis XI of France signed the Treaty of Arras whereby her father promised to give her hand in marriage to Louis son Dauphin Charles The engagement took place in 1483 With Franche Comte and Artois as her dowry Margaret was transferred to the guardianship of Louis XI who died soon after She was raised as a fille de France and prepared for her future role as Queen of France Under the supervision of her governess Madame de Segre and Charles sister regent of France Anne de Beaujeu Margaret received a fine education alongside several noble children amongst whom was Louise of Savoy 1 Although their union was political the young Margaret developed a genuine affection for Charles However he renounced the treaty in the autumn of 1491 and forcibly married Margaret s former stepmother Anne Duchess of Brittany for political reasons The French court had ceased treating Margaret as their future queen but she could not return to her ex stepmother s Anne of Brittany court until June 1493 after the Treaty of Senlis had been signed in May that year She was hurt by Charles actions and was left with a feeling of enduring resentment towards the House of Valois Marriages EditPrincess of Asturias Edit Pieter van Coninxloo Philip the Handsome and Margaret of Austria c 1493 1495 Betrothal diptych National Gallery London To achieve an alliance with Queen Isabella I of Castile and King Ferdinand II of Aragon Maximilian started negotiating the marriage of their only son and heir John Prince of Asturias to Margaret as well as the marriage of their daughter Juana to Philip Margaret left the Netherlands for Spain late in 1496 Her engagement to the Prince of Asturias seemed doomed when the ship carrying her to Spain hit a storm in the Bay of Biscay In haste she wrote her own epitaph should she not reach Spain Here lies Margaret the willing bride Twice married but a virgin when she died However Margaret survived the storm and according to the Calendar of State Papers Spain Volume 1 1485 1509 in February 1497 her entire fleet still waited in Southampton in England for weather to clear up Margaret actually married Prince John on 3 April 1497 in Burgos Cathedral Tragically John died of a fever after only six months on 4 October Margaret was left pregnant but gave birth to a premature stillborn daughter on 2 April 1498 2 Margaret stayed in Spain until September 1499 before returning home In meantime it was suggested that she should teach Catherine of Aragon French Duchess of Savoy Edit Tomb of Philibert II of Savoy inside the Church of Brou Bourg en Bresse Ain France In 1501 Margaret married Philibert II Duke of Savoy 1480 1504 whose realm played a decisive role in the rivalry between France and the Habsburgs in Italy on account of its strategic position in the Western Alps They had a very stable relationship for those 3 years When Margaret came to Savoy the government was in the hands of Rene Philibert s bastard brother Margaret fought hard to strip away his powers and possessions even involving Maximilian as Holy Roman Emperor he was overlord of Savoy to nullify the letters that gave Rene legitimacy Rene being declared a traitor took refuge in France and was welcomed by his half sister Louise of Savoy mother of Francis I She then took hold of the government while her husband focused on private hobbies like hunting which she did share with him She summoned councils appointed officers and when her brother Philip visited she discussed and approved his plan regarding a continued reapproachement with France 3 By 1504 however Philibert died of pleurisy Grief stricken Margaret threw herself out of a window but was saved After being persuaded to bury her husband she had his heart embalmed so she could keep it with her forever 4 Her court historian and poet Jean Lemaire de Belges gave her the title Dame de deuil Lady of Mourning 5 Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands Edit Margaret s return to her father in 1493 marble relief created by Alexander Colin based on woodcuts from The Triumphal Arch by Albrecht Durer inside his cenotaph in Innsbruck Clive Holland remarks that it must have required courage to place the scene next to depictions of the father s triumphs as at the time the rejection was a bitter experience for them both 6 Engraving of Margaret of Austria as Governor of the Netherlands Queen Isabella died in late 1504 and Philip and Juana went to Castile to claim the crown After Philip s death Charles was the new sovereign of the Low Countries but he was young and alone Juana could not return to act as regent because her unstable mental state and her Castilian subjects would not allow their 7 circular reference ruler to abandon the kingdom Preoccupied with German affairs her father ruler of the Holy Roman Empire Maximillian I 8 named Margaret governor of the Low Countries and guardian of Charles in 1507 along with her nieces Eleanor Isabella and Mary She became the only woman elected as its ruler by the representative assembly of Franche Comte with her title confirmed in 1509 Some report that Margaret was considered a foreigner because of her childhood at the French court citation needed According to Blockmans and others though Margaret Philip as well as Charles V were considered autochthonous only Maximilian was always a foreigner 9 10 The Governess served as an intermediary between her father and her nephew s subjects in the Netherlands from her newly built palace at Mechelen During a remarkably successful career she broke new ground for women rulers 11 A letter by Charles V to his aunt Margaret of Austria 19 October 1518 after she had returned to her previous position as his governess for the Netherlands In 1520 Charles made Margaret his governor general in gratitude for her services She was the only regent he ever re appointed indefinitely from 1519 until her death in on 1 December 1530 12 Tupu Yla Anttila opines that Margaret acted as defacto queen consort in a political sense first to her father and then Charles V absent rulers who needed a representative dynastic presence that also complemented their characteristics Her queenly virtues helped her to play the role of diplomat and peace maker as well as guardian and educator of future rulers whom Maximilian called our children or our common children in letters to Margaret This was a model that developed as part of the solution for the emerging Habsburg composite monarchy and would continue to serve later generations As an older relative and former guardian she had more power with Charles than with her father Maximilian who treated her cordially but occasionally acted in a threatening manner 13 Authors of The Promised Lands The Low Countries Under Burgundian Rule 1369 1530 credit Margaret with keeping the provinces together as well as fulfilling the demands for peace from the Netherlandish Estates Despite Louis XII s attempts to regain control of certain territories and interfered in Guelders Friesland and Liege cooperation between the regent the Privy Council and the Estates General maintained the integrity of the Burgundian inheritance 14 Foreign policy Edit Margaret of Austria pearwood by Conrat Meit circa 1518 Margaret soon found herself at war with France over the question of Charles s requirement to pay homage to the French king for the County of Flanders which was outside the Empire and while a long standing portion of the inherited Burgundian titles amp provinces legally still within France In response she persuaded Emperor Maximilian to end the war with King Louis XII On November 1508 she journeyed to Cambrai to assist in the formation of the League of Cambrai which ended for a time the possibility of a French invasion of the Low Countries redirecting French attention to Northern Italy 15 16 The Estates preferred to maintain peace with France and Guelders But Charles of Egmont the defacto lord of Guelders continued to cause trouble In 1511 she made an alliance with England and besieged Venlo but Charles of Egmont invaded Holland so the siege had to be lifted 17 When she asked her father who had fought Guelders even without the Low Countries s help during the time of Philip and then helped Philip to achieve his 1505 victory over Guelders to come to help he suggested to her that the Estates in the Low Countries should defend themselves forcing her to sign the 1513 treaty with Charles recognizing him as Duke of Guelders and Count of Zutphen In 1514 he marched into Arnhem a clear breach of the treaty The Habsburg Netherlands would only be able to incorporate Guelders and Zutphen under Charles V 18 19 20 21 According to James D Tracy Maximilian and Margaret were reasonable in demanding more stern measures against Guelders but their critics in the Estates General that had continuously voted against providing funds for wars against Guelders and among the nobles naively thought that Charles of Egmont could be controlled by maintaining the peaceful relationship with the King of France his patron After Charles s brief personal rule 1514 1517 Margaret returned to witness Guelders s most stunning military success in decades together with a horrible trail of destruction their Black Band mercenaries left through Friesland and Holland Many of Charles V s Netherlands subjects including leading Humanists like Erasmus and Hadrianus Barlandus unreasonably mistrusted their government suspecting that princes Maximilian in particular were concocting clever schemes just to expand the Habsburg dominion and extracting money in fact Maximilian also did hope to employ the wealth of the Low Countries to finance his projects elsewhere he hardly succeeded though The inaction of the experienced commander Rudolf von Anhalt during the sacking of the town of Tienen in Brabant in particular made Barlandus suspect a sinister motive in reality von Anhalt was ordered by Margaret to avoid direct engagement until he had more troops 22 23 24 By 1512 she told her father that the Netherlands existed on peace and trade and thus she would declare neutrality while using foreign armies and funds to wage wars She played the key role in bringing together the participants of Holy League the pope the Swiss Henry VIII Ferdinand of Aragon and her father Maximilian he joined the League only as Emperor as not as guardian of his grandson Charles and thus the Low Countries neutrality was maintained The league targeted France The treaty also would not prevent the more adventurous Netherlands seigneurs from serving under Maximilian and Henry when they attacked the French later 25 17 Following this strategy in 1513 at the head of Henry VIII s army Maximilian gained a victory against the French at the Battle of the Spurs at little cost to himself or his daughter in fact according to Margaret the Low Countries got a profit of one million of gold from supplying the English army 26 17 For the sake of his grandson Charles s Burgundian lands he ordered Therouanne s walls to be demolished the stronghold had often served as a backdoor for French interference in the Low Countries 26 27 After Maximillian I s death in 1518 Margaret and young Charles all of 18 began to negotiate the latter s election as Holy Roman Emperor despite the opposition of the papacy and France The Governess instead supported her younger nephew Ferdinand However Charles refused to withdraw Using a combination of diplomacy and bribery Margaret played a crucial role in the election of Charles as Holy Roman Emperor in 1519 defeating the candidacy of King Francis I of France who from this day forward became Charles great rival in the struggle for pre eminence in Europe 15 16 Louise of Savoy with whom Margaret negotiated the terms of the Treaty of Cambrai As Emperor Charles V inherited the long running disputes with the Kings of France over possession of the Duchy of Milan and the Kingdom of Naples Though Charles preferred the Netherlands to many of his possessions his many kingdoms and many wars required him to travel throughout Europe His great victory at Pavia over Francis I in 1525 Battle of Pavia in which he took the French King prisoner and then freed him in exchange for his sons as hostages led once more to French invasion of the Low Countries Francis reneged on promises to renounce overlordship of Artois Flanders and the Franche Comte much less return the much desired Burgundian core territory the Duchy itself centered at Dijon Duchy of Burgundy as soon as he was safely back in France Once again Margaret proved a remarkably capable ruler of the Netherlands holding off the forces of the League of Cognac i e the French 1526 29 and then negotiating the Paix de Dames Ladies Peace Journeying to Cambrai again Margaret reunited with Louise of Savoy her sister in law and mother of Francis I They negotiated the end of a war that France could no longer sustain the Habsburgs lost Burgundy proper forever but France gave up its claims to legal overlordship of Flanders Artois and the Free County of Burgundy Franche Comte 28 Economy Edit The Palace of Coudenberg from a 17th century painting Brussels served as one of the main revenues of the Imperial court of Charles V in the Low Countries Margaret had an aptitude for business and maintained the prosperity of the Netherlands She negotiated the restoration of Intercursus Magnus with England which was favorable to the Flemish textile interests and brought huge profits 15 16 Because of the trade industry and wealth of the regions and cities she oversaw the Low Countries was an important source of income for the Imperial treasury In 1524 she signed a trade agreement with Frederick I of Denmark the condition was that Holland would not support Christian II that ensured the regular supply of grain into the Netherlands Christian later managed to get the support from Charles V thanks to the efforts of his secretary Cornelis de Schepper but Margaret refused to follow even Charles s order and insisted on placing the economical interests of the Netherlands above dynastic interests Christian was the husband of Isabella of Austria thus brother in law to Charles sister of Charles and nephew in law to Margaret 29 Margaret provided funds and war supplies for her nephew s troops especially against King Francis I of France and the German Protestants In following years Habsburg forces consolidated their hold over Tournai Friesland Utrecht and Overijssel which became part of the Netherlands Internal conflict Edit Although the Low Countries was not previously centralized Margaret s reign was a period of relative peace for the Netherlands The exception was the beginning of the Protestant Reformation especially in the north The first martyrs were burnt at the stake in 1523 Patronage of the arts Edit Inner courtyard of Margaret of Austria s Palace an early 16th century building in Mechelen Belgium It was one of the first Renaissance buildings in northern Europe Once she was declared Governor of the Netherlands Margaret purchased the Hof van Savoye located in the Korte Maagdenstraat Short Virgins Street in Mechelen She found the residence too small and started an ambitious expansion campaign in 1507 From 1517 to 1530 the architect Rombout II Keldermans furthered the project along the Keizerstraat Emperor Street and modified what became the rear wing which faces the Palace of Margaret of York The Governess kept several painters at her court including the Master of the Legend of the Magdalen and Pieter van Coninxloo Margaret possessed a rich library consisting mostly of missals poetry historical and ethical treatises which included the works of Christine de Pizan and the famous illuminated Tres Riches Heures du duc de Berry 30 She possessed several Chansonniers 31 which contained works by Josquin des Prez Johannes Ockeghem Jacob Obrecht and Pierre de la Rue who was her favourite composer In his 1517 1518 travel journal Italian canon Antonio de Beatis described Margaret s highly decorated library for women The books are all written in French and bound in velvet with silver gilt clasps 32 Margaret ended up raising her nephew and nieces in her palace Her court was visited by the great humanists of her time including Erasmus Adrian of Utrecht later Pope Adrian VI and Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa 33 34 Agrippa dedicated his arguably feminist work Declamation on the Nobility and Preeminence of the Female Sex to her 35 The Governor was so impressed with diplomat Thomas Boleyn s charm that she offered his daughter Anne Boleyn future Queen consort of England a temporary place in her household She reported to the English nobleman that the little girl was so presentable and so pleasant considering her youthful age that I am more beholden to you for sending her to me than you to me Margaret ordered several splendid music manuscripts from Pierre Alamire to send them as gifts to her relatives and political relations 36 She had one of the earliest collections of objects from the New World Hernan Cortes had presented Charles V with treasures received from the Aztec King Moctezuma in 1519 Several of these treasures were sent to Mechelen as a gift from her nephew in 1523 37 Portraits Edit Margaret of Austria c 1500 Attributed to Pieter van Coninxloo Margaret of Austria as Duchess of Savoy 15th century Margaret of Austria Worshipping by Anonymous Southern Netherlands between 1500 and 1510 Museum of Fine Arts Ghent Margaret of Austria 16th century Death and Burial Edit Tomb of Margaret of Austria Monastery of Brou Bourg en Bresse Statue of Margaret of Austria located at the market square of Mechelen The background is the St Rumbold s Cathedral On 15 November 1530 Margaret stepped on a piece of broken glass She initially thought little of the injury but gangrene set in and the leg had to be amputated She decided to arrange all her affairs first designating Charles V as her sole heir and writing him a letter in which she asked him to maintain peace with France and England On the night of 30 November the doctors came to operate on her They gave her a dose of opium to lessen the pain but it was reportedly so strong that she would not wake up again She died between midnight and one o clock 38 She was buried alongside her second husband at Bourg en Bresse in the mausoleum of the Royal Monastery of Brou that she previously commissioned 39 There is a statue of the Governess next to the St Rumbold s Cathedral in Mechelen Belgium Heraldry Edit Arms as a single lady before 1496 Arms as princess of Spain 1496 1501 Arms as duchess of Savoy after 1501 Arms as countess of Burgundy and Artois after 1509 Depiction in media EditMargaret of Austria is portrayed by Spanish actress Ursula Corbero in the TV show Isabel 40 A fictionalized version of Margaret can be found in the play The Unhappy Penitent by Catharine Trotter where she appears as the character Margarite In the play Margarite is in love with Rene II Duke of Lorraine although this may be a historical inaccuracy since there is no indication available today that the two ever met Also the Duke of Brittany is in love with Margarite but this likely another historical inaccuracy since he died in 1488 three years before Anne came to France to marry Charles VIII her father s death is what spurred the various betrothals of Anne In the White Princess series she is portrayed by Zazie Hayhurst Ancestry EditAncestors of Margaret of Austria Duchess of Savoy16 Leopold III Duke of Austria 47 8 Ernest Duke of Austria 43 17 Viridis Visconti 47 4 Frederick III Holy Roman Emperor 41 18 Siemowit IV Duke of Masovia 48 9 Cymburgis of Masovia 44 19 Alexandra of Lithuania 48 2 Maximilian I Holy Roman Emperor20 John I of Portugal 45 26 10 Edward I of Portugal 45 21 Philippa of Lancaster 45 27 5 Eleanor of Portugal 41 22 Ferdinand I of Aragon 49 11 Eleanor of Aragon 45 23 Eleanor of Alburquerque 49 1 Margaret of Austria24 John I Duke of Burgundy 50 30 12 Philip III Duke of Burgundy 42 25 Margaret of Bavaria 50 31 6 Charles I Duke of Burgundy 42 26 John I of Portugal 45 20 13 Isabella of Portugal 42 27 Philippa of Lancaster 45 21 3 Mary Duchess of Burgundy28 John I Duke of Bourbon 51 14 Charles I Duke of Bourbon 46 29 Marie Duchess of Auvergne 51 7 Isabella of Bourbon 42 30 John I Duke of Burgundy 52 24 15 Agnes of Burgundy 46 31 Margaret of Bavaria 25 References Edit Diana Maury Robin Anne R Larsen and Carole Levin 2007 Encyclopedia of women in the Renaissance Italy France and England ABC CLIO Inc p 43 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link N de Aragon in geneall net retrieved 7 October 2015 Gristwood Sarah 29 November 2016 Game of Queens The Women Who Made Sixteenth Century Europe Basic Books p 64 ISBN 978 0 465 09679 4 Retrieved 4 November 2021 Jansen Sharon L 2002 The Monstrous Regiment of Women Female Rulers in Early Modern Europe p 88 Gonkdo Michal 2006 Dame de Deuil Musical Offerings for Marguerite of Austria 1480 1530 3 CD Booklet KTC 4011 Holland Clive 1909 Tyrol and Its People Methuen and Company p 100 Retrieved 4 November 2021 Maximilian I Holy Roman Emperor Wikipedia 18 September 2021 Margaret of Austria regent of The Netherlands 1480 1530 Encyclopedia Britannica Koenigsberger H G 22 November 2001 Monarchies States Generals and Parliaments The Netherlands in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries Cambridge University Press p 91 ISBN 978 0 521 80330 4 Retrieved 4 November 2021 Blockmans Willem Pieter Blockmans Wim Prevenier Walter 1999 The Promised Lands The Low Countries Under Burgundian Rule 1369 1530 University of Pennsylvania Press p 210 ISBN 978 0 8122 1382 9 Retrieved 4 November 2021 Enno van Gelder H A en Van Houtte J A 1971 Margaretha van Oostenrijk in Grote Winkler Prins vol 12 p 610 611 Amsterdam Elsevier Enno van Gelder H A en Van Houtte J A 1971 Margaretha van Oostenrijk in Grote Winkler Prins vol 12 p 610 611 Amsterdam Elsevier Anttila T Yla 219 Habsburg Female Regents in the Early 16th Century PDF University of Helsinki pp 1 25 71 Archived PDF from the original on 25 October 2021 Retrieved 27 October 2021 Blockmans Wim Prevenier Walter 3 August 2010 The Promised Lands The Low Countries Under Burgundian Rule 1369 1530 University of Pennsylvania Press p 231 ISBN 978 0 8122 0070 6 Retrieved 4 November 2021 a b c Jansen 2002 p 94 a b c Tremayne 1918 p 240 a b c The New Cambridge Modern History 1713 63 The Old Regime volume VII CUP Archive 1957 pp 251 252 Archived from the original on 4 November 2021 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Koenigsberger 2001 p 99 101 Edmundson George 21 September 2018 History of Holland BoD Books on Demand p 21 ISBN 978 3 7340 5543 0 Archived from the original on 4 November 2021 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Blok Petrus Johannes 1970 History of the People of the Netherlands From the beginning of the fifteenth century to 1559 AMS Press pp 188 191 ISBN 978 0 404 00900 7 Archived from the original on 4 November 2021 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Koenigsberger 2001 p 99 Tracy James D 23 October 2018 Holland Under Habsburg Rule 1506 1566 The Formation of a Body Politic Univ of California Press pp 68 69 ISBN 978 0 520 30403 1 Retrieved 10 January 2022 Janin Hunt Carlson Ursula 10 January 2014 Mercenaries in Medieval and Renaissance Europe McFarland p 8 21 150 ISBN 978 1 4766 1207 2 Retrieved 10 January 2022 Tracy James D 1 January 1996 Erasmus of the Low Countries University of California Press p 94 ISBN 978 0 520 08745 3 Retrieved 10 January 2022 Koenigsberger 2001 p 101 a b Potter 2014 p 322 sfn error no target CITEREFPotter2014 help Gorrevod Laurent de 1913 Correspondance politique et administrative de Laurent de Gorrevod conseiller de Marguerite d Autriche et gouverneur de Bresse These presentee in French Protat p 271 Archived from the original on 4 November 2021 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Berenger Jean 1994 A History of the Habsburg Empire 1273 1700 5 ed New York Longman pp 141 149 Sicking L H J 1 January 2004 Neptune and the Netherlands State Economy and War at Sea in the Renaissance BRILL pp 216 218 ISBN 978 90 04 13850 6 Retrieved 4 November 2021 Schreurs Eugeen Vendrix Philippe 2005 The sweet melancholy of Margaret translated by Celia Skrine 11 CD Booklet MEW 0525 Schreurs Eugeen 1998 Margarete Maximilian I translated by Stratton Bull 14 CD Booklet ORF CD 265 Antonio de Beatis The Travel Journal of Antonio de Beatis 1517 1518 Translated by J R Hale ed and J M A Lindon Hakluyt Society 1979 pp 92 3 Tremayne Eleanor E 1918 The First Governess of the Netherlands Margaret of Austria Library of Alexandria p 379 ISBN 9781465517579 Triest Monica 2000 Macht vrouwen en politiek 1477 1558 Maria van Bourgondie Margaretha van Oostenrijk Maria van Hongarije Leuven Van Halewijck LeGates Marlene 2012 In Their Time A History of Feminism in Western Society Routledge p 111 ISBN 9781136779039 Kellman Herbert ed 1999 The Treasury of Petrus Alamire Music and Art in Flemish Court Manustricpts 1500 1535 Leuven Die Keure MacDonald Deanna 2002 Collecting a New World The Ethnographic Collections of Margaret of Austria The Sixteenth Century Journal 33 3 649 663 doi 10 2307 4144018 JSTOR 4144018 Tremayne Eleanor E 1908 The First Governess of the Netherlands Margaret of Austria Methuen pp 286 289 Retrieved 4 November 2021 Brou Centre des monuments nationaux Retrieved 2018 03 04 Personaje Margarita de Austria RTVE Retrieved 2 March 2016 a b Holland Arthur William 1911 Maximilian I emperor In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press a b c d Poupardin Rene 1911 Charles called The Bold duke of Burgundy In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Frederick III Roman Emperor Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed Cambridge University Press Urban William 2003 Tannenberg and After Chicago Lithuanian Research and Studies Center p 191 ISBN 0 929700 25 2 a b c d e f Stephens Henry Morse 1903 The story of Portugal G P Putnam s Sons p 139 ISBN 9780722224731 Retrieved 11 July 2018 a b Kiening Christian 1994 Rhetorique de la perte L exemple de la mort d Isabelle de Bourbon 1465 Medievales in French 13 27 15 24 doi 10 3406 medi 1994 1307 a b Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1860 Habsburg Ernst der Eiserne Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 6 via Wikisource a b Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1860 Habsburg Cimburgis von Masovien Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 6 p 158 via Wikisource a b Leonora of Aragon 1405 1445 Women in World History A Biographical Encyclopedia Gale Research Retrieved 11 July 2018 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Philip the Good Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 21 11th ed Cambridge University Press a b Anselme de Sainte Marie Pere 1726 Histoire genealogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France Genealogical and chronological history of the royal house of France in French Vol 3 3rd ed Paris La compagnie des libraires p 137 O Reilly Elizabeth Boyle 1921 How France Built Her Cathedrals London Harper Brothers Publishers p 265 The present choir of Moulins Cathedral originally the chapel of their palace was built by Agnes of Burgundy daughter of Jean sans Peur John the Fearless Bibliography Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Margaret of Austria Margarete Maximilian I Musik um 1500 Capilla Flamenca with La Caccia Schola Cantorum Cantate Domino Aalst Schola Gregoriana Lovaniensis 1998 ORF Shop CD 265 2 CDs Dulcis Melancholia Biographie musicale de Marguerite d Autriche Capilla Flamenca 2005 MEW 0525 Dame de Deuil Musical Offerings for Marguerite of Austria La Morra 2005 KTC 4011 Diana Maury Robin Anne R Larsen and Carole Levin 2007 Encyclopedia of women in the Renaissance Italy France and England ABC CLIO Inc a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Margaret of Austria 1480 1530 Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed 1911 p 703 Jansen Sharon L 2002 The Monstrous Regiment of Women Female Rulers in Early Modern Europe Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 312 21341 7 Margaret of Austria 1480 1530 EncyclopediaMargaret of Austria Duchess of SavoyHouse of HabsburgBorn 10 January 1480 Died 1 December 1530Political officesPreceded byWilliam de Croy Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands1507 1530 Succeeded byMary of HungaryItalian nobilityPreceded byYolande Louise of Savoy Duchess consort of Savoy1501 1504 VacantTitle next held byBeatrice of Portugal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Margaret of Austria Duchess of Savoy amp oldid 1126416564, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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