Joanna of Austria, Grand Duchess of Tuscany

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Joanna of Austria
Grand Duchess of Tuscany
Tenure 21 April 1574 – 11 April 1578
Spouse Francesco I de' Medici
Issue
Eleonora, Duchess of Mantua
Marie, Queen of France
Anna de' Medici
Filippo, Grand Prince of Tuscany
House House of Habsburg
Father Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor
Mother Anna of Bohemia and Hungary
Born 24 January 1547
Prague, Czech Republic
Died 11 April 1578
Florence, Italy

Joanna of Austria (24 January 1547 – 11 April 1578) was born an Archduchess of Austria as the youngest daughter of Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor and Anna of Bohemia and Hungary. By marriage, she was the Grand Princess of Tuscany and later the Grand Duchess of Tuscany. One of her daughters was the famous Marie de Medici, second wife of King Henry IV of France.

Contents

[edit] Family

Joanna was born in Prague as the youngest of 15 children. She never knew her mother and eldest sister as her mother died 2 days after Joanna's birth and her sister Elisabeth of Austria, Queen of Poland, died two years before Joanna was born.

Her paternal grandparents were Philip I of Castile and Joanna of Castile. Her maternal grandparents were King Vladislaus II of Bohemia and Hungary, and Anna of Foix-Candale. Through her father, Johanna was also a descendant of Isabella I of Castile and Mary of Burgundy.

[edit] Marriage

Her marriage to Francesco I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, took place on 18 December 1565 in Florence, after she solemnly arrived in the city by the Porta al Prato. Giorgio Vasari and Vincenzo Borghini, with the help of Giovanni Caccini made big festivities for these event.

Nevertheless, Joanna was homesick and unhappy. Ignored by her husband, and despised by the Florentines for her Austrian hauteur, she never felt at home in Florence.

Her father-in-law, Cosimo I de' Medici, was reasonably kind to Joanna. He had the courtyard of the Palazzo Vecchio specially decorated for her; the lunettes were painted with murals of Austrian towns by pupils of Vasari, and Verrocchio's Putto with Dolphin fountain was brought down from the Careggi villa where it had been set up in the garden by Lorenzo de' Medici.

The position of Joanna in the Florentine court was difficult during most of her marriage: between 1566 and 1575, she gave birth to six daughters, of whom only three survived infancy. The absence of a male heir to continue the dynasty was the cause of constant conflict with her husband, who preferred the company and love of his mistress Bianca Capello, who - although some call it a fraud- gave birth a son, Antonio, in 1576.

Finally, in 1577 Joanna gave birth to the long-awaited heir, baptized Filippo in honour of the King Philip II of Spain, Joanna's first cousin. The birth was celebrated with great joy by all the court, because thus was secured the succession of the Grand Duchy for another generation and eliminated all the hopes of Bianca Capello to have her "son" Antonio as heir of Tuscany. At the end, it was Joanna's brother-in-law, Ferdinando, who succeeded Francesco as Grand Duke.

[edit] Death

On 10 April 1578, Joanna - heavily pregnant with her eighth child - fell from the stairs in the Grand Ducal Palace in Florence. Some hours later, she gave birth to a son, who, born prematurely, died immediately. She died the next day on 11 April. Francesco subsequently married his mistress, Bianca Cappello.

The mysterious circumstances around this accident caused rumours accusing her husband and his mistress of murdering Joanna, so that they could be married. However, modern medical investigation of her remains confirm the official reports of her death as caused by the birth (the child presented arm first, and Johanna suffered a ruptured uterus). Johanna suffered from scoliosis: her spine and pelvis were severely deformed. It is clear from the condition of her pelvis that her previous births had been difficult, and it seems remarkable that she had survived them.[1]

[edit] Issue

The seven children of Francesco and Joanna were:

Out of a total of seven children, only two daughters, Eleonora and Marie lived to adulthood, the rest of the children died young. Anna the second eldest daughter died at the age of fourteen.

[edit] References

  1. ^ [1], Gino Fornaciari, Angelica Vitiello, Sara Giusiani, Valentina Giuffra, Antonio Fornaciari, Natale Villari, The Medici Project: First Anthropological and Paleopathological Results (retrieved 23 January 2011), which includes photographs of her bones.

[edit] Ancestry

[edit] Titles, styles, honours and arms

[edit] Titles and Styles

  • 24 January 1547 – 18 December 1565 Her Highness Archduchess Joanna of Austria
  • 18 December 1565 – 21 April 1574 Her Highness the Grand Princess of Tuscany
  • 21 April 1574 – 11 April 1578 Her Highness the Grand Duchess of Tuscany

[edit] See also

Joanna of Austria
Born: 24 January 1547 Died: 11 April 1578
Italian royalty
Preceded by
Eleanor of Toledo
as Duchess of Florence
Grand Duchess consort of Tuscany
1574–1578
Vacant
Title next held by
Christina of Lorraine
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