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Ferdinando I de' Medici

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Ferdinando I.
Grand Duke of Tuscany
Reign19 October 1587 – 7 February 1609
PredecessorFrancesco I
SuccessorCosimo II
Born(1549-07-30)30 July 1549
Florence
Died17 February 1609(1609-02-17) (aged 59)
Florence
SpouseChristina of Lorraine
IssueCosimo II, Grand Duke of Tuscany
Maria Maddalena
Catherine, Duchess of Mantua
Carlo, Bishop of Ostia
Claudia, Archduchess of Austria
Names
Ferdinando de' Medici
HouseHouse of Medici
FatherCosimo I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany
MotherEleonora di Toledo

Ferdinando I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany (30 July 1549 – 17 February 1609) was Grand Duke of Tuscany from 1587 to 1609, having succeeded his older brother Francesco I.

Early life

Ferdinando I de' Medici as Cardinal (1562 to 1589).
Evangelium Sanctum Domini Nostri Jesu Christi in Arabic, 1590, with Arabic types of Robert Granjon, Typographia Medicea, Rome.

Ferdinando was the fifth son (the third surviving at the time of his birth) of Cosimo I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany and Eleonora di Toledo, the daughter of Don Pedro Alvarez de Toledo, the Spanish viceroy of Naples.

He was made a Cardinal in 1562 at the age of 14 but was never ordained into the priesthood. At Rome, he proved an able administrator. He founded the Villa Medici in Rome and acquired many works of art (including the Medici lions), which he then brought back to Florence with him.

Grand Duke

When his brother Francesco I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany died in 1587, Ferdinando succeeded as Grand Duke at the age of 38.

In many ways, Ferdinando was the opposite of his brother who preceded him. Approachable and generous, he set out to rule mildly. He re-established the justice system and was genuinely concerned about the welfare of his subjects. During his reign, Tuscany revived and regained the independence his brother had given up.

Ferdinando fostered commerce and gained great wealth through the Medici banks, which were established in all the major cities of Europe. He enacted an edict of tolerance for Jews and heretics,[1] and Livorno became a haven for Spanish Jews as well as other persecuted foreigners. He established the Medici Oriental Press (Typographia Medicea), which published numerous books in the Arabic script.

He improved the harbor Cosimo I had built and diverted part of the flow of the Arno River into a canal called the Naviglio, which aided commerce between Florence and Pisa. He fostered an irrigation project in the Val di Chiana, which allowed the flatlands around Pisa and Fucecchio and in the Val di Nievole to be cultivated.

Marriage

For the first two years of his reign, he retained his position as Cardinal. In 1589 he married Christina of Lorraine.[2] The couple had a large reception at the Medici Villa in Poggio a Caiano. Christina's dowry was considerably large; it included 600,000 crowns in cash as well as jewellery with a value of 50,000 crowns. Also, the rights of the duchy of Urbino were transferred to Christina after the death of Queen Catherine and thus assumed by future Medici rulers.[3]

Foreign policy

Pietro Tacca's Monumento dei Quattro Mori (Monument of the Four Moors) in Leghorn, showing Ferdinando holding baton of a field marshal standing victorious above chained Moorish captives. (1623)

His foreign policy attempted to free Tuscany from Spanish domination. After the assassination of Henry III of France in 1589, he supported Henry IV of France in his struggles against the Catholic League. Ferdinando lent Henry money and encouraged him to convert to Catholicism, which he eventually did. Ferdinando also used his influence with the Pope to get him to accept Henry's conversion.

Henry showed no appreciation for these favors, and Ferdinando let the relationship cool, maintaining his cherished independence. He supported Philip III of Spain in his campaign in Algeria and Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor in his against the Turks. For these undertakings, he found it necessary to raise taxes on his subjects. He finally obtained the formal investiture of Siena, which his father had conquered.

Ferdinando also strengthened the Tuscan fleet, and it saw victories against pirates on the Barbary coast in 1607, and against a superior Turkish fleet the following year.

He also dreamed of a small African empire, and then considered the possibility of a colony in Brasil.[4] Ferdinando organised an expedition in 1608 under the command of Captain Thornton to northern Brasil and the Amazon river in order to create a colony.

Issue

Ancestors

Family of Ferdinando I de' Medici
16. Pierfrancesco di Lorenzo de' Medici
8. Giovanni de' Medici il Popolano
17. Laudomia Acciaiuoli
4. Giovanni dalle Bande Nere
18. Galeazzo Maria Sforza
9. Caterina Sforza
19. Lucrezia Landriani
2. Cosimo I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany
20. Giovanni Salviati
10. Jacopo Salviati
21. Maddalena Gondi
5. Maria Salviati
22. Lorenzo de' Medici
11. Lucrezia de' Medici
23. Clarice Orsini
1. Ferdinando I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany
24. Garcia Álvarez de Toledo
12. Fadrique Álvarez de Toledo
25. María Enriquez de Quiñones y Toledo
6. Pedro Álvarez de Toledo
26. Álvaro de Zuñiga y Leiva
13. Isabel de Zúñiga y Pimentel
27. Leonor Pimentel
3. Eleonora di Toledo
28. Rodrigo Afonso Pimentel
14. Luis Pimentel y Pacheco
29. María Pacheco
7. Maria Osorio Pimentel,
Marchioness of Villafranca del Bierzo
30. Pedro Alvarez Osorio
15. Juana Osorio y Bazán
31. María de Bazan

References

  • Hibbert, Christopher (1979). "XXI". In Pelican History of Art (ed.). The Rise and Fall of the House of Medici. Penguin Books Ltd. pp. 279–281.
Preceded by Grand Duke of Tuscany
1587–1609
Succeeded by