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{{Short description|15th- and 16th-century Italian noble}}
{{Short description|Italian noblewoman, patron of the arts and fashion leader (1474–1539)}}
{{for|the daughter of [[Francesco I d'Este, Duke of Modena]]|Isabella d'Este (1635–1666)}}
{{for|the daughter of [[Francesco I d'Este, Duke of Modena]]|Isabella d'Este (1635–1666)}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2025}}
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| death_place  = [[Mantua]], [[Duchy of Mantua]]
| death_place  = [[Mantua]], [[Duchy of Mantua]]
}}
}}
'''Isabella d'Este''' (19 May 1474 – 13 February 1539) was the [[Marchioness]] of [[Mantua]] and one of the leading women of the Italian [[Renaissance]] as a major cultural and political figure.
'''Isabella d'Este''' (19 May 1474 – 13 February 1539) was the [[Marchioness]] of [[Mantua]] and one of the leading women of the [[Italian Renaissance]] as a major cultural and political figure.


She was a patron of the arts as well as a leader of fashion and her innovative style of dressing was emulated by many women. The poet Ariosto labeled her as the "liberal and magnanimous Isabella",{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=9}} while author Matteo Bandello described her as "supreme among women".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=9}} Diplomat Niccolò da Correggio went even further by hailing her as "The First Lady of the world".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=9}}
She was a patron of the arts as well as a leader of fashion and her innovative style of dressing was emulated by many women. The poet Ariosto labeled her as the "liberal and magnanimous Isabella",{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=9}} while author Matteo Bandello described her as "supreme among women".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=9}} Diplomat Niccolò da Correggio went even further by hailing her as "The First Lady of the world".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=9}}


She served as the [[regent]] of Mantua during the absence of her husband [[Francesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua|Francesco II Gonzaga]] and during the minority of her son [[Federico II, Duke of Mantua|Federico]]. She was a prolific letter-writer and maintained a lifelong correspondence with her sister-in-law [[Elisabetta Gonzaga]]. Isabella grew up in a cultured family in the city-state of [[Ferrara]]. She received a fine classical education and she met many famous humanist scholars and artists. Due to the vast amount of extant correspondence between Isabella and her family and friends, her life is extremely well documented.{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=14}}
She served as the [[regent]] of Mantua during the absence of her husband [[Francesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua]] and during the minority of her son [[Federico II, Duke of Mantua|Federico]]. She was a prolific letter-writer and maintained a lifelong correspondence with her sister-in-law [[Elisabetta Gonzaga]]. Isabella grew up in a cultured family in the city-state of [[Ferrara]]. She received a fine classical education and she met many famous humanist scholars and artists. Due to the vast amount of extant correspondence between Isabella and her family and friends, her life is extremely well documented.{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=14}}


== Biography ==
== Biography ==
Isabella was born on Tuesday, 19 May 1474 at nine o'clock in the evening.{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=12}} Isabella's mother, [[Eleanor of Naples, Duchess of Ferrara|Eleanor of Naples]], wrote a letter to her friend Barbara Gonzaga describing the details of Isabella's birth<ref>Note: In fifteenth century Italy the day began at sunset rather than at midnight; therefore as Isabella's birth occurred on 19 May at the second hour, this indicated that correctly, she was born on 18 May, at 9.00 P.M.</ref> in [[Ferrara]].{{sfn|Cartwright|1903a}} Eleanor was the daughter of [[Ferdinand I of Naples|Ferdinand I]], the Aragonese King of Naples, and [[Isabella of Clermont]]. {{sfn|Marek|1976|p=12}}
Isabella was born on Tuesday, 19 May 1474 at nine o'clock in the evening.{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=12}} Isabella's mother, [[Eleanor of Naples, Duchess of Ferrara|Eleanor of Naples]], wrote a letter to her friend Barbara Gonzaga describing the details of Isabella's birth<ref>Note: In fifteenth century Italy the day began at sunset rather than at midnight; therefore as Isabella's birth occurred on 19 May at the second hour, this indicated that correctly, she was born on 18 May, at 9.00 P.M.</ref> in [[Ferrara]].{{sfn|Cartwright|1903a}} Eleanor was the daughter of [[Ferdinand I of Naples|Ferdinand I]], the Aragonese King of Naples, and [[Isabella of Clermont]].{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=12}}


One year later, on 29 June 1475, her sister [[Beatrice d'Este|Beatrice]] was born, and in 1476 and 1477 two brothers, [[Alfonso I d'Este, Duke of Ferrara|Alfonso]] and [[Ferrante d'Este|Ferrante]], were born. In 1479 and 1480 two more brothers were born; [[Ippolito d'Este|Ippolito]] and [[Sigismondo d'Este (1480–1524)|Sigismondo]]. Of all the children born into the family, Isabella is believed to have been the favourite.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gardener |first= Edmund |title= Dukes & Poets in Ferrara |publisher=Archibald Constable & Co. LTD |year= 1904 |location=London |page=238}}</ref>
One year later, on 29 June 1475, her sister [[Beatrice d'Este|Beatrice]] was born, and in 1476 and 1477 two brothers, [[Alfonso I d'Este, Duke of Ferrara|Alfonso]] and [[Ferrante d'Este|Ferrante]], were born. In 1479 and 1480 two more brothers were born; [[Ippolito d'Este|Ippolito]] and [[Sigismondo d'Este (1480–1524)|Sigismondo]]. Of all the children born into the family, Isabella is believed to have been the favourite.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gardener |first= Edmund |title= Dukes & Poets in Ferrara |publisher=Archibald Constable & Co. LTD |year= 1904 |location=London |page=238}}</ref>


In the year of her brother Ferrante's birth, Isabella was among the children of the family who travelled to Naples with her mother. When her mother returned to Ferrara, Isabella accompanied her, while the other two children remained in Naples for many years: Beatrice was adopted by her [[Ferdinand I of Naples|grandfather]], and her little brother [[Ferrante d'Este|Ferrante]] was left under the tutelage of their uncle [[Alfonso II of Naples|Alfonso]].<ref>Enrica Guerra, ''Il carteggio tra Beatrice d'Aragona e gli Estensi (1476–1508)'', pp. 42–43.</ref>
In the year of her brother Ferrante's birth, Isabella was among the children of the family who travelled to Naples with her mother. When her mother returned to Ferrara, Isabella accompanied her, while the other two children remained in Naples for many years: Beatrice was adopted by her [[Ferdinand I of Naples|grandfather]], and her little brother [[Ferrante d'Este|Ferrante]] was left under the tutelage of their uncle [[Alfonso II of Naples|Alfonso]].<ref>Enrica Guerra, ''Il carteggio tra Beatrice d'Aragona e gli Estensi (1476–1508)'', pp. 42–43.</ref>
[[File:Giancriostoforo_romano,_medaglia_di_isabella_d'este,_marchesa_di_mantova.JPG|link=https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Giancriostoforo_romano,_medaglia_di_isabella_d'este,_marchesa_di_mantova.JPG|left|thumb|Medail of Isabella, [[Giovanni Cristoforo Romano]]]]
[[File:Giancriostoforo_romano,_medaglia_di_isabella_d'este,_marchesa_di_mantova.JPG|link=https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Giancriostoforo_romano,_medaglia_di_isabella_d'este,_marchesa_di_mantova.JPG|left|thumb|Medail of Isabella, [[Giovanni Cristoforo Romano]]]]


=== Education ===
=== Education ===
Due to her outstanding intellect, she often discussed the classics and the affairs of state with ambassadors. In addition, she was personally acquainted with the painters, musicians, writers, and scholars who lived in and around the court. Besides her extensive knowledge of history and languages, she could also recite [[Virgil]] and [[Terence]] by heart. Isabella was also a talented singer and musician, and was taught to play the [[lute]] by [[Giovanni Angelo Testagrossa]].<ref>{{Cite Grove |last=Ness |first=Arthur J. |title=Giovanni Angelo Testagrossa}}</ref> In addition to these accomplishments, she was also an innovator of new dances, having been instructed in the art of dance by Ambrogio, a Jewish dancing master. {{sfn|Marek|1976|pp=16–17}}
Due to her outstanding intellect, she often discussed the classics and the affairs of state with ambassadors. In addition, she was personally acquainted with the painters, musicians, writers, and scholars who lived in and around the court. Besides her extensive knowledge of history and languages, she could also recite [[Virgil]] and [[Terence]] by heart. Isabella was also a talented singer and musician, and was taught to play the [[lute]] by [[Giovanni Angelo Testagrossa]].<ref>{{Cite Grove |last=Ness |first=Arthur J. |title=Giovanni Angelo Testagrossa}}</ref> In addition to these accomplishments, she was also an innovator of new dances, having been instructed in the art of dance by Ambrogio, a Jewish dancing master.{{sfn|Marek|1976|pp=16–17}}


=== Betrothal and marriage ===
=== Betrothal and marriage ===
[[File:Isabella d'Este palazzo ducale.jpg|thumb|upright|''Ambras Miniature'' of Isabella, anonymous artist (16th century)]]
[[File:Isabella d'Este palazzo ducale.jpg|thumb|upright|''Ambras Miniature'' of Isabella, anonymous artist (16th century)]]
In 1480, at the age of six, Isabella was betrothed to the eight years older [[Francesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua|Francesco]], the heir to the Marquess of Mantua. The Duke of Milan requested her hand in marriage for his son, Ludovico, two weeks later. Instead, her sister, [[Beatrice d'Este|Beatrice]] was betrothed to Ludovico and became the Duchess of Milan. Her [[dowry]] amounted to 25,000 [[ducat]]s.<ref name="DBDI">{{cite encyclopedia |url=http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/isabella-d-este-marchesa-di-mantova_(Dizionario-Biografico) |title=ISABELLA d'Este, marchesa di Mantova |first=Raffaele |last=Tamalio |encyclopedia=Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani |language=it |volume=62 |year=2004}}</ref> Although he was not handsome, Isabella admired Francesco for his strength and bravery; she also regarded him as a gentleman. After their first few encounters she began to enjoy his company and she spent the next few years getting to know him and preparing to be the Marchioness of Mantua. During their courtship, Isabella treasured the letters, poems, and sonnets he sent her as gifts.{{citation needed|date=February 2019}}
In 1480, at the age of six, Isabella was betrothed to the eight years older [[Francesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua|Francesco]], the heir to the Marquess of Mantua. The Duke of Milan requested her hand in marriage for his son, Ludovico, two weeks later. Instead, her sister, [[Beatrice d'Este|Beatrice]], was betrothed to Ludovico and became the Duchess of Milan. Her [[dowry]] amounted to 25,000 [[ducat]]s.<ref name="DBDI">{{cite encyclopedia |url=http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/isabella-d-este-marchesa-di-mantova_(Dizionario-Biografico) |title=ISABELLA d'Este, marchesa di Mantova |first=Raffaele |last=Tamalio |encyclopedia=Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani |language=it |volume=62 |year=2004}}</ref> Although he was not handsome, Isabella admired Francesco for his strength and bravery; she also regarded him as a gentleman. After their first few encounters{{when|reason=if he is writing poems, I'm guessing he is 21 and she is 13; somehow, this seems material|date=September 2025}} she began to enjoy his company and she spent the next few years getting to know him and preparing to be the Marchioness of Mantua. During their courtship, Isabella treasured the letters, poems, and sonnets he sent her as gifts.{{citation needed|date=February 2019}}


Ten years later, on 11 February 1490, at age 15, she married Francesco [[Proxy marriage|by proxy]]. By then, he had succeeded to the marquisate. Besides being the Marquess, Francesco was captain general of the armies of the [[Republic of Venice]]. Isabella became his wife amid a spectacular outpouring of public rejoicing and a grand celebration that took place on 15 February.<ref name="DBDI" /> She brought the sum of 3,000 ducats as her marriage portion, as well as valuable jewelry, dishes, and a silver service. {{sfn|Marek|1976|p=28}} Prior to the magnificent banquet which followed the wedding ceremony, Isabella rode through the main streets of Ferrara astride a horse draped in gems and gold. {{sfn|Marek|1976|p=30}}
Ten years later, on 11 February 1490, at age 15, she married Francesco [[Proxy marriage|by proxy]]. By then, he had succeeded to the marquisate. Besides being the Marquess, Francesco was captain general of the armies of the [[Republic of Venice]]. Isabella became his wife amid a spectacular outpouring of public rejoicing and a grand celebration that took place on 15 February.<ref name="DBDI" /> She brought the sum of 3,000 ducats as her marriage portion, as well as valuable jewelry, dishes, and a silver service.{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=28}} Prior to the magnificent banquet which followed the wedding ceremony, Isabella rode through the main streets of Ferrara astride a horse draped in gems and gold.{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=30}}


==== Relations with Milan ====
==== Relations with Milan ====
In 1491 Isabella went with a small entourage to Brescello and from there to Pavia, to accompany her sister [[Beatrice d'Este|Beatrice]] who was married to [[Ludovico Sforza|Ludovico il Moro]]. On this occasion she saw [[Galeazzo Sanseverino]] again —- as she had known him as a child in Ferrara —- with whom she began a large, and at times humorous, exchange of letters.{{sfn|Cartwright|1945|pp=51–58 }} However, his identity is not certain and could be the almost homonymous Galeazzo Visconti, Count of [[Busto Arsizio]], a courtier also dear to the dukes.<ref name=":7">{{cite book |title=Delle relazioni di Isabella d'Este Gonzaga con Ludovico e Beatrice Sforza|author=Alessandro Luzio|author2=Rodolfo Renier|pages=30–31}}</ref>  
In 1491 Isabella went with a small entourage to Brescello and from there to Pavia, to accompany her sister [[Beatrice d'Este|Beatrice]] who was married to [[Ludovico Sforza|Ludovico il Moro]]. On this occasion she saw [[Galeazzo Sanseverino]] again — as she had known him as a child in Ferrara — with whom she began a large, and at times humorous, exchange of letters.{{sfn|Cartwright|1945|pp=51–58 }} However, his identity is not certain and could be the almost homonymous Galeazzo Visconti, Count of [[Busto Arsizio]], a courtier also dear to the dukes.<ref name=":7">{{cite book |title=Delle relazioni di Isabella d'Este Gonzaga con Ludovico e Beatrice Sforza|author=Alessandro Luzio|author2=Rodolfo Renier|pages=30–31}}</ref>  
[[File:Statua_di_San_Vittore_dal_basso_museo_del_Duomo_di_Milano.jpg|upright|link=https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Statua_di_San_Vittore_dal_basso_museo_del_Duomo_di_Milano.jpg|left|thumb|Probable portrait of [[Galeazzo Sanseverino]], statue in the collection of the Great Museum of the Duomo of Milan.]]
[[File:Statua_di_San_Vittore_dal_basso_museo_del_Duomo_di_Milano.jpg|upright|link=https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Statua_di_San_Vittore_dal_basso_museo_del_Duomo_di_Milano.jpg|left|thumb|Probable portrait of [[Galeazzo Sanseverino]], statue in the collection of the Great Museum of [[Milan Cathedral]]]]
Between the two immediately ignited a dispute, destined to last for months, on who was the best paladin, Orlando or Rinaldo: Galeazzo supported the first, the sisters d'Este the second. Galeazzo, who exercised a strong fascination, soon managed to convert them both to Orlando's faith, but Isabella, once back in Mantua, returned to prefer Rinaldo, so that Galeazzo remembered her as "I alone was enough to make her change her mind and cry out ''Rolando! Rolando!''", invited her to follow her sister's example and swore that he would convert her a second time, as soon as they met again. Isabella jokingly replied that she would then bring a frog to offend him, and the dispute went on for a long time.<ref name=":7" />
Between the two{{what|reason=letters, proximity, gossip?|date=September 2025}} immediately ignited a dispute, destined to last for months, on who was the best paladin, Orlando or Rinaldo: Galeazzo supported the first, the sisters d'Este the second. Galeazzo, who exercised a strong fascination, soon managed to convert them both to Orlando's faith, but Isabella, once back in Mantua, returned to prefer Rinaldo, so that Galeazzo remembered her as "I alone was enough to make her change her mind and cry out ''Rolando! Rolando!''", invited her to follow her sister's example and swore that he would convert her a second time, as soon as they met again. Isabella jokingly replied that she would then bring a frog to offend him, and the dispute went on for a long time.<ref name=":7" />


On 11 February, speaking to her about the amusements he had with Beatrice, he wrote to her: "I will also strive to improve in order to give greater pleasure to the S. V., when I come for her this summer", and lamented the lack of "his sweet company". {{sfn|Luzio|Renier|1890|pp=39–40 }} Isabella's presence was in fact much desired in Milan, not only by Galeazzo but also by her sister, Ludovico and the other courtiers, however the Marquise was able to go there a few times, as her husband Francesco was wary of sending it to her, judging that in that court too many "madness" were committed, and perhaps also out of jealousy of Ludovico.{{sfn|Pizzagalli|2001|p=137}}  
On 11 February, speaking to her about the amusements he had with Beatrice, he wrote to her: "I will also strive to improve in order to give greater pleasure to the S. V., when I come for her this summer", and lamented the lack of "his sweet company".{{sfn|Luzio|Renier|1890|pp=39–40 }} Isabella's presence was in fact much desired in Milan, not only by Galeazzo but also by her sister, Ludovico and the other courtiers. {{clarify|text=However the Marquise was able to go there a few times, as her husband Francesco was wary of sending it to her, judging that in that court too many "madness" were committed,|reason=ESL-isms abound; someone with also a clue about the story is best suited to fix this|date=September 2025}} and perhaps also out of jealousy of Ludovico.{{sfn|Pizzagalli|2001|p=137}}  
[[File:Beatrice_e_Isabella_d'Este.jpg|link=https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Beatrice_e_Isabella_d'Este.jpg|thumb|Alleged portrait of the two sisters: [[Beatrice d'Este|Beatrice]] (left) and Isabella (right), in the ceiling fresco of the Sala del Tesoro of Palazzo Costabili near Ferrara. Attributed [[Benvenuto Tisi|Benvenuto Tisi da Garofalo]], dated 1503–1506.]]
[[File:Beatrice_e_Isabella_d'Este.jpg|link=https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Beatrice_e_Isabella_d'Este.jpg|thumb|Alleged portrait of the two sisters: [[Beatrice d'Este|Beatrice]] (left) and Isabella (right), in the ceiling fresco of the Sala del Tesoro of Palazzo Costabili near Ferrara. Attributed [[Benvenuto Tisi|Benvenuto Tisi da Garofalo]], dated 1503–1506.]]
Despite the affection, Isabella began to feel envy for her sister Beatrice, first for the very fortunate marriage that had touched her and for the enormous riches, then for the two sons in perfect health who were born to her a short time later, while she seemed unable to have children,{{sfn|Pizzagalli|1999|p=106}}{{sfn|Valeri|1913|p=381}} and in this aroused the concerns of her mother Eleonora, who continually exhorted her in letters to be as close as possible to her husband.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.rm.unina.it/rivista/dwnl/saggi_ferrari_09.pdf|title=Un'educazione sentimentale per lettera: il caso di Isabella d'Este (1490–1493)|access-date=28 September 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210930075617/http://www.rm.unina.it/rivista/dwnl/saggi_ferrari_09.pdf|archive-date=30 September 2021|url-status=live}}</ref> A certain hatred can also be seen in a letter to his mother dating back to his visit to Pavia in August 1492, when, speaking of Beatrice, he wrote: "she is not a greater than me, but she is much bigger!"; in a similar way she also expressed herself to her husband, not being able yet to know, perhaps, that the sister's coarseness was due to the incipient pregnancy (she was at the fourth-fifth month).{{sfn|Mazzi|2004|pp=38,44–50}} These frictions were perhaps also linked to the fact that Ludovico had initially asked for Isabella's hand, in 1480, and that this had not been possible because, only a few days earlier, Duke Ercole had officially promised it to Francesco Gonzaga. {{sfn|Cartwright|1945|p=7}}
Despite the affection, Isabella began to feel envy for her sister Beatrice, first for the very fortunate marriage that had touched her and for the enormous riches, then for the two sons in perfect health who were born to her a short time later, while she seemed unable to have children,{{sfn|Pizzagalli|1999|p=106}}{{sfn|Valeri|1913|p=381}} and in this aroused the concerns of her mother Eleonora, who continually exhorted her in letters to be as close as possible to her husband.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.rm.unina.it/rivista/dwnl/saggi_ferrari_09.pdf|title=Un'educazione sentimentale per lettera: il caso di Isabella d'Este (1490–1493)|access-date=28 September 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210930075617/http://www.rm.unina.it/rivista/dwnl/saggi_ferrari_09.pdf|archive-date=30 September 2021|url-status=live}}</ref> A certain hatred can also be seen in a letter to his{{clarify|reason=there is no solid male anaphor here|date=September 2025}} mother dating back to his visit to Pavia in August 1492, when, speaking of Beatrice, he wrote: "she is not a greater than me, but she is much bigger!"; in a similar way she also expressed herself to her husband, not being able yet to know, perhaps, that the sister's coarseness was due to the incipient pregnancy (she was at the fourth-fifth month).{{sfn|Mazzi|2004|pp=38,44–50}} These frictions were perhaps also linked to the fact that Ludovico had initially asked for Isabella's hand, in 1480, and that this had not been possible because, only a few days earlier, Duke Ercole had officially promised it to Francesco Gonzaga.{{sfn|Cartwright|1945|p=7}}


Despite everything, in 1492 she was very close to Beatrice in a difficult moment of her pregnancy, that is when she was suddenly struck by an attack of malarial fevers, and in 1495 she went again to Milan to assist her sister in her second birth and also baptized her nephew Francesco. {{sfn|Luzio|Renier|1890|p=107 }}
Despite everything, in 1492 she was very close to Beatrice in a difficult moment of her pregnancy, that is when she was suddenly struck by an attack of malarial fevers, and in 1495 she went again to Milan to assist her sister in her second birth and also baptized her nephew Francesco.{{sfn|Luzio|Renier|1890|p=107 }}


In the summer of 1494, on the occasion of the descent of the French into Italy, Beatrice invited her sister to Milan to kiss Gilbert of Montpensier and others of the royal house, according to the custom French. Secretary Benedetto Capilupi reported: {{sfn|Luzio|Renier|1890|p=97 }}{{Blockquote|The Duchess says that when the Duke of Orliens came, she had to dress colorfully, dance and be kissed by the Duke, who wanted to kiss all the bridesmaids and women of account. [...] Coming Count Delfino or someone else of royal blood, the Duchess invites the S.V. to take these little kisses|Benedetto Capilupi's letter to Isabella d'Este}}In fact, it does not seem that Beatrice had any conflicting feelings towards Isabella, nor that she saw with a bad eye the complicity between the latter and her husband Ludovico. The Moro in fact, who was of generous nature, often gave Isabella even very expensive gifts: once he sent her fifteen arms of a fabric so precious as to cost forty ducats on her arm – an amazing sum – saying that he had already made a dress for Beatrice. {{sfn|Luzio|Renier|1890|p=62 }}  
In the summer of 1494, on the occasion of the descent of the French into Italy, Beatrice invited her sister to Milan to kiss Gilbert of Montpensier and others of the royal house, according to the custom French. Secretary Benedetto Capilupi reported:{{sfn|Luzio|Renier|1890|p=97 }}{{Blockquote|The Duchess says that when the Duke of Orliens came, she had to dress colorfully, dance and be kissed by the Duke, who wanted to kiss all the bridesmaids and women of account. [...] Coming Count Delfino or someone else of royal blood, the Duchess invites the S.V. to take these little kisses|Benedetto Capilupi's letter to Isabella d'Este}}In fact, it does not seem that Beatrice had any conflicting feelings towards Isabella, nor that she saw with a bad eye the complicity between the latter and her husband Ludovico. The Moro in fact, who was of generous nature, often gave Isabella even very expensive gifts: once he sent her fifteen arms of a fabric so precious as to cost forty ducats on her arm – an amazing sum – saying that he had already made a dress for Beatrice.{{sfn|Luzio|Renier|1890|p=62 }}  
[[File:7580_-_Ludovico_il_Moro_-_Museo_del_Paesaggio_(Verbania)_-_Foto_Giovanni_Dall'Orto,_8-Jan-2012a.jpg|link=https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:7580_-_Ludovico_il_Moro_-_Museo_del_Paesaggio_(Verbania)_-_Foto_Giovanni_Dall'Orto,_8-Jan-2012a.jpg|thumb|[[Ludovico Sforza|Ludovico il Moro]], Isabella's brother-in-law. Round from the Renaissance frieze torn from the Visconti castle of Invorio Inferiore]]
[[File:7580_-_Ludovico_il_Moro_-_Museo_del_Paesaggio_(Verbania)_-_Foto_Giovanni_Dall'Orto,_8-Jan-2012a.jpg|link=https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:7580_-_Ludovico_il_Moro_-_Museo_del_Paesaggio_(Verbania)_-_Foto_Giovanni_Dall'Orto,_8-Jan-2012a.jpg|thumb|[[Ludovico Sforza|Ludovico il Moro]], Isabella's brother-in-law. Round from the Renaissance frieze torn from the Visconti castle of Invorio Inferiore]]
After the death of his wife, which took place in 1497, Ludovico came to allude to a secret relationship with Isabella, claiming that it was out of jealousy of his wife that the Marquis Francesco played a double game between him and the Lordship of Venice. The rumor was however promptly denied by his father Ercole.<ref>Daniela Pizzagalli, La signora del Rinascimento. Vita e splendori di Isabella d'Este alla corte di Mantova, Rizzoli, 2001, p. 137.</ref>
After the death of his wife, which took place in 1497, Ludovico came to allude to a secret relationship with Isabella, claiming that it was out of jealousy of his wife that the Marquis Francesco played a double game between him and the Lordship of Venice. The rumor was however promptly denied by his father Ercole.<ref>Daniela Pizzagalli, La signora del Rinascimento. Vita e splendori di Isabella d'Este alla corte di Mantova, Rizzoli, 2001, p. 137.</ref>
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==== Marriage ====
==== Marriage ====
As the couple had known and admired one another for many years, their mutual attraction deepened into love. Reportedly, marriage to Francesco caused Isabella to "bloom".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=33}} At the time of her wedding, Isabella was said to have been pretty, slim, graceful, and well-dressed. {{sfn|Marek|1976|pp=33–34}} Her long, fine hair was dyed a fashionable pale blonde and her eyes were described as "brown as fir cones in autumn, scattered laughter".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=34}}
As the couple had known and admired one another for many years, their mutual attraction deepened into love. Reportedly, marriage to Francesco caused Isabella to "bloom".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=33}} At the time of her wedding, Isabella was said to have been pretty, slim, graceful, and well-dressed.{{sfn|Marek|1976|pp=33–34}} Her long, fine hair was dyed a fashionable pale blonde and her eyes were described as "brown as fir cones in autumn, scattered laughter".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=34}}


Isabella's relationship with her husband over the years often proved to be tense, at times very tense, both for the political differences between the two and for the difficulty in procreating a male heir. In truth, Francesco for his part was always very proud of his daughters and never showed himself disappointed, indeed from the beginning he declared himself in love with the firstborn Eleonora, despite the absolute disappointment of Isabella who refused her daughter, who was then very lovingly educated by her sister-in-law Elisabetta, who because of her husband's impotence never had children. When in 1496 the second daughter Margherita was born, Isabella was so angry that she wrote to her husband, who was then fighting the French in Calabria, a letter in which she blamed him, declaring that she did nothing but reap the fruits of his sown. Francis replied that he was instead very happy with the birth of his daughter – who, however, he did not have time to know, having died in swaddling clothes – and indeed forbade anyone to show discontent with it.{{sfn|Pizzagalli|2001|pp=87–88,114–115}}
Isabella's relationship with her husband over the years often proved to be tense, at times very tense, both for the political differences between the two and for the difficulty in procreating a male heir. In truth, Francesco for his part was always very proud of his daughters and never showed himself disappointed, indeed from the beginning he declared himself in love with the firstborn Eleonora, despite the absolute disappointment of Isabella who refused her daughter, who was then very lovingly educated by her sister-in-law Elisabetta, who because of her husband's impotence never had children. When in 1496 the second daughter Margherita was born, Isabella was so angry that she wrote to her husband, who was then fighting the French in Calabria, a letter in which she blamed him, declaring that she did nothing but reap the fruits of his sown. Francis replied that he was instead very happy with the birth of his daughter – who, however, he did not have time to know, having died in swaddling clothes – and indeed forbade anyone to show discontent with it.{{sfn|Pizzagalli|2001|pp=87–88,114–115}}
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[[File:Francesco II Gonzaga.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Isabella's husband, [[Francesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua]]]]
[[File:Francesco II Gonzaga.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Isabella's husband, [[Francesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua]]]]


In his capacity of captain general of the Venetian armies, Francesco often was required to go to [[Venice]] for conferences that left Isabella in Mantua on her own at ''La Reggia'', the ancient palace that was the [[family seat]] of the Gonzagas.{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=35}} She did not lack company, however, as she passed the time with her mother and with her sister, Beatrice. Upon meeting Elisabetta Gonzaga, her 18-year-old sister-in-law, the two women became close friends. They enjoyed reading books, playing cards, and travelling about the countryside together. Once they journeyed as far as [[Lake Garda]] during one of Francesco's absences. {{sfn|Marek|1976|p=35}}
In his capacity of captain general of the Venetian armies, Francesco often was required to go to [[Venice]] for conferences that left Isabella in Mantua on her own at ''La Reggia'', the ancient palace that was the [[family seat]] of the Gonzagas.{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=35}} She did not lack company, however, as she passed the time with her mother and with her sister, Beatrice. Upon meeting Elisabetta Gonzaga, her 18-year-old sister-in-law, the two women became close friends. They enjoyed reading books, playing cards, and travelling about the countryside together. Once they journeyed as far as [[Lake Garda]] during one of Francesco's absences.{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=35}}


==== Diplomatic missions ====
==== Diplomatic missions ====
Isabella had met the French king in Milan in 1500 on a successful diplomatic mission that she had undertaken to protect Mantua from French invasion. Louis had been impressed by her alluring personality and keen intelligence. {{sfn|Marek|1976|pp=80–81}} It was while she was being entertained by Louis, whose troops occupied Milan, that she offered asylum to Milanese refugees including [[Cecilia Gallerani]], the refined mistress of her sister Beatrice's husband, [[Ludovico Sforza]], Duke of Milan, who had been forced to leave his duchy in the wake of French occupation. Isabella presented Cecilia to King Louis, describing her as a "lady of rare gifts and charm".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=80}}
Isabella had met the French king in Milan in 1500 on a successful diplomatic mission that she had undertaken to protect Mantua from French invasion. Louis had been impressed by her alluring personality and keen intelligence.{{sfn|Marek|1976|pp=80–81}} It was while she was being entertained by Louis, whose troops occupied Milan, that she offered asylum to Milanese refugees including [[Cecilia Gallerani]], the refined mistress of her sister Beatrice's husband, [[Ludovico Sforza]], Duke of Milan, who had been forced to leave his duchy in the wake of French occupation. Isabella presented Cecilia to King Louis, describing her as a "lady of rare gifts and charm".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=80}}


==== Lucrezia Borgia ====
==== Lucrezia Borgia ====
A year after her 1502 marriage to Isabella's brother Alfonso, the notorious [[Lucrezia Borgia]] became the mistress of Francesco.<ref>Note:In June 1505, Alfonso succeeded their father as duke, making Lucrezia Duchess of Ferrara</ref> At about the same time, Isabella had given birth to a daughter, Ippolita, and she continued to bear him children throughout Francesco and Lucrezia's long, passionate affair, which was more sexual than romantic.{{sfn|Marek|1976|pp=166–69}} Lucrezia had previously made overtures of friendship to Isabella which the latter had coldly and disdainfully ignored. From the time Lucrezia had first arrived in Ferrara as Alfonso's intended bride, Isabella, despite having acted as hostess during the wedding festivities, had regarded Lucrezia as a rival, whom she sought to outdo at every opportunity. {{sfn|Marek|1976|pp=147–48}} Francesco's affair with Lucrezia, whose beauty was renowned,{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=33}} caused Isabella much jealous suffering and emotional pain.{{sfn|Marek|1976|pp=166–69}} The liaison ended when he contracted [[syphilis]] as a result of encounters with prostitutes.{{citation needed|date=February 2021}}
A year after her 1502 marriage to Isabella's brother Alfonso, the notorious [[Lucrezia Borgia]] became the mistress of Francesco.<ref>Note:In June 1505, Alfonso succeeded their father as duke, making Lucrezia Duchess of Ferrara</ref> At about the same time, Isabella had given birth to a daughter, Ippolita, and she continued to bear him children throughout Francesco and Lucrezia's long, passionate affair, which was more sexual than romantic.{{sfn|Marek|1976|pp=166–69}} Lucrezia had previously made overtures of friendship to Isabella which the latter had coldly and disdainfully ignored. From the time Lucrezia had first arrived in Ferrara as Alfonso's intended bride, Isabella, despite having acted as hostess during the wedding festivities, had regarded Lucrezia as a rival, whom she sought to outdo at every opportunity.{{sfn|Marek|1976|pp=147–48}} Francesco's affair with Lucrezia, whose beauty was renowned,{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=33}} caused Isabella much jealous suffering and emotional pain.{{sfn|Marek|1976|pp=166–69}} The liaison ended when he contracted [[syphilis]] as a result of encounters with prostitutes.{{citation needed|date=February 2021}}


=== Regency ===
=== Regency ===
[[File:Leonardo da Vinci, Portrait of Isabella d'Este.jpg|left|thumb|[[Portrait of Isabella d'Este (Leonardo)|Portrait of Isabella d'Este]] by [[Leonardo da Vinci]] (1499–1500)]]
[[File:Leonardo da Vinci, Portrait of Isabella d'Este.jpg|left|thumb|[[Portrait of Isabella d'Este (Leonardo)|Portrait of Isabella d'Este]] by [[Leonardo da Vinci]] (1499–1500)]]
Isabella played an important role in Mantua during troubled times for the city. When her husband was captured in 1509 and held hostage in Venice, she took control of Mantua's military forces and held off the invaders until his release in 1512. In the same year, 1512, she was the hostess at the Congress of Mantua, which was held to settle questions concerning Florence and Milan. {{sfn|Marek|1976|p=250}} As a ruler, she appeared to have been much more assertive and competent than her husband. When apprised of this fact upon his return, Francesco was furious and humiliated at being surpassed by his wife's superior political ability. This caused their marriage to break down irrevocably. As a result, Isabella began to travel freely and live independently from her husband until his death on 19 March 1519.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Brooklyn Museum: Isabella d'Este |url=https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/dinner_party/place_settings/isabella_d_este |access-date=5 December 2022 |website=www.brooklynmuseum.org}}</ref>
Isabella played an important role in Mantua during troubled times for the city. When her husband was captured in 1509 and held hostage in Venice, she took control of Mantua's military forces and held off the invaders until his release in 1512. In the same year, 1512, she was the hostess at the Congress of Mantua, which was held to settle questions concerning Florence and Milan.{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=250}} As a ruler, she appeared to have been much more assertive and competent than her husband. When apprised of this fact upon his return, Francesco was furious and humiliated at being surpassed by his wife's superior political ability. This caused their marriage to break down irrevocably. As a result, Isabella began to travel freely and live independently from her husband until his death on 19 March 1519.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Brooklyn Museum: Isabella d'Este |url=https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/dinner_party/place_settings/isabella_d_este |access-date=5 December 2022 |website=www.brooklynmuseum.org}}</ref>


After the death of her husband, Isabella ruled Mantua as regent for her son [[Frederick II, Duke of Mantua|Federico]]. She began to play an increasingly important role in Italian politics, steadily advancing Mantua's position. She was instrumental in promoting Mantua to a Duchy, which was obtained by wise diplomatic use of her son's marriage contracts. She also succeeded in obtaining a [[Cardinal (Catholicism)|cardinal]]ate for her son [[Ercole Gonzaga|Ercole]]. She further displayed shrewd political acumen in her negotiations with [[Cesare Borgia]], who had dispossessed [[Guidobaldo da Montefeltro]], [[duke of Urbino]], the husband of her sister-in-law and good friend [[Elisabetta Gonzaga]] in 1502.{{citation needed|date=February 2024}}
After the death of her husband, Isabella ruled Mantua as regent for her son [[Frederick II, Duke of Mantua|Federico]]. She began to play an increasingly important role in Italian politics, steadily advancing Mantua's position. She was instrumental in promoting Mantua to a Duchy, which was obtained by wise diplomatic use of her son's marriage contracts. She also succeeded in obtaining a [[Cardinal (Catholicism)|cardinal]]ate for her son [[Ercole Gonzaga|Ercole]]. She further displayed shrewd political acumen in her negotiations with [[Cesare Borgia]], who had dispossessed [[Guidobaldo da Montefeltro]], [[duke of Urbino]], the husband of her sister-in-law and good friend [[Elisabetta Gonzaga]] in 1502.{{citation needed|date=February 2024}}
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==== "Devoted head of state" ====
==== "Devoted head of state" ====
As a widow, Isabella at the age of 45 became a "devoted head of state". {{sfn|Marek|1976|p=204}} Her position as a Marquise required her serious attention, therefore she was required to study the problems faced by a ruler of a city-state. To improve the well-being of her subjects she studied architecture, agriculture, and industry, and followed the principles that [[Niccolò Machiavelli]] had set forth for rulers in his book ''[[The Prince]]''. In return, the people of Mantua respected and loved her. {{sfn|Marek|1976|p=205}}
As a widow, Isabella at the age of 45 became a "devoted head of state".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=204}} Her position as a Marquise required her serious attention, therefore she was required to study the problems faced by a ruler of a city-state. To improve the well-being of her subjects she studied architecture, agriculture, and industry, and followed the principles that [[Niccolò Machiavelli]] had set forth for rulers in his book ''[[The Prince]]''. In return, the people of Mantua respected and loved her.{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=205}}


[[File:BLW Plate with Hippolytus and Phaedra.jpg|thumb|[[Maiolica]] plate from [[Urbino]] with the arms of Isabella and her late husband, c. 1524 ([[Victoria and Albert Museum]])]]
[[File:BLW Plate with Hippolytus and Phaedra.jpg|thumb|[[Maiolica]] plate from [[Urbino]] with the arms of Isabella and her late husband, c. 1524 ([[Victoria and Albert Museum]])]]
Isabella left Mantua for Rome in 1527. She was present during the catastrophic [[Sack of Rome (1527)|Sack of Rome]], when she converted her house the ''Palazzo Colonna'', into an asylum for approximately 2,000 people (including clerics, nobles and common citizens) fleeing the Imperial soldiers. Her huge palace was the only place safe from attacks, because her son Ferrante Gonzaga was a general in the invading army and she herself had good relationship with the emperor. When she left Rome, she managed to acquire safe passage for all the refugees who had sought refuge in her home.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bartlett |first1=Kenneth |title=The Renaissance in Italy: A History |date=15 November 2019 |publisher=Hackett Publishing |isbn=978-1-62466-820-3 |page=315 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3ta-DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA315 |access-date=5 September 2022 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Wagner |first1=John A. |title=Voices of the Renaissance: Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life |date=4 February 2022 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-1-4408-7604-2 |page=137 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=O3FYEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA137 |access-date=5 September 2022 |language=en}}</ref>
Isabella left Mantua for Rome in 1527. She was present during the catastrophic [[Sack of Rome (1527)|Sack of Rome]], when she converted her house, the ''Palazzo Colonna'', into an asylum for approximately 2,000 people (including clerics, nobles and common citizens) fleeing the Imperial soldiers. Her huge palace was the only place safe from attacks, because her son Ferrante Gonzaga was a general in the invading army and she herself had good relationship with the emperor. When she left Rome, she managed to acquire safe passage for all the refugees who had sought refuge in her home.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bartlett |first1=Kenneth |title=The Renaissance in Italy: A History |date=15 November 2019 |publisher=Hackett Publishing |isbn=978-1-62466-820-3 |page=315 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3ta-DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA315 |access-date=5 September 2022 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Wagner |first1=John A. |title=Voices of the Renaissance: Contemporary Accounts of Daily Life |date=4 February 2022 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-1-4408-7604-2 |page=137 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=O3FYEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA137 |access-date=5 September 2022 |language=en}}</ref>


==== Later years and death ====
==== Later years and death ====
Once Rome became stabilized following the sacking, she left the city and returned to Mantua. She made it a centre of culture, started a school for girls, and turned her ducal apartments into a museum containing the finest art treasures. This was not enough to satisfy Isabella, already in her mid-sixties, so she returned to political life and ruled [[Solarolo]], in [[Emilia-Romagna|Romagna]] until her death on 13 February 1539. She was buried beside her husband in the Church of Santa Paola in Mantua, but the remains were stolen.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Canadè |first=Rossella |title=Dalle ossa riesumate l'altra faccia dei Gonzaga |url=http://gazzettadimantova.gelocal.it/cronaca/2011/02/06/news/dalle-ossa-riesumate-l-altra-faccia-dei-gonzaga-1.148964|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140429050046/http://gazzettadimantova.gelocal.it/cronaca/2011/02/06/news/dalle-ossa-riesumate-l-altra-faccia-dei-gonzaga-1.148964 |archive-date=29 April 2014 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Este, Beatrice d' and Isabella d' – Dictionary definition of Este, Beatrice d' and Isabella d' {{!}} Encyclopedia.com: FREE online dictionary|url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/women/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/este-beatrice-d-and-isabella-d|access-date=1 February 2018|website=www.encyclopedia.com}}</ref>
Once Rome became stabilized following the sacking, she left the city and returned to Mantua. She made it a centre of culture, started a school for girls, and turned her ducal apartments into a museum containing the finest art treasures. This was not enough to satisfy Isabella, already in her mid-sixties, so she returned to political life and ruled [[Solarolo]], in [[Emilia-Romagna|Romagna]] until her death on 13 February 1539. She was buried beside her husband in the Church of Santa Paola in Mantua, but the remains were stolen.{{whose|reason=there are two sets of remains in scope here|date=September 2025}}<ref>{{Cite web |last=Canadè |first=Rossella |title=Dalle ossa riesumate l'altra faccia dei Gonzaga |url=http://gazzettadimantova.gelocal.it/cronaca/2011/02/06/news/dalle-ossa-riesumate-l-altra-faccia-dei-gonzaga-1.148964|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140429050046/http://gazzettadimantova.gelocal.it/cronaca/2011/02/06/news/dalle-ossa-riesumate-l-altra-faccia-dei-gonzaga-1.148964 |archive-date=29 April 2014 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Este, Beatrice d' and Isabella d' – Dictionary definition of Este, Beatrice d' and Isabella d' {{!}} Encyclopedia.com: FREE online dictionary|url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/women/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/este-beatrice-d-and-isabella-d|access-date=1 February 2018|website=www.encyclopedia.com}}</ref>


== Appearance ==
== Appearance ==
[[File:Medaglie_dei_fratelli_d'Este,_Isabella,_Beatrice,_Alfonso_e_Ippolito.jpg|link=https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Medaglie_dei_fratelli_d'Este,_Isabella,_Beatrice,_Alfonso_e_Ippolito.jpg|left|thumb|Confrontation of the Este brothers' medals: Isabella, [[Alfonso I d'Este, Duke of Ferrara|Alfonso]], [[Ferrante d'Este|Ferrante]], [[Ippolito d'Este|Ippolito]] and [[Sigismondo d'Este (1480–1524)|Sigismondo]] had inherited the typical Este nose of their father; [[Beatrice d'Este|Beatrice]] the slightly upturned one of her mother. Furthermore, all were dark-haired, except Ferrante and Sigismondo, who had recovered, as it seems, the traditional blond of the Este.]]
[[File:Medaglie_dei_fratelli_d'Este,_Isabella,_Beatrice,_Alfonso_e_Ippolito.jpg|left|thumb|The Este siblings' medals: Isabella, [[Beatrice d'Este|Beatrice]], [[Alfonso I d'Este, Duke of Ferrara|Alfonso]], and [[Ippolito d'Este|Ippolito]]]]
 
Isabella's appearance was frequently written about in her lifetime. [[Mario Equicola]] said that "her eyes were black and sparkling, her hair yellow, and her complexion one of dazzling brilliancy."{{sfn|Cartwright|1903a|p=9}} Similarly [[Gian Giorgio Trissino]]'s ''I Ritratti'' has a fictionalized [[Pietro Bembo]] describe Isabella's "rippling golden hair that flowed in thick masses over her shoulders,"{{sfn|Cartwright|1903a|p=9}} in a passage that, according to art historian Sally Hickson, identifies Isabella as the "living paragon of female beauty."{{sfn|Hickson|2009|p=17}} The real Bembo praised Isabella's "beautiful and charming hand and pure, sweet voice" in a letter addressed to her.{{sfn|Cartwright|1903a|p=273}} The alleged beauty of Isabella attracted the attention of the king of France, [[Charles VIII of France|Charles VIII]], who asked the chaplain Bernardino of Urbino about her features and attempted to arrange a meeting with her. However, this meeting never took place as shortly after he returned to France.<ref name=":4">La galleria dei Gonzaga, venduta all'Inghilterra nel 1627–28: documenti degli archivi di Mantova e Londra, Alessandro Luzio Cogliati, 1913, p. 223.</ref><ref name=":0">Alessandro Luzio e Rodolfo Renier, Delle relazioni d'Isabella d'Este Gonzaga con Lodovico e Beatrice Sforza, Milano, Tipografia Bortolotti di Giuseppe Prato, 1890, p. 116.</ref>
Isabella's appearance was frequently written about in her lifetime. [[Mario Equicola]] said that "her eyes were black and sparkling, her hair yellow, and her complexion one of dazzling brilliancy."{{sfn|Cartwright|1903a|p=9}} Similarly [[Gian Giorgio Trissino]]'s ''I Ritratti'' has a fictionalized [[Pietro Bembo]] describe Isabella's "rippling golden hair that flowed in thick masses over her shoulders,"{{sfn|Cartwright|1903a|p=9}} in a passage that, according to art historian Sally Hickson, identifies Isabella as the "living paragon of female beauty."{{sfn|Hickson|2009|p=17}} The real Bembo praised Isabella's "beautiful and charming hand and pure, sweet voice" in a letter addressed to her.{{sfn|Cartwright|1903a|p=273}} The alleged beauty of Isabella attracted the attention of the king of France, [[Charles VIII of France|Charles VIII]], who asked the chaplain Bernardino of Urbino about her features and attempted to arrange a meeting with her. However, this meeting never took place as shortly after he returned to France.<ref name=":4">La galleria dei Gonzaga, venduta all'Inghilterra nel 1627–28: documenti degli archivi di Mantova e Londra, Alessandro Luzio Cogliati, 1913, p. 223.</ref><ref name=":0">Alessandro Luzio e Rodolfo Renier, Delle relazioni d'Isabella d'Este Gonzaga con Lodovico e Beatrice Sforza, Milano, Tipografia Bortolotti di Giuseppe Prato, 1890, p. 116.</ref>


Isabella herself frequently diminished her own appearance; commenting on his portrait she told [[Francesco Francia|Francia]] that he had "made us far more beautiful by your art than nature ever made us."{{sfn|Hickson|2009|p=10}} Likewise she told Trissino that "your praises of us far exceed the truth",{{sfn|Cartwright|1903b|p=105}} and said of Titian's portrait that "we doubt that at the age he represents us we were ever of the beauty it contains."{{sfn|Hickson|2009|p=19}} In 1534, in the same year that Titian's portrait was painted, Titian's friend, Pietro Aretino, mocked her appearance, calling her "the monstrous Marchioness of Mantua, with ebony teeth and ivory eyelashes, dishonestly ugly and ultra-dishonestly tarted up."{{sfn|Bonoldi|2015|p=78}}{{sfn|Hickson|2009|p=19}} Despite her desplays of modesty, Isabella was also known to lose herself in front of a mirror.{{sfn|Chambers|Martineau|1981|p=56|ps=: Jennifer Fletcher, 'Isabella d'Este, Patron and Collector'}}
Isabella herself frequently diminished her own appearance; commenting on his portrait she told [[Francesco Francia|Francia]] that he had "made us far more beautiful by your art than nature ever made us."{{sfn|Hickson|2009|p=10}} Likewise she told Trissino that "your praises of us far exceed the truth",{{sfn|Cartwright|1903b|p=105}} and said of Titian's portrait that "we doubt that at the age he represents us we were ever of the beauty it contains."{{sfn|Hickson|2009|p=19}} In 1534, in the same year that Titian's portrait was painted, Titian's friend, Pietro Aretino, mocked her appearance, calling her "the monstrous Marchioness of Mantua, with ebony teeth and ivory eyelashes, dishonestly ugly and ultra-dishonestly tarted up."{{sfn|Bonoldi|2015|p=78}}{{sfn|Hickson|2009|p=19}} Despite her displays of modesty, Isabella was also known to lose herself in front of a mirror.{{sfn|Chambers|Martineau|1981|p=56|ps=: Jennifer Fletcher, 'Isabella d'Este, Patron and Collector'}}


Isabella was worried about her weight from an early age.{{sfn|Mozzarelli|Oresko|Ventura|1997|p=291|ps=: Luke Syson, 'Reading Faces: Gian Cristoforo Romano's Medal of Isabella d'Este'}} As an adult she discussed her weight with those close to her frequently. In 1499 she sent a portrait by [[Giovanni Santi]] to her brother Ludovico Sforza, complaining that it did not resemble her very much "for being a little fatter than me." Ludovico replied that he liked the portrait very much of her and that it was very similar to her, although "somewhat more fat", unless Isabella had "grown fatter after we saw her."<ref>Alessandro Luzio e Rodolfo Renier, Delle relazioni d'Isabella d'Este Gonzaga con Lodovico e Beatrice Sforza, etc, p. 151.</ref>{{sfn|Chambers|Martineau|1981|p=56|ps=: Jennifer Fletcher, 'Isabella d'Este, Patron and Collector'}} In 1509 she complained to her husband that "if she had more to do with running the state she would not have grown fat",{{sfn|Chambers|Martineau|1981|p=63|ps=: Jennifer Fletcher, 'Isabella d'Este, Patron and Collector'}} while in 1511 her sister Lucrezia complained about an early draft of the Francia portrait that made her look too thin.{{sfn|Hickson|2009|p=9}}
Isabella was worried about her weight from an early age.{{sfn|Mozzarelli|Oresko|Ventura|1997|p=291|ps=: Luke Syson, 'Reading Faces: Gian Cristoforo Romano's Medal of Isabella d'Este'}} As an adult she discussed her weight with those close to her frequently. In 1499 she sent a portrait by [[Giovanni Santi]] to her brother Ludovico Sforza, complaining that it did not resemble her very much "for being a little fatter than me." Ludovico replied that he liked the portrait very much of her and that it was very similar to her, although "somewhat more fat", unless Isabella had "grown fatter after we saw her."<ref>Alessandro Luzio e Rodolfo Renier, Delle relazioni d'Isabella d'Este Gonzaga con Lodovico e Beatrice Sforza, etc, p. 151.</ref>{{sfn|Chambers|Martineau|1981|p=56|ps=: Jennifer Fletcher, 'Isabella d'Este, Patron and Collector'}} In 1509 she complained to her husband that "if she had more to do with running the state she would not have grown fat",{{sfn|Chambers|Martineau|1981|p=63|ps=: Jennifer Fletcher, 'Isabella d'Este, Patron and Collector'}} while in 1511 her sister Lucrezia complained about an early draft of the Francia portrait that made her look too thin.{{sfn|Hickson|2009|p=9}}
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== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==
During her lifetime and after her death, poets, popes, and statesmen paid tribute to Isabella. [[Pope Leo X]] invited her to treat him with "as much friendliness as you would your brother". {{sfn|Marek|1976|p=14}}  The latter's secretary [[Pietro Bembo]] described her as "one of the wisest and most fortunate of women". The poet Ariosto deemed her the "liberal and magnanimous Isabella". Author Matteo Bandello wrote that she was "supreme among women", and the diplomat Niccolò da Correggio entitled her "The First Lady of the world". {{sfn|Marek|1976|p=16}}
During her lifetime and after her death, poets, popes, and statesmen paid tribute to Isabella. [[Pope Leo X]] invited her to treat him with "as much friendliness as you would your brother".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=14}}  The latter's secretary [[Pietro Bembo]] described her as "one of the wisest and most fortunate of women". The poet Ariosto deemed her the "liberal and magnanimous Isabella". Author Matteo Bandello wrote that she was "supreme among women", and the diplomat Niccolò da Correggio entitled her "The First Lady of the world".{{sfn|Marek|1976|p=16}}


Judgments less imbued with praise, indeed very harsh, were instead expressed by [[Pope Julius II]] in disagreement with Isabella's conduct, even went so far as to call her "that ribald whore".<ref>{{cite book |author=Luca Bonoldi |title=Isabella d'Este: La Signora del Rinascimento |year=2015 |page=75}}</ref>  A not dissimilar judgment had also expressed her husband Francesco himself who, now a prisoner of the Venetians, accused his wife of not loving him and of having indeed been the cause of his ruin, referring to her by letter as "that whore of my wife".<ref>{{cite news |title=Archivio storico lombardo |year=1910 |page=57 |agency=Società storica lombarda}}</ref>
Judgments less imbued with praise, indeed very harsh, were instead expressed by [[Pope Julius II]] in disagreement with Isabella's conduct, even went so far as to call her "that ribald whore".<ref>{{cite book |author=Luca Bonoldi |title=Isabella d'Este: La Signora del Rinascimento |year=2015 |page=75}}</ref>  A similar judgment had also been expressed by her husband Francesco himself who, now a prisoner of the Venetians, accused his wife of not loving him and of having been the cause of his ruin, referring to her by letter as "that whore of my wife".<ref>{{cite news |title=Archivio storico lombardo |year=1910 |page=57 |agency=Società storica lombarda}}</ref>


== Cultural pursuits ==
== Cultural pursuits ==
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[[file: Isabella d'Este vs Isabella in Black.jpg|thumb|Colour portraits of Isabella d'Este <br>in the [[Kunsthistorisches Museum|KHM]], Vienna – ''perhaps including mix-up?''|left]]
[[file: Isabella d'Este vs Isabella in Black.jpg|thumb|Colour portraits of Isabella d'Este <br>in the [[Kunsthistorisches Museum|KHM]], Vienna – ''perhaps including mix-up?''|left]]


Despite her significant art patronage that included a number of portraits, there are very few surviving portraits that may be identified as Isabella, especially when compared to her sister [[Beatrice d'Este|Beatrice]]. {{sfn|Ferino|1994|p= 86}} It is known that the elderly Isabella preferred idealized paintings and even waived sitting as a model.{{sfn|Ferino|1994|p= 94}} However, it may be presumed that she insisted nonetheless on seeing her personal characteristics in the outcome.<ref>Several letters mention Isabella's request for overpainting hair and eye colours, i.e. Luzio, Alessandro: ''Federico Gonzaga ostaggio alla corte di Giulio II''. Societa Romana di storia patria (Rome) 1887, p. 59: "... pregandolo tuttavia a ritoccare il ritratto ne' capelli, che il pittore aveva fatti troppo biondi" and Luzio (1913), p. 213: "... a commutar gli occhij de nigri in bianchi"</ref> These few identifications are known as inhomogeneous (i.e. differing eye and hair colours as well as divergent eyebrows in two Titian portraits).{{sfn|Ferino|1994|p=86}}
Despite her significant art patronage that included a number of portraits, there are very few surviving portraits that may be identified as Isabella, especially when compared to her sister [[Beatrice d'Este|Beatrice]].{{sfn|Ferino|1994|p= 86}} It is known that the elderly Isabella preferred idealized paintings and even waived sitting as a model.{{sfn|Ferino|1994|p= 94}} However, it may be presumed that she insisted nonetheless on seeing her personal characteristics in the outcome.<ref>Several letters mention Isabella's request for overpainting hair and eye colours, i.e. Luzio, Alessandro: ''Federico Gonzaga ostaggio alla corte di Giulio II''. Societa Romana di storia patria (Rome) 1887, p. 59: "... pregandolo tuttavia a ritoccare il ritratto ne' capelli, che il pittore aveva fatti troppo biondi" and Luzio (1913), p. 213: "... a commutar gli occhij de nigri in bianchi"</ref> These few identifications are known as inhomogeneous (i.e. differing eye and hair colours as well as divergent eyebrows in two Titian portraits).{{sfn|Ferino|1994|p=86}}


[[File:Confronto del presunto busto di Isabella d'Este con la medaglia di Cristoforo Romano e il disegno di Leonardo da Vinci.jpg|thumb|Comparison between an alleged bust of Isabella, attributed to Gian Cristoforo Romano, and two of her portraits: the very certain one of the same sculptor and the almost certain one of Leonardo da Vinci. There are some differences compared to the latter: in the torso the double chin is completely missing, the chin is more marked, the nose more thinned, the forehead less rounded and more generally the face appears less full; however, it cannot be excluded that it may be an idealized portrait of her.]]
[[File:Confronto del presunto busto di Isabella d'Este con la medaglia di Cristoforo Romano e il disegno di Leonardo da Vinci.jpg|thumb|Comparison between an alleged bust of Isabella, attributed to Gian Cristoforo Romano, and two of her portraits: the very certain one of the same sculptor and the almost certain one of Leonardo da Vinci. There are some differences compared to the latter: in the torso the double chin is completely missing, the chin is more marked, the nose more thinned, the forehead less rounded and more generally the face appears less full; however, it cannot be excluded that it may be an idealized portrait of her.]]
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[[file: Leonarda da Vinci - Isabella d'Este und Mona Lisa II.jpg|thumb|Leonardo: ''Isabella d'Este'' (1499) / Leonardo (workshop) ''[[Mona Lisa (Prado)]]'' (1506–1519) / Leonardo: ''[[Mona Lisa]]'' (1503–1506)|left]]
[[file: Leonarda da Vinci - Isabella d'Este und Mona Lisa II.jpg|thumb|Leonardo: ''Isabella d'Este'' (1499) / Leonardo (workshop) ''[[Mona Lisa (Prado)]]'' (1506–1519) / Leonardo: ''[[Mona Lisa]]'' (1503–1506)|left]]
{{Main|Mona Lisa}}
{{Main|Mona Lisa}}
In the current catalogue raisonné of Leonardo da Vinci (2019), only Isabella d'Este is documented as a plausible alternative as the subject  of Leonardo's ''[[Mona Lisa]]'', usually considered a portrait of [[Lisa del Giocondo]].<ref>Zöllner, Frank: ''Leonardo da Vinci&nbsp;— The Complete Paintings''. Taschen Verlag (Cologne) 2019, p. 241 (''Mona Lisa'' section).</ref> Lisa was the wife of a merchant in [[Florence]] and [[Giorgio Vasari]] wrote of her portrait by Leonardo,<ref>Vasari, Giorgio: ''Lebensläufe der berühmtesten Maler, Bildhauer und Architekten''. 1550 / Manesse Verlag (Zurich) 2005, p. 330.</ref>&nbsp;– in debate that persists about whether this is the portrait now known as the ''Mona Lisa''. Evidence in favor of Isabella as the subject of the famous work includes Leonardo's drawing 'Isabella d'Este' from 1499 and her letters of 1501–1506 requesting the promised painted portrait.<ref>Lewis, Francis-Ames: ''Isabella and Leonardo''. Yale University Press (New Haven) 2012, Appendix Letters pp. 223–240 (original letters in Italian and English).</ref> Further arguments focus upon the mountains in the background indicating the native origin of the subject,<ref>Florence/[[Tuscany]] versus Mantua/[[Dolomites]].</ref> and the armrest in the painting as a Renaissance symbol used to identify a portrait as that of a sovereign. The Louvre's reservation is that Isabella would be a "blonde", a feature that exists only in the widely circulated but uncertain representation ''[[Isabella in Black]]''.<ref>Sylvie Béguin (ed.): ''Le Studiolo d’Isabella d’Este''. Exhibition catalogue 1975, p. 4.</ref>
In the current catalogue raisonné of Leonardo da Vinci (2019), only Isabella d'Este is documented as a plausible alternative as the subject  of Leonardo's ''[[Mona Lisa]]'', usually considered a portrait of [[Lisa del Giocondo]].<ref>Zöllner, Frank: ''Leonardo da Vinci&nbsp;— The Complete Paintings''. Taschen Verlag (Cologne) 2019, p. 241 (''Mona Lisa'' section).</ref> Lisa was the wife of a less known merchant in [[Florence]] and [[Giorgio Vasari]] wrote of her portrait by Leonardo,<ref>Vasari, Giorgio: ''Lebensläufe der berühmtesten Maler, Bildhauer und Architekten''. 1550 / Manesse Verlag (Zurich) 2005, p. 330.</ref>&nbsp;– in debate that persists about whether this is the portrait now known as the ''Mona Lisa''. No visual comparisons are known for Lisa del Giocondo's and the format speaks in favour of a wealthy art patron.
 
[[File:Isabella d'Este Portraitmedal and Prado Mona Lisa.jpg|thumb|Matching hairstyle: ''Portrait medal'' by Gian Cristoforo Romano (1496-1505) / ''Mona Lisa (Prado)'' by his workshop 1506–19)]]
Evidence in favor of Isabella as the subject of the famous work includes Leonardo's drawing 'Isabella d'Este' from 1499 and her letters of 1501–1506 requesting the promised painted portrait.<ref>Lewis, Francis-Ames: ''Isabella and Leonardo''. Yale University Press (New Haven) 2012, Appendix Letters pp. 223–240 (original letters in Italian and English).</ref> Further arguments focus upon the mountains in the background indicating the native origin of the subject,<ref>Florence/[[Tuscany]] versus Mantua/[[Dolomites]].</ref> and the armrest in the painting as a Renaissance symbol used to identify a portrait as that of a sovereign. The cleaned Prado copy from the Leonardo workshop also confirms the hairstyle shown on Isabella d'Este's portrait medals: hair tied up and temple curls. The Louvre's reservation was (in 1975) that Isabella would be a "blonde", a feature that exists only in the widely circulated but uncertain representation ''[[Isabella in Black]]''.<ref>Sylvie Béguin (ed.): ''Le Studiolo d’Isabella d’Este''. Exhibition catalogue 1975, p. 4.</ref>


== Issue ==
== Issue ==
Line 203: Line 207:
Isabella d'Este was portrayed by Belgian actress Alexandra Oppo in the television show [[Borgia (TV series)|''Borgia'']] (2011–2014).<ref>{{Citation|title=Borgia|date=10 July 2011|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1736341/|type=Biography, Drama, History|author=Mark Ryder |others=Isolda Dychauk, Diarmuid Noyes, John Doman|publisher=Atlantique Productions, EOS Entertainment, Canal+|access-date=18 May 2021}}</ref>
Isabella d'Este was portrayed by Belgian actress Alexandra Oppo in the television show [[Borgia (TV series)|''Borgia'']] (2011–2014).<ref>{{Citation|title=Borgia|date=10 July 2011|url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1736341/|type=Biography, Drama, History|author=Mark Ryder |others=Isolda Dychauk, Diarmuid Noyes, John Doman|publisher=Atlantique Productions, EOS Entertainment, Canal+|access-date=18 May 2021}}</ref>


Isabella d'Este was depicted as a vampire in the video game Vampire Therapist (2024). The game chronicles Isabella's life and the fate of the Gonzaga house.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Vampire Therapist Gives Us What We Never Knew We Needed|url=https://www.thefandomentals.com/vampire-therapist-demo-review/|access-date=19 March 2025|website=www.thefandomentals.com|date=10 June 2024 }}</ref>
Isabella d'Este was depicted as a vampire in the video game ''[[Vampire Therapist]]'' (2024). The game chronicles Isabella's life and the fate of the Gonzaga house.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Vampire Therapist Gives Us What We Never Knew We Needed|url=https://www.thefandomentals.com/vampire-therapist-demo-review/|access-date=19 March 2025|website=www.thefandomentals.com|date=10 June 2024 }}</ref>


Isabella d'Este is the subject of novel by the historian and bestselling novelist Sarah Dunant. "The Marchesa" published by Whitefox in 2025, is based on her magnificent archive of letters in Mantua and includes illsutrations. While ostensibly fiction it is extremely historically accurate.
Isabella d'Este is the subject of a novel by the historian and bestselling novelist [[Sarah Dunant]], ''The Marchesa'', published by Whitefox in 2025, is based on her archive of letters in Mantua and includes illustrations. While ostensibly fiction, it is historically accurate.{{cn|date=June 2025}}


== References ==
== References ==

Latest revision as of 19:02, 13 September 2025

Template:Short description Script error: No such module "For". Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox royalty Isabella d'Este (19 May 1474 – 13 February 1539) was the Marchioness of Mantua and one of the leading women of the Italian Renaissance as a major cultural and political figure.

She was a patron of the arts as well as a leader of fashion and her innovative style of dressing was emulated by many women. The poet Ariosto labeled her as the "liberal and magnanimous Isabella",Template:Sfn while author Matteo Bandello described her as "supreme among women".Template:Sfn Diplomat Niccolò da Correggio went even further by hailing her as "The First Lady of the world".Template:Sfn

She served as the regent of Mantua during the absence of her husband Francesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua and during the minority of her son Federico. She was a prolific letter-writer and maintained a lifelong correspondence with her sister-in-law Elisabetta Gonzaga. Isabella grew up in a cultured family in the city-state of Ferrara. She received a fine classical education and she met many famous humanist scholars and artists. Due to the vast amount of extant correspondence between Isabella and her family and friends, her life is extremely well documented.Template:Sfn

Biography

Isabella was born on Tuesday, 19 May 1474 at nine o'clock in the evening.Template:Sfn Isabella's mother, Eleanor of Naples, wrote a letter to her friend Barbara Gonzaga describing the details of Isabella's birth[1] in Ferrara.Template:Sfn Eleanor was the daughter of Ferdinand I, the Aragonese King of Naples, and Isabella of Clermont.Template:Sfn

One year later, on 29 June 1475, her sister Beatrice was born, and in 1476 and 1477 two brothers, Alfonso and Ferrante, were born. In 1479 and 1480 two more brothers were born; Ippolito and Sigismondo. Of all the children born into the family, Isabella is believed to have been the favourite.[2]

In the year of her brother Ferrante's birth, Isabella was among the children of the family who travelled to Naples with her mother. When her mother returned to Ferrara, Isabella accompanied her, while the other two children remained in Naples for many years: Beatrice was adopted by her grandfather, and her little brother Ferrante was left under the tutelage of their uncle Alfonso.[3]

File:Giancriostoforo romano, medaglia di isabella d'este, marchesa di mantova.JPG
Medail of Isabella, Giovanni Cristoforo Romano

Education

Due to her outstanding intellect, she often discussed the classics and the affairs of state with ambassadors. In addition, she was personally acquainted with the painters, musicians, writers, and scholars who lived in and around the court. Besides her extensive knowledge of history and languages, she could also recite Virgil and Terence by heart. Isabella was also a talented singer and musician, and was taught to play the lute by Giovanni Angelo Testagrossa.[4] In addition to these accomplishments, she was also an innovator of new dances, having been instructed in the art of dance by Ambrogio, a Jewish dancing master.Template:Sfn

Betrothal and marriage

File:Isabella d'Este palazzo ducale.jpg
Ambras Miniature of Isabella, anonymous artist (16th century)

In 1480, at the age of six, Isabella was betrothed to the eight years older Francesco, the heir to the Marquess of Mantua. The Duke of Milan requested her hand in marriage for his son, Ludovico, two weeks later. Instead, her sister, Beatrice, was betrothed to Ludovico and became the Duchess of Milan. Her dowry amounted to 25,000 ducats.[5] Although he was not handsome, Isabella admired Francesco for his strength and bravery; she also regarded him as a gentleman. After their first few encountersTemplate:When she began to enjoy his company and she spent the next few years getting to know him and preparing to be the Marchioness of Mantua. During their courtship, Isabella treasured the letters, poems, and sonnets he sent her as gifts.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Ten years later, on 11 February 1490, at age 15, she married Francesco by proxy. By then, he had succeeded to the marquisate. Besides being the Marquess, Francesco was captain general of the armies of the Republic of Venice. Isabella became his wife amid a spectacular outpouring of public rejoicing and a grand celebration that took place on 15 February.[5] She brought the sum of 3,000 ducats as her marriage portion, as well as valuable jewelry, dishes, and a silver service.Template:Sfn Prior to the magnificent banquet which followed the wedding ceremony, Isabella rode through the main streets of Ferrara astride a horse draped in gems and gold.Template:Sfn

Relations with Milan

In 1491 Isabella went with a small entourage to Brescello and from there to Pavia, to accompany her sister Beatrice who was married to Ludovico il Moro. On this occasion she saw Galeazzo Sanseverino again — as she had known him as a child in Ferrara — with whom she began a large, and at times humorous, exchange of letters.Template:Sfn However, his identity is not certain and could be the almost homonymous Galeazzo Visconti, Count of Busto Arsizio, a courtier also dear to the dukes.[6]

File:Statua di San Vittore dal basso museo del Duomo di Milano.jpg
Probable portrait of Galeazzo Sanseverino, statue in the collection of the Great Museum of Milan Cathedral

Between the twoTemplate:What immediately ignited a dispute, destined to last for months, on who was the best paladin, Orlando or Rinaldo: Galeazzo supported the first, the sisters d'Este the second. Galeazzo, who exercised a strong fascination, soon managed to convert them both to Orlando's faith, but Isabella, once back in Mantua, returned to prefer Rinaldo, so that Galeazzo remembered her as "I alone was enough to make her change her mind and cry out Rolando! Rolando!", invited her to follow her sister's example and swore that he would convert her a second time, as soon as they met again. Isabella jokingly replied that she would then bring a frog to offend him, and the dispute went on for a long time.[6]

On 11 February, speaking to her about the amusements he had with Beatrice, he wrote to her: "I will also strive to improve in order to give greater pleasure to the S. V., when I come for her this summer", and lamented the lack of "his sweet company".Template:Sfn Isabella's presence was in fact much desired in Milan, not only by Galeazzo but also by her sister, Ludovico and the other courtiers. Template:Clarify and perhaps also out of jealousy of Ludovico.Template:Sfn

File:Beatrice e Isabella d'Este.jpg
Alleged portrait of the two sisters: Beatrice (left) and Isabella (right), in the ceiling fresco of the Sala del Tesoro of Palazzo Costabili near Ferrara. Attributed Benvenuto Tisi da Garofalo, dated 1503–1506.

Despite the affection, Isabella began to feel envy for her sister Beatrice, first for the very fortunate marriage that had touched her and for the enormous riches, then for the two sons in perfect health who were born to her a short time later, while she seemed unable to have children,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and in this aroused the concerns of her mother Eleonora, who continually exhorted her in letters to be as close as possible to her husband.[7] A certain hatred can also be seen in a letter to hisTemplate:Clarify mother dating back to his visit to Pavia in August 1492, when, speaking of Beatrice, he wrote: "she is not a greater than me, but she is much bigger!"; in a similar way she also expressed herself to her husband, not being able yet to know, perhaps, that the sister's coarseness was due to the incipient pregnancy (she was at the fourth-fifth month).Template:Sfn These frictions were perhaps also linked to the fact that Ludovico had initially asked for Isabella's hand, in 1480, and that this had not been possible because, only a few days earlier, Duke Ercole had officially promised it to Francesco Gonzaga.Template:Sfn

Despite everything, in 1492 she was very close to Beatrice in a difficult moment of her pregnancy, that is when she was suddenly struck by an attack of malarial fevers, and in 1495 she went again to Milan to assist her sister in her second birth and also baptized her nephew Francesco.Template:Sfn

In the summer of 1494, on the occasion of the descent of the French into Italy, Beatrice invited her sister to Milan to kiss Gilbert of Montpensier and others of the royal house, according to the custom French. Secretary Benedetto Capilupi reported:Template:Sfn<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

The Duchess says that when the Duke of Orliens came, she had to dress colorfully, dance and be kissed by the Duke, who wanted to kiss all the bridesmaids and women of account. [...] Coming Count Delfino or someone else of royal blood, the Duchess invites the S.V. to take these little kisses

Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".In fact, it does not seem that Beatrice had any conflicting feelings towards Isabella, nor that she saw with a bad eye the complicity between the latter and her husband Ludovico. The Moro in fact, who was of generous nature, often gave Isabella even very expensive gifts: once he sent her fifteen arms of a fabric so precious as to cost forty ducats on her arm – an amazing sum – saying that he had already made a dress for Beatrice.Template:Sfn

File:7580 - Ludovico il Moro - Museo del Paesaggio (Verbania) - Foto Giovanni Dall'Orto, 8-Jan-2012a.jpg
Ludovico il Moro, Isabella's brother-in-law. Round from the Renaissance frieze torn from the Visconti castle of Invorio Inferiore

After the death of his wife, which took place in 1497, Ludovico came to allude to a secret relationship with Isabella, claiming that it was out of jealousy of his wife that the Marquis Francesco played a double game between him and the Lordship of Venice. The rumor was however promptly denied by his father Ercole.[8]

Others instead defined Beatrice's attitude towards her sister as "complexed second child"[9] because in the letter of congratulations to Isabella for the birth of little Eleonora - who, being female, incredibly disappointed her mother - she added the greetings of her little son Hercules to "soa cusina", despite not having the child yet turned one year of age, something that historians such as Luciano Chiappini interpreted as a sort of mockery, of "refined malice", "a slap given with grace and grace". In fact, if Isabella was always the daughter most loved by her parents, Beatrice had been ceded to her grandfather, and only with the birth of the firstborn had she obtained her own revenge.[10]

Other mischief between sisters dates back to the weeks immediately following the battle of Fornovo: Beatrice, who was at the siege of Novara together with the Marquis Francesco, wanted to see the booty stolen from the tent of King Charles VIII during the battle, booty that however Francesco had already sent to his wife in Mantua. He wrote to his wife to give it to his sister-in-law, but Isabella replied that she was not so willing to cede this honor to her sister and, with the excuse that she lacked a mule, begged her husband to invent some expedient. Beatrice replied that it was not her intention to steal the booty from her sister, but that she only wanted to see it all together and then return it to her. Meanwhile, it occurred to her to procure "a femina de partito", that is, a high-ranking prostitute, to Francis, saying to do it "for a good cause and to avoid greater evil", that is to say to preserve her brother-in-law and sister from the terrible malfrancese, but perhaps also to ingratiate herself with him. In October Francis wrote to his wife sorry that she was not there with them to see the army before it was disbanded,[11] but it does not seem that he had urged her to come, probably because he had at heart his safety (the camps were dangerous places, where violent fights often broke out, and Beatrice herself had been saved on one occasion by Francis, when she risked being raped by a few thousand Alemannic mercenaries).[12]

Moreover, Isabella had already had a mishap with some Genoese soldiers who, upon entering the city in 1492, surrounded her to appropriate her mount and harness, according to custom. So she later told her husband: "I was never more afraid; and they tore all the harness to pieces, and took off the bridle before I could dismount, despite the fact that the governor interposed him and that I voluntarily offered it to him. I lost heart, although among so many partisans I was afraid of some misfortune. Finally, helped, I freed myself from their hands ".[13]

Having also received different educations, the two sisters were the opposite of each other: Isabella, more like her mother, was sweet, graceful and a lover of tranquility; Beatrice, more like her father, was impetuous, adventurous and aggressive.Template:Sfn Beatrice loved to shoot crossbow,[14] Isabella had "the hand so light that we cannot play well [the clavichord], when we have to strain it for the hardness of the keys".[15] However, they were united by the desire to excel in everything.[10]

In the last two hundred years historians and writers were divided in preference for one or the other: many - such as Francesco Malaguzzi Valeri and Maria Bellonci - regretted that Ludovico had not, only briefly, married Isabella, fantasizing about the splendors that Isabella would be able to bring to Milan, in conditions of greater well-being than to Mantua, and how he could distract the Moro from his perverse policy. These judgments were not separated from a blatant contempt for the second daughter, as in the case of Alessandro Luzio, who writes: "The luck that made play of this Sforza, making him pass from the brightest heights to the darkest abysses of misery, had in April 1480 exchanged a beneficial star for a sinister meteor".[16]

In truth, other historians, including Rodolfo Renier himself, Luzio's colleague, judged that Beatrice was the most suitable wife for Ludovico, since she knew, with her own audacity, to instill courage in her insecure consort, and acquired political depth already in her early youth, so much so as to be decisive in situations of greatest danger, while Isabella could boast a role in this sense only in the years of maturity.[17][18] The different fate of the two sisters certainly weighed in these judgments: Isabella lived sixty-five years, Beatrice died at twenty-one. It was from this tragic loss, for which she proved inconsolable,[19] that Isabella undertook to support her brother-in-law's cause with her husband Francesco, who was against him. So he continued to do until the fall of the Sforza, in 1499, when he suddenly changed sides and declared himself to be "good French".[20]

Marriage

As the couple had known and admired one another for many years, their mutual attraction deepened into love. Reportedly, marriage to Francesco caused Isabella to "bloom".Template:Sfn At the time of her wedding, Isabella was said to have been pretty, slim, graceful, and well-dressed.Template:Sfn Her long, fine hair was dyed a fashionable pale blonde and her eyes were described as "brown as fir cones in autumn, scattered laughter".Template:Sfn

Isabella's relationship with her husband over the years often proved to be tense, at times very tense, both for the political differences between the two and for the difficulty in procreating a male heir. In truth, Francesco for his part was always very proud of his daughters and never showed himself disappointed, indeed from the beginning he declared himself in love with the firstborn Eleonora, despite the absolute disappointment of Isabella who refused her daughter, who was then very lovingly educated by her sister-in-law Elisabetta, who because of her husband's impotence never had children. When in 1496 the second daughter Margherita was born, Isabella was so angry that she wrote to her husband, who was then fighting the French in Calabria, a letter in which she blamed him, declaring that she did nothing but reap the fruits of his sown. Francis replied that he was instead very happy with the birth of his daughter – who, however, he did not have time to know, having died in swaddling clothes – and indeed forbade anyone to show discontent with it.Template:Sfn

Only in 1500 their son Federico was born.Template:Sfn

File:Francesco II Gonzaga.jpg
Isabella's husband, Francesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua

In his capacity of captain general of the Venetian armies, Francesco often was required to go to Venice for conferences that left Isabella in Mantua on her own at La Reggia, the ancient palace that was the family seat of the Gonzagas.Template:Sfn She did not lack company, however, as she passed the time with her mother and with her sister, Beatrice. Upon meeting Elisabetta Gonzaga, her 18-year-old sister-in-law, the two women became close friends. They enjoyed reading books, playing cards, and travelling about the countryside together. Once they journeyed as far as Lake Garda during one of Francesco's absences.Template:Sfn

Diplomatic missions

Isabella had met the French king in Milan in 1500 on a successful diplomatic mission that she had undertaken to protect Mantua from French invasion. Louis had been impressed by her alluring personality and keen intelligence.Template:Sfn It was while she was being entertained by Louis, whose troops occupied Milan, that she offered asylum to Milanese refugees including Cecilia Gallerani, the refined mistress of her sister Beatrice's husband, Ludovico Sforza, Duke of Milan, who had been forced to leave his duchy in the wake of French occupation. Isabella presented Cecilia to King Louis, describing her as a "lady of rare gifts and charm".Template:Sfn

Lucrezia Borgia

A year after her 1502 marriage to Isabella's brother Alfonso, the notorious Lucrezia Borgia became the mistress of Francesco.[21] At about the same time, Isabella had given birth to a daughter, Ippolita, and she continued to bear him children throughout Francesco and Lucrezia's long, passionate affair, which was more sexual than romantic.Template:Sfn Lucrezia had previously made overtures of friendship to Isabella which the latter had coldly and disdainfully ignored. From the time Lucrezia had first arrived in Ferrara as Alfonso's intended bride, Isabella, despite having acted as hostess during the wedding festivities, had regarded Lucrezia as a rival, whom she sought to outdo at every opportunity.Template:Sfn Francesco's affair with Lucrezia, whose beauty was renowned,Template:Sfn caused Isabella much jealous suffering and emotional pain.Template:Sfn The liaison ended when he contracted syphilis as a result of encounters with prostitutes.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Regency

File:Leonardo da Vinci, Portrait of Isabella d'Este.jpg
Portrait of Isabella d'Este by Leonardo da Vinci (1499–1500)

Isabella played an important role in Mantua during troubled times for the city. When her husband was captured in 1509 and held hostage in Venice, she took control of Mantua's military forces and held off the invaders until his release in 1512. In the same year, 1512, she was the hostess at the Congress of Mantua, which was held to settle questions concerning Florence and Milan.Template:Sfn As a ruler, she appeared to have been much more assertive and competent than her husband. When apprised of this fact upon his return, Francesco was furious and humiliated at being surpassed by his wife's superior political ability. This caused their marriage to break down irrevocably. As a result, Isabella began to travel freely and live independently from her husband until his death on 19 March 1519.[22]

After the death of her husband, Isabella ruled Mantua as regent for her son Federico. She began to play an increasingly important role in Italian politics, steadily advancing Mantua's position. She was instrumental in promoting Mantua to a Duchy, which was obtained by wise diplomatic use of her son's marriage contracts. She also succeeded in obtaining a cardinalate for her son Ercole. She further displayed shrewd political acumen in her negotiations with Cesare Borgia, who had dispossessed Guidobaldo da Montefeltro, duke of Urbino, the husband of her sister-in-law and good friend Elisabetta Gonzaga in 1502.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Widowhood

"Devoted head of state"

As a widow, Isabella at the age of 45 became a "devoted head of state".Template:Sfn Her position as a Marquise required her serious attention, therefore she was required to study the problems faced by a ruler of a city-state. To improve the well-being of her subjects she studied architecture, agriculture, and industry, and followed the principles that Niccolò Machiavelli had set forth for rulers in his book The Prince. In return, the people of Mantua respected and loved her.Template:Sfn

File:BLW Plate with Hippolytus and Phaedra.jpg
Maiolica plate from Urbino with the arms of Isabella and her late husband, c. 1524 (Victoria and Albert Museum)

Isabella left Mantua for Rome in 1527. She was present during the catastrophic Sack of Rome, when she converted her house, the Palazzo Colonna, into an asylum for approximately 2,000 people (including clerics, nobles and common citizens) fleeing the Imperial soldiers. Her huge palace was the only place safe from attacks, because her son Ferrante Gonzaga was a general in the invading army and she herself had good relationship with the emperor. When she left Rome, she managed to acquire safe passage for all the refugees who had sought refuge in her home.[23][24]

Later years and death

Once Rome became stabilized following the sacking, she left the city and returned to Mantua. She made it a centre of culture, started a school for girls, and turned her ducal apartments into a museum containing the finest art treasures. This was not enough to satisfy Isabella, already in her mid-sixties, so she returned to political life and ruled Solarolo, in Romagna until her death on 13 February 1539. She was buried beside her husband in the Church of Santa Paola in Mantua, but the remains were stolen.Template:Whose[25][26]

Appearance

File:Medaglie dei fratelli d'Este, Isabella, Beatrice, Alfonso e Ippolito.jpg
The Este siblings' medals: Isabella, Beatrice, Alfonso, and Ippolito

Isabella's appearance was frequently written about in her lifetime. Mario Equicola said that "her eyes were black and sparkling, her hair yellow, and her complexion one of dazzling brilliancy."Template:Sfn Similarly Gian Giorgio Trissino's I Ritratti has a fictionalized Pietro Bembo describe Isabella's "rippling golden hair that flowed in thick masses over her shoulders,"Template:Sfn in a passage that, according to art historian Sally Hickson, identifies Isabella as the "living paragon of female beauty."Template:Sfn The real Bembo praised Isabella's "beautiful and charming hand and pure, sweet voice" in a letter addressed to her.Template:Sfn The alleged beauty of Isabella attracted the attention of the king of France, Charles VIII, who asked the chaplain Bernardino of Urbino about her features and attempted to arrange a meeting with her. However, this meeting never took place as shortly after he returned to France.[27][28]

Isabella herself frequently diminished her own appearance; commenting on his portrait she told Francia that he had "made us far more beautiful by your art than nature ever made us."Template:Sfn Likewise she told Trissino that "your praises of us far exceed the truth",Template:Sfn and said of Titian's portrait that "we doubt that at the age he represents us we were ever of the beauty it contains."Template:Sfn In 1534, in the same year that Titian's portrait was painted, Titian's friend, Pietro Aretino, mocked her appearance, calling her "the monstrous Marchioness of Mantua, with ebony teeth and ivory eyelashes, dishonestly ugly and ultra-dishonestly tarted up."Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Despite her displays of modesty, Isabella was also known to lose herself in front of a mirror.Template:Sfn

Isabella was worried about her weight from an early age.Template:Sfn As an adult she discussed her weight with those close to her frequently. In 1499 she sent a portrait by Giovanni Santi to her brother Ludovico Sforza, complaining that it did not resemble her very much "for being a little fatter than me." Ludovico replied that he liked the portrait very much of her and that it was very similar to her, although "somewhat more fat", unless Isabella had "grown fatter after we saw her."[29]Template:Sfn In 1509 she complained to her husband that "if she had more to do with running the state she would not have grown fat",Template:Sfn while in 1511 her sister Lucrezia complained about an early draft of the Francia portrait that made her look too thin.Template:Sfn

Her face became damaged and prematurely aged by Venetian ceruse.Template:Sfn

Legacy

During her lifetime and after her death, poets, popes, and statesmen paid tribute to Isabella. Pope Leo X invited her to treat him with "as much friendliness as you would your brother".Template:Sfn The latter's secretary Pietro Bembo described her as "one of the wisest and most fortunate of women". The poet Ariosto deemed her the "liberal and magnanimous Isabella". Author Matteo Bandello wrote that she was "supreme among women", and the diplomat Niccolò da Correggio entitled her "The First Lady of the world".Template:Sfn

Judgments less imbued with praise, indeed very harsh, were instead expressed by Pope Julius II in disagreement with Isabella's conduct, even went so far as to call her "that ribald whore".[30] A similar judgment had also been expressed by her husband Francesco himself who, now a prisoner of the Venetians, accused his wife of not loving him and of having been the cause of his ruin, referring to her by letter as "that whore of my wife".[31]

Cultural pursuits

File:Tizian 056.jpg
Isabella in Black,
presumed to be an idealization of the 62-year-old Isabella by Titian (1536),
a widely circulated but uncertain representation[32]

Isabella d'Este is famous as the most important art patron of the Renaissance; her life is documented by her correspondence, which remains archived in Mantua (approximately 28,000 letters received and copies of approximately 12,000 letters written).[33][34]

Art patronage

In painting she had numerous famous artists of the time work for her, including Giovanni Bellini, Giorgione, Leonardo da Vinci, Andrea Mantegna (court painter until 1506), Perugino, Raphael, Titian, Antonio da Correggio, Lorenzo Costa (court painter from 1509), Dosso Dossi, Francesco Francia, Giulio Romano, and many others. For instance her 'Studiolo' in the Ducal Palace, Mantua, was decorated with allegories by Mantegna, Perugino, Costa, and Correggio.Template:Sfn

In parallel she contracted the most important sculptors and medallists of her time, i.e. Michelangelo, Pier Jacopo Alari Bonacolsi (L'Antico), Gian Cristoforo Romano, and Tullio Lombardo. She also collected ancient Roman art.Template:Sfn[35]

For what concerns writers, she was in contact with Pietro Aretino, Ludovico Ariosto, Pietro Bembo, Baldassare Castiglione, Mario Equicola, Gian Giorgio Trissino, and others.[36]

In music Isabella sponsored the composers Bartolomeo Tromboncino and Marco Cara and she played the lute.Template:Sfn Unusually, she employed women as professional singers at her court, including Giovanna Moreschi, the wife of Marchetto Cara.[37]

In the architecture field, she could not afford new palaces, however she commissioned architects such as Biagio Rossetti and Battista Covo.Template:Sfn

She was also considered an icon of her time in fashion. Famous is her Balzo as headwear – documented as her invention in letters circa 1509 and visible several times in portraits of other ladies in the 1520s/30s.[38]

Portraits

File:Isabella d'Este vs Isabella in Black.jpg
Colour portraits of Isabella d'Este
in the KHM, Vienna – perhaps including mix-up?

Despite her significant art patronage that included a number of portraits, there are very few surviving portraits that may be identified as Isabella, especially when compared to her sister Beatrice.Template:Sfn It is known that the elderly Isabella preferred idealized paintings and even waived sitting as a model.Template:Sfn However, it may be presumed that she insisted nonetheless on seeing her personal characteristics in the outcome.[39] These few identifications are known as inhomogeneous (i.e. differing eye and hair colours as well as divergent eyebrows in two Titian portraits).Template:Sfn

File:Confronto del presunto busto di Isabella d'Este con la medaglia di Cristoforo Romano e il disegno di Leonardo da Vinci.jpg
Comparison between an alleged bust of Isabella, attributed to Gian Cristoforo Romano, and two of her portraits: the very certain one of the same sculptor and the almost certain one of Leonardo da Vinci. There are some differences compared to the latter: in the torso the double chin is completely missing, the chin is more marked, the nose more thinned, the forehead less rounded and more generally the face appears less full; however, it cannot be excluded that it may be an idealized portrait of her.

In 1495 she refused with absolute rigor to pose for Mantegna in the Madonna della Vittoria – where her figure was provided next to that of her husband – since in the past the painter had portrayed her "so badly done" – in a painting that in fact has not survived – "which has none of my similarities". However, the negative judgment of the Marquise was not due to Mantegna's inability to portray her similar to the truth, as she herself writes, but to the opposite lack: of not knowing how to "well counterfeit the natural", that is idealize. Her husband Francesco had to pose alone and Mantegna remedied the disturbance of the symmetry by painting, in place of the Marquise, St. Elizabeth, his eponymous saint.[40]

In recent years several museums have withdrawn their few identifications of portraits as Isabella because of concern about possible misidentification.[41]

The remaining three colourful portraits are still inhomogeneous (Kunsthistorisches Museum/KHM, Vienna):[42]

La Bella (now in Palazzo Pitti, Florence) has been discussed as an alternative to Titian's 1536 portrait in Vienna, because the commission from the 60-year-old patron was for a rejuvenated portrait; if La Bella were Isabella, eye colour, hair colour, eyebrows, and general appearance would homogenize in all known portraits, allowing potential links toward further identifications.[44]

As of 2021, the 1495 medal by Gian Cristoforo Romano (several extant copies) is the only reliable identification because of the inscription created during Isabella's lifetime.[45]Template:Sfn

Idealised portraits still show characteristics of the person.[46] The following characteristics can be derived (characteristics of the disputed Isabella in Black are excluded):

  • From her medal (Giovanni Cristoforo Romano) wavy hair, preferred hairstyle with sidelocks and a (small) double chin.
  • From the coloured depictions Ambras Miniature and Isabella in Red red-brown / 'medium-blond' hair and brown eyes under curved eyebrows.
  • Isabella preferred idealisation (ideal of beauty, rejuvenation, simplification etc.).
  • Additionally: The balzo was common in the 1530s, probably not yet in the 1510s.

Relationship with Leonardo and Mona Lisa theory

File:Leonarda da Vinci - Isabella d'Este und Mona Lisa II.jpg
Leonardo: Isabella d'Este (1499) / Leonardo (workshop) Mona Lisa (Prado) (1506–1519) / Leonardo: Mona Lisa (1503–1506)

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". In the current catalogue raisonné of Leonardo da Vinci (2019), only Isabella d'Este is documented as a plausible alternative as the subject of Leonardo's Mona Lisa, usually considered a portrait of Lisa del Giocondo.[49] Lisa was the wife of a less known merchant in Florence and Giorgio Vasari wrote of her portrait by Leonardo,[50] – in debate that persists about whether this is the portrait now known as the Mona Lisa. No visual comparisons are known for Lisa del Giocondo's and the format speaks in favour of a wealthy art patron.

File:Isabella d'Este Portraitmedal and Prado Mona Lisa.jpg
Matching hairstyle: Portrait medal by Gian Cristoforo Romano (1496-1505) / Mona Lisa (Prado) by his workshop 1506–19)

Evidence in favor of Isabella as the subject of the famous work includes Leonardo's drawing 'Isabella d'Este' from 1499 and her letters of 1501–1506 requesting the promised painted portrait.[51] Further arguments focus upon the mountains in the background indicating the native origin of the subject,[52] and the armrest in the painting as a Renaissance symbol used to identify a portrait as that of a sovereign. The cleaned Prado copy from the Leonardo workshop also confirms the hairstyle shown on Isabella d'Este's portrait medals: hair tied up and temple curls. The Louvre's reservation was (in 1975) that Isabella would be a "blonde", a feature that exists only in the widely circulated but uncertain representation Isabella in Black.[53]

Issue

Together Isabella and Francesco had eight children:[54][55][56]

Household slaves

Correspondence exchanged by Isabella documents the Renaissance European tendency to perceive black African slaves as exotic.[57] Isabella's pursuit of a black child as a servant is extensively documented.[58] On 1 May 1491 Isabella asked Giorgio Brognolo, her agent in Venice, to procure a young black girl ('una moreta') between the ages of one-and-a-half and four, and twice in early June reminded him of the request, emphasizing that the girl should be 'as black as possible'.[59] Isabella's household and financial records reflect that she already had a significantly older black girl in her service when she inquired after a younger black child. Records also reflect that she obtained a little black girl from a Venetian orphanage. She opened negotiations with a Venetian patrician household for the sale of a little black boy and purchased an enslaved little black girl from her sister.[60]

Depiction in modern media

The artwork The Dinner Party by Judy Chicago features a place setting for Isabella d'Este.[61]

Isabella d'Este was portrayed by Belgian actress Alexandra Oppo in the television show Borgia (2011–2014).[62]

Isabella d'Este was depicted as a vampire in the video game Vampire Therapist (2024). The game chronicles Isabella's life and the fate of the Gonzaga house.[63]

Isabella d'Este is the subject of a novel by the historian and bestselling novelist Sarah Dunant, The Marchesa, published by Whitefox in 2025, is based on her archive of letters in Mantua and includes illustrations. While ostensibly fiction, it is historically accurate.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

References

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Bibliography

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Template:Refend

Further reading

Template:Sister project

Template:S-endTemplate:Princesses of Modena
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Marchioness of Mantua
1490–1519 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by
  1. Note: In fifteenth century Italy the day began at sunset rather than at midnight; therefore as Isabella's birth occurred on 19 May at the second hour, this indicated that correctly, she was born on 18 May, at 9.00 P.M.
  2. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  3. Enrica Guerra, Il carteggio tra Beatrice d'Aragona e gli Estensi (1476–1508), pp. 42–43.
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  5. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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  8. Daniela Pizzagalli, La signora del Rinascimento. Vita e splendori di Isabella d'Este alla corte di Mantova, Rizzoli, 2001, p. 137.
  9. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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  11. Alessandro Luzio e Rodolfo Renier, Delle relazioni d'Isabella d'Este Gonzaga con Lodovico e Beatrice Sforza, Milano, Tipografia Bortolotti di Giuseppe Prato, 1890, pp. 114-119.
  12. Deputazione di storia patria per la Lombardia, Archivio storico lombardo, Società storica lombarda, 1874, pp. 348-349.
  13. Alessandro Luzio e Rodolfo Renier, Delle relazioni d'Isabella d'Este Gonzaga con Lodovico e Beatrice Sforza, Milano, Tipografia Bortolotti di Giuseppe Prato, 1890, p. 64.
  14. Paolo Negri, Studi sulla crisi italiana alla fine del secolo, Archivio storico lombardo: giornale della Società storica lombarda, anno 51, fasc. 1-2 (1924), p. 130.
  15. Musici alla corte degli Sforza, Archivio storico lombardo, 1887, p. 295.
  16. Luzio Alessandro. Isabella d'Este e la corte sforzesca, Archivio Storico Lombardo : Giornale della società storica lombarda (1901 mar, Serie 3, Volume 15, Fascicolo 29), p. 147.
  17. Gaspare Visconti, Rodolfo Renier, Tip. Bortolotti di Giuseppe Prato, 1886, pp. 6-7.
  18. Strenna Italiana, vol. 19, p. 137.
  19. Maria Serena Mazzi, Come rose d'inverno, le signore della corte estense nel '400, Nuovecarte, 2004, p. 43.
  20. Daniela Pizzagalli, La signora del Rinascimento. Vita e splendori di Isabella d'Este alla corte di Mantova, Rizzoli, 2001, pp. 135-140.
  21. Note:In June 1505, Alfonso succeeded their father as duke, making Lucrezia Duchess of Ferrara
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  27. La galleria dei Gonzaga, venduta all'Inghilterra nel 1627–28: documenti degli archivi di Mantova e Londra, Alessandro Luzio Cogliati, 1913, p. 223.
  28. Alessandro Luzio e Rodolfo Renier, Delle relazioni d'Isabella d'Este Gonzaga con Lodovico e Beatrice Sforza, Milano, Tipografia Bortolotti di Giuseppe Prato, 1890, p. 116.
  29. Alessandro Luzio e Rodolfo Renier, Delle relazioni d'Isabella d'Este Gonzaga con Lodovico e Beatrice Sforza, etc, p. 151.
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  32. See catalogue raisonné Titian (incl. divergent inventory Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria in 1659) and scientific exhibition review in 1994:
    • Francesco Valcanover, L‘ opera completa di Tiziano, Milan 1969, p. 108.
    • Jennifer Fletcher: Isabella d'Este, Vienna in: The Burlington Magazine 136, 1994, p. 399.
    The discussion is about lack of resemblance and lack of idealization. Vice versa, the features match to her successor Margherita Paleologa and pictures with Balzo were later favorably marketed as Isabella.
  33. Shemek, Deanna: Phaethon's Children: The Este Court and its Culture in Early Modern Ferrara. Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies (Arizona) 2005, p. 277
  34. For a documentations of art related letters see: Luzio, Alessandro: La Galleria dei Gonzaga – Appendice B: I ritratti d'Isabella d'Este. Casa Editrice L. F. Cogliati (Milan) 1913
  35. Cartwright, Julia: Isabella d'Este. Murray (London) 1907, Table of contents
  36. Cartwright (1907), table of contents
  37. Tick, Judith et al.: Women in music, §II: Western classical traditions in Europe & the USA. In: Macy, Laura: Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press. (subscription required)
  38. Luzio and Renier: Il lusso di Isabella d’Este, Marchesa di Mantova: la guardaroba, Nuova antologia, 63 (1896), pp. 462 and 667.
  39. Several letters mention Isabella's request for overpainting hair and eye colours, i.e. Luzio, Alessandro: Federico Gonzaga ostaggio alla corte di Giulio II. Societa Romana di storia patria (Rome) 1887, p. 59: "... pregandolo tuttavia a ritoccare il ritratto ne' capelli, che il pittore aveva fatti troppo biondi" and Luzio (1913), p. 213: "... a commutar gli occhij de nigri in bianchi"
  40. Lorenzo Bonoldi, Isabella d'Este: La Signora del Rinascimento, 2015, p. 11.
  41. See e.g.:
  42. KHM Vienna: Inv. 83, Inv 1534, Inv 5081
  43. picture
  44. i.e. Ozzola, Leandro (1931): Isabella d'Este e Tiziano. In: Bolletino d'Arte del Ministero della pubblica istruzione. BdA (Rome) 1931 No. 11, pp. 491–494; Download Template:Webarchive
  45. KHM Vienna, Inv 6.272bß
  46. Renaissance portraiture served "to keep the memory of an absent or deceased person present" under "the most exact imitation possible of the person to be portrayed and universally valid idealisation underlining virtue and dignity". Ulrich Pfisterer: Die Kunstliteratur der italienischen Renaissance, Reclam 2002, p. 109 and p. 113.
  47. Temple curl and pre-form of the balzo, 1511 is also the year of Isabella's documented commission for Francia's portrait (probably based on Leonardo da Vinci), the later model for Titian; see Bruce Cole: Titian and the Idea of Originality, in: The Craft of Art: Originality and Industry in the Italian Renaissance and Baroque, ed. Ladis / Wood / Eiland U., Athens 1995, University of Georgia Press, pp. 100-101.
  48. Assuming the museum's dating of 1510, the oldest depiction of a balzo.
  49. Zöllner, Frank: Leonardo da Vinci — The Complete Paintings. Taschen Verlag (Cologne) 2019, p. 241 (Mona Lisa section).
  50. Vasari, Giorgio: Lebensläufe der berühmtesten Maler, Bildhauer und Architekten. 1550 / Manesse Verlag (Zurich) 2005, p. 330.
  51. Lewis, Francis-Ames: Isabella and Leonardo. Yale University Press (New Haven) 2012, Appendix Letters pp. 223–240 (original letters in Italian and English).
  52. Florence/Tuscany versus Mantua/Dolomites.
  53. Sylvie Béguin (ed.): Le Studiolo d’Isabella d’Este. Exhibition catalogue 1975, p. 4.
  54. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".#Fe2 3 boys and 5 girlsTemplate:Self-published source
  55. Daniela Pizzagalli, La Signora del Rinascimento. Vite e splendori di Isabella d'Este alla Corte di Mantova, Milano, Rizzoli, 2001, pp. 42-100
  56. Giancarlo Malacarne, I Gonzaga di Mantova, una stirpe per una capitale europea. Gonzaga Marchesi, Modena, Il Bulino, 2005.
  57. Joaneath Spicer, "European Perceptions of Blackness as Reflected in the Visual Arts," Revealing the African Presence in Renaissance Europe, (Baltimore: The Walters Art Museum, 2012)
  58. Alessandro Luzio and Rodolfo Renier, 'Buffoni, schiavi e nani alla corte dei Gonzaga ai tempi d'Esabella d'Este', Nuova Antologia, 19 (1891), pp. 112–46, 140–5.
  59. Paul H.D. Kaplan, "Isabella d'Este and black African women", Black Africans in Renaissance Europe, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005)
  60. Kaplan, 153.
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