ESTE, Italian Noble Family

ĕsˈtā, Italian noble family, rulers of Ferrara (1240–1597) and of Modena (1288–1796) and celebrated patrons of the arts during the Renaissance. Probably of Lombard origin, they took their name from the castle of Este, near Padua. They succeeded to the house of the Guelphs when the original Guelph line died out.

Azzo d'Este II, 996–1097, lord of Este and the founder of his family's greatness, was invested with Milan by the emperor. Azzo's son, Guelph d'Este IV or Welf IV, d. 1101, was adopted by his maternal uncle, Guelph III, whom he succeeded as duke of Carinthia. In 1070 he was made duke of Bavaria. The grandfather of Henry the Proud of Bavaria and Saxony, Guelph IV was the founder of the German line of the Guelphs, from whom the British royal family is descended. He died on Cyprus while crusading.

Azzo d'Este II had another son, who continued the Italian line of the house; among that son's successors was Obizzo d'Este I, d. 1193. Obizzo and his grandson played an important part in the struggle of the Guelphs against Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I (see Guelphs and Ghibellines). He married the heiress of one of the two families contending for supremacy in Ferrara. His grandson, Azzo d'Este VI, 1170–1212, was podesta [chief magistrate] of Mantua and Verona and fought to obtain Ferrara, but it was left for his son, Azzo d'Este VII, 1205–64, to succeed in becoming (1240) podesta of that city at the head of the triumphant Guelph party. Obizzo d'Este II, d. 1293, was made perpetual lord of Ferrara in 1264, lord of Modena in 1288, and lord of Reggio (now Reggio nell' Emilia) in 1289.

Because Ferrara was held as a fief from the pope, the Este became papal vicars in 1332. Niccolò d'Este III, 1384–1441, made Ferrara a center of arts and letters and increased the power of his house by playing his more powerful neighbors against each other. Under his successors the court of the Este became one of the most brilliant in Europe. Among them were his illegitimate sons Leonello d'Este, 1407–50, an accomplished prince, and Borso d'Este, 1413–71, who received the title duke of Modena and Reggio from Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III in 1452 and that of duke of Ferrara from Pope Paul II in 1471.

Niccolò's legitimate son Ercole d'Este I, 1431–1505, lost some territory in wars against Venice. Ercole's beautiful and brilliant daughter, Beatrice d'Este, 1475–97, married Ludovico Sforza, duke of Milan, one of the most lavish of all Renaissance princes. Her sister, Isabella d'Este, 1474–1539, married Francesco Gonzaga, marquis of Mantua. Ariosto, Boiardo, and Berni were her friends, and Leonardo da Vinci and Titian painted portraits of her.

Ercole I was succeeded by his son, Alfonso d'Este I, 1476–1534, second husband of Lucrezia Borgia. In the Italian Wars he entered the League of Cambrai against Venice and remained an ally of Louis XII of France even after Pope Julius II had made peace with Venice. The pope declared Alfonso's fiefs forfeited and excommunicated him (1510); Modena and Reggio were lost. However, in 1526–27 Alfonso participated in the expedition of Charles V, Holy Roman emperor and king of Spain, against Pope Clement VII, and in 1530 the pope again recognized him as possessor of those duchies. Ariosto lived at his court in Ferrara after a long employment by Alfonso's brother, Ippolito I, Cardinal d'Este, 1479–1520, to whom Ariosto's Orlando Furioso is dedicated.

Alfonso's son and successor, Ercole d'Este II, 1508–59, married Renée, daughter of Louis XII of France. He joined the pope and France against Spain in 1556, but made a separate peace in 1558. He also was a patron of the arts, as was his brother, Ippolito II, Cardinal d'Este, 1509–72, an able diplomat who led the pro-French party at the papal court. Ippolito built the celebrated Villa d'Este at Tivoli.

With Ercole II's son, Alfonso d'Este II, 1533–97, the direct male line of the house ended. He willed his titles to his cousin, Cesare d'Este, 1533–1628, but Pope Clement VIII refused to recognize Cesare's rights, and Ferrara was incorporated into the Papal States in 1598. Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II recognized Cesare's rights to Modena and Reggio, but without Ferrara the duchy lost political importance.

The last duke, Ercole d'Este III, was deposed in 1796 by the French and died in 1803. His daughter, Maria Beatrice, married Archduke Ferdinand of Austria, a son of Austrian Emperor Francis I, who founded the house of Austria-Este. After the restoration (1814) of the duchy of Modena their son and grandson, Francis IV and Francis V, ruled as dukes of Modena, Massa, and Carrara. Francis V was expelled in 1859, and his territories were annexed (1860) to the kingdom of Sardinia.

See W. L. Gundersheimer, Ferrara: The Style of a Renaissance Despotism (1973).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

-15966-

Search the Library
Books
Journals
Magazines
Newspapers
Encyclopedia
Advanced Search
About Questia
Questia is the world's largest online academic library offering full-text books, journals, and articles on thousands of topics.

Join Now...
Questia Books and Articles on: Este Italian Noble Family
We found: 2053 results
By media type:
 

Books:

 

2025  

 

Journal articles:

 

25  

 

Magazine articles:

 

1  

 

Newspaper articles:

 

0  

 

Encyclopedia articles:

 

2  

 

books on: Este Italian Noble Family  - 2025 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...allude to the Este familys difficulty...Evasion in the Italian Renaissance...orbit of the Este family between around...Historiography in the Italian Renaissance...letterattrra italiana and his Dizionario...transfer of the Este family and the establishment...
...Pleasures--An Erotic Album of the Italian Renaissance, trans. Lynn...Maria Malaguzzi Valeri, was of noble extraction and his father...could trace his distinguished family back at least to twelfth-century...literary predecessor in the Este court of Ferrara, Matteo Maria...
...first mediaeval Italian overlord to maintain...and founded family dynasties that...such as the Este family at Ferrara...Crusades. Three Italian seaport cities...Latin and various Italian dialects, including...million", but to a family nickname Milion...
...The written approvals of the novellas usually state that the texts under consideration punish bad deeds while rewarding noble actions, not exhibiting any contradiction with good customs or the Catholic Church. Pabst contends that the written approvals...
...nations. I can easily imagine Italians who would find Dante cruel...Ariosto was born in 1474, of noble ancestors, in the city of Modena...The eldest of a very large family, he had his brothers and sisters...the favor of one prince of Este, he passed into the service...
More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

journal articles on: Este Italian Noble Family  - 25 results

       More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-25 >>  
 
...gender in Italian Renaissance...power for the family and the state...further above, noble ladies nod...after the Este came to governing...reaffirm the Este familys oligarchic...medieval Italian armies in...enclosure of the noble ladies lower...adorned with family coats-of...
...depended on the complicity of noble women and their families. Only...Appendix Mistresses of Italian Despots, 1350-1485 N.B. Because...arranged alphabetically by despotic family and then chronologically by...encourage further research. ESTE: Obizzo III (+ 1352): Lippa...
...see Schiff. (74.) Other noble Castilian authors with...Mendoza, 218-19. (76.) "Este seyendo el primero...letras, y hanse alcado con este nombre los juristas abogados...the upper nobility. The noble family Manrique de Lara traced...
...personas. La fruta de este son pavos, perdices...ways to that of the Italian pastorals. When we...the groom and his family at the famous wedding...into exile. Another noble, presumably satirized...reference to a real-life noble family, perhaps a distortion...
...the Sforza family, listing...prince and noble guests, who...nineteenth-century Italian legal historian...elites at the Este court. (54...the Sforza family of Milan...Strategy, the Este managed to...much of the Italian peninsula...letters to the Este family,... even...
More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-25 >>

 

magazine articles on: Este Italian Noble Family  - 1 result

 
 
...life. The rest of the family, Lorenzos siblings and...REPUBLICAS Y LAS MONARQUIAS Este ensayo se suma a muchos...del poderoso. Que el noble no desprecie al plebeyo...plebeyo aborrezca al noble; y que todo el gobierno...father. Nonetheless, the familys ties to Sonora were strong...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Este Italian Noble Family  - 2 results

 
 
ESTE , Italian noble family es ta, Italian noble family, rulers of...the castle of Este, near Padua...1097, lord of Este and the founder of his familys greatness, was...continued the Italian line of the house...
...1988) and Italy and Its Discontents: Family, Civil Society, State, 1980 2000 (2003); R. S. Cunsolo, Modern Italian Nationalism (1989); S. Tarrow, Democracy...The Mafia and the Death of the First Italian Republic (1995); C. Duggan, The Force...


 About Questia   ::   Privacy   ::   Contact