Duke of Ferrara and of Modena

Duke of Modena
Flag of the Duchy of Modena under the Habsburg–Este family
Details
Style Imperial and Royal Highness
First monarch Borso d'Este, Duke of Ferrara
Last monarch Francis V, Duke of Modena
Formation 1452
Abolition 1859
Pretender(s) Prince Lorenz of Belgium, Archduke of Austria-Este

Emperor Frederick III elevated the Italian family of Este, Lords of Ferrara, to Dukes of Modena and Reggio in 1452, and Dukes of Ferrara in 1471. In 1597, they lost the succession Duchy of Ferrara itself to the Papal States. They continued to rule the Duchy of Modena and Reggio in the Emilia until 1796, when it became part of Napoleon Bonaparte's Cispadane Republic. In 1814 the duchy was restored under the Habsburg grandson of the last Este Duke, continuing until annexed by Piedmont-Sardinia in 1859.

From the Lordship of Este to the Duchy of Ferrara-Modena-Reggio

House of Este

The line of "Marquesses of Este"("Marchesi d'Este") rises in 1039 with Albert Azzo II, Margrave of Milan. The name "Este" is related to the city where the family came from, Este. The family was founded by Adalbert the Margrave. who might have been the true first Margrave of Milan of this family. In 1209 Azzo VI is named the first "Marquess of Ferrara", and the title passed to his descendants, and Este Marquisate's was delegated to a cadet branch of the family. Later, were also created the Marquisates of Modena and Reggio.

Partitions of Modena-Ferrara-Reggio under Este rule

The Duchy of Modena (in the dark purple) and of Ferrara (in the light purple) in the context of late 15th century Italy.
Marquisate of Este
(940-1448)
(acquired Ferrara 1187, recovered 1209)
(acquired Modena 1288; Reggio 1289, recovered 1405 )
       Marquisate of Ferrara
(1222-1240)
      
       Marquisate of Modena
(1293-1388)
Marquisate of Ferrara
(1293-1308)
       Reggio under Papal States' rule
(1306-1308)
Ferrara and Reggio under Papal States' rule
(1308-1317)
Marquisate of Ferrara
(1317-1405)
Reggio under Papal States' rule
(1317-1405)
      
Marquisate of Modena-Ferrara-Reggio
(1405-1471)
      
Duchy of Modena-Ferrara-Reggio
(1471-1597)
(Ferrara was lost to Papal States in 1597)
Duchy of Modena-Reggio
(1597-1796, 1814-1859)

Table of rulers

RulerBornReignDeathRuling partConsortNotes
Adalbert I the Margrave?c.940-951951EsteUnknown
at least two children
Founder of the dynasty.
Oberto IBefore 951951-97515 October 975EsteWilla of Spoleto
seven children
Also Margrave of Milan. A son of his was the founder of the Malaspina family.
Oberto IIBefore 975975-1014c.1014EsteUnknown
six children
Co-ruled with his brother Adalberto.
Adalbert (II)Before 975975-10021002EsteUnknown
three children
Co-ruled with his brother Oberto.
Albert Azzo I
(or Albert II Azzo I)
Before 10141014-1029[1]1029EsteAdelaide
one child
Son of Oberto II.
Albert Azzo II
(or Albert III Azzo I)
997 or 10 July 10091029-109720 August 1097EsteKunigunde of Altdorf
1036
one child

Garsenda of Maine
c.1050
two children
Only son of Albert Azzo I.
Folco I10701097-11281128EsteUnknown
c.1109
six children
Azzo IIIBefore 11281122-1137c.1137EsteUnknownPossible nephew of Folco. Co-ruler with his uncle and then with his cousins, sons of Folco I.
Azzo IV?1128-1145c.1145EsteUnknown Sons of Folco I, ruled jointly and with their cousin Azzo III. Obizzo ruled with his son Azzo V from 1139, and ended up ruling alone at the end of his life, as his son predeceased him. He was succeeded by his grandson Azzo VI. Obizzo was also first lord of Ferrara. After his death this land was lost, only recovered by his grandson Azzo VI in 1209.
Boniface?1128-1163c.1163EsteUnknown
two children
Folco II?1128-1178c.1178EsteUnknown
Alberto IV?1128-1184c.1184EsteUnknown
two children
Obizzo I c.1100 1128-1193 25 December 1193 Este Unknown
one child

Sophia of Lendinara
five children
1187-1193Ferrara
Azzo Vc.1125c.1139?-11931193EsteMarchesella Adelardi of Ferrara
1139
two children
Azzo VI c.1170 1193-1209 November 1212 Este Sofia Aldobrandini
1189
two children

Sophia (Eleonora) of Savoy
before 1192
one child

Alice of Châtillon
22 February 1204
two children
Son of Azzo V. In 1209 was made the first Marquess of Ferrara.
1209-1212Este and Ferrara
Aldobrandino Ic.11901212-121510 October 1215Este and FerraraUnknown
Before 1215
three children
Son of Azzo VI and Sofia. Left no descendants, he was succeeded by his brother.
Azzo VII Novello c.12051212-1222 16 February 1264Este and Ferrara Giovanna of Puglia
1225
five children

Mabilia Pallavicini
1238
no/two children
Son of Azzo VI and Alice. He was deposed by Salinguerra Torelli in 1222 in Ferrara, but recovered the city in 1240.
1222-1240Este
1240-1264Este and Ferrara
Salinguerra II Torelli
(non-dynastic)
11641212-12401244FerraraRetrudis

Sofia Ezzelini

Sibilla da Montefiore

eight children
Co-ruling with Aldobrandino I and Azzo VII since 1212; deposed Azzo VII in 1222; deposed in 1240 by the deposed Azzo VII, who recovered the land.
Obizzo II 1247 or 12521264-1288/9 20 January or 13 February[2] 1293Este and Ferrara Jacopina (Fieschi) of Lavagna
1263
three children

Constance (della Scala) of Verona
1289
two children
Grandson of Azzo VII, as bastard son of Azzo's son, Rinaldo. Between 1288 ad 1289 he achieved the joining of the communes of Modena and Reggio to the Este's lands. After his death the lands were partitioned between his sons.
1288/9-1293Este, Ferrara, Modena, Reggio
Francesco Ic. or after 12891293-131223 August 1312EsteOrsina Orsini
four children
Son of Obizzo II.
Azzo VIII After 1263 1293-1306 31 January 1308 Ferrara and Reggio Giovanna Orsini
September 1282
three children

Beatrice of Sicily
April 1305
no children
Son of Obizzo II. In 1306 lost Reggio Papal States.
1306-1308Ferrara
Reggio occupied by the Papal States (1306-1405)
Aldobrandino II?1293-132626 July 1326ModenaAlda Rangoni
1289
four children
Co-ruled with his sons and nephews, following a pro-Este revolt in Ferrara.
Modenese Republic (1326-1336)
Frescoc.128013081312FerraraPellegrina Caccianemici
one child
Bastard son of Azzo VIII.
Ferrara occupied by the Papal States (1308-1317)
Rinaldo?1317-133531 December 1335FerraraLucrezia di Barbiano
one child
Following a pro-Este revolt in Ferrara, the sons of Aldobrandino II (Rinaldo, Niccolò, Obizzo) and Francesco I (Bertoldo and Azzo) ascended together. Some of them accumulated the rule of Ferrara with other government of other parts of Este's lands: Bertoldo and Azzo also ruled in Este since 1312; Obizzo and Niccolò recovered Modena in 1336.
Niccolò I ? 1317-1336 1 May 1344 Ferrara Beatrice of Mantua
21 April 1335
no children.
1336-1344Ferrara and Modena
Obizzo III 14 July 1294 1317-1336 20 March 1352 Ferrara Jacopa Pepoli
May 1317
no children

Filippa Ariosti
(lover until 1347)
27 November 1347
ten children
(legitimated 1347)
1336-1352Ferrara and Modena
Bertoldo I Before 1312 1312-1317 1343 Este Caterina da Camino
c.1325
at least one child
1317-1343Este and Ferrara
Azzo IX Before 1312 1312-1317 24 June 1318 Este Ricciarda da Camino
no children
1317-1318Este and Ferrara
Francesco IIc.13251343-13841384EsteCaterina (Visconti) of Milan

Taddea Barbiano

four children
Son of Bertoldo.
Aldobrandino III13351352-13611361FerraraBeatrice da Camino
1351
two children
Niccolò II the Lame 17 May 1338 1352-1361 26 March 1388 Modena Verde (della Scala) of Verona
February 1363
one child
1361-1388Ferrara
Azzo X13441384-14151415EsteUnknown
at least one child
Son of Francesco II
Alberto V 27 February 1347 1361-1388 30 July 1393 Ferrara Giovanna da Roberti
1388
no children

Isotta Albaresani
(lover until 1393)
1393
one child
(legitimated 1393)
Bastard son of Obizzo III. In 1388 reunited Modena and Ferrara under his rule.
1388-1393Ferrara and Modena
Niccolò III9 November 13831393-14416 December 1441Ferrara and Modena
(until 1405)

Ferrara, Modena and Reggio (from 1405)
Gigliola da Carrara
1394
no children

Laura (Parisina) Malatesta
1418
three children

Ricciarda of Saluzzo
1429 or 1431
two children
Recovered Reggio in 1405.
Taddeo13901415-144821 June 1448EsteMargherita Pio
two children

Unknown
Son of Azzo X. Left no descendants.
The Marquisate of Este was definitely annexed to Modena-Ferrara-Reggio
Leonello21 September 14071441-14501 October 1450Ferrara, Modena and ReggioMargaret of Mantua
1435
one child

Maria of Naples
1444
no children
Bastard son of Niccolò III.
Borso14131450-147120 August 1471Ferrara, Modena and ReggioUnmarriedBastard son of Niccolo III. Duke of Modena and Reggio from 1452, Duke of Ferrara from 1471)[3].
Ercole I26 October 14311471-150515 June 1505Modena-Ferrara-ReggioEleanor of Naples
July 1473
six children
Legitimate son of Niccolò III.
Alfonso I21 July 14761505-153431 October 1534Modena-Ferrara-ReggioAnna Maria of Milan
23 January 1491
Pavia
no children

Lucrezia Borgia
1 September 1501
Ferrara
seven children
Ercole II5 April 15081534-15593 October 1559Modena-Ferrara-ReggioRenée of France
28 June 1528
Paris
five children
Alfonso II22 November 15331559-159727 October 1597Modena-Ferrara-ReggioLucrezia de' Medici
3 July 1558
Florence
no children

Barbara of Austria
5 December 1565
Innsbruck
no children
br>Margherita Gonzagaa
24 February 1579
Ferrara
no children
Left no descendants. He was succeeded by his cousin Cesare.

Este Dukes of Modena and Reggio

Habsburg – Este Dukes of Modena and Reggio, 1814–1859

(from 1815 also Duke of Mirandola and from 1829 Duke of Massa and Prince of Carrara)

NamePortraitBirthMarriagesDeath
Francesco IV
14 July 1814–
21 January 1846
6 October 1779
Milan
son of Ferdinand, Duke of Breisgau and Maria Beatrice d'Este, Duchess of Massa
Maria Beatrice of Savoy
20 June 1812
Cagliari Cathedral
four children
21 January 1846
Modena
aged 66
Francesco V
21 January 1846–
11 June 1859
1 June 1819
Modena
son of Francis IV and Maria Beatrice of Savoy
Princess Adelgunde of Bavaria
20 March 1842
Kreuzkirche (Munich)
one daughter
20 November 1875
Vienna
aged 56

Habsburg – Este Dukes of Modena and Reggio, post monarchy

See also

References

  1. Luciano Chiappini, Gli Estensi, p. 19, Varese, 1988.
  2. Tuohy, Thomas (2002). Herculean Ferrara : Ercole d'Este, 1471-1505, and the invention of a Ducal capital (1st pbk. ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, published with the assistance of the Istituto di Studi Rinascimentali, Ferrara. p. 211. ISBN 978-0521522632.
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