Duchy of Mantua | |||||||||
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1530–1797 | |||||||||
Capital | Mantua | ||||||||
Common languages | Lombard Italian Latin | ||||||||
Religion | Roman Catholicism | ||||||||
Government | Princely hereditary monarchy | ||||||||
Duke | |||||||||
• 1530–1540 | Federico II Gonzaga (first) | ||||||||
• 1665–1708 | Ferdinando Carlo Gonzaga | ||||||||
• 1708–1797 | Austrian Habsburgs (last) | ||||||||
Historical era | Early Modern | ||||||||
• Margraviate of Mantua is raised to Duchy | 8 April 1530 | ||||||||
25 December 1627 | |||||||||
1628–1631 | |||||||||
• Gonzaga rule ends - Partitioned and ruled by the Austrian Habsburgs | 1708 | ||||||||
• Annexed to the Duchy of Milan | 26 September 1786 | ||||||||
• Separated from the Duchy of Milan | 24 January 1791 | ||||||||
• Conquered by Napoleon - Disestablished | 1797 | ||||||||
Currency | Monetazione di Mantova | ||||||||
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Today part of | Italy |
The Duchy of Mantua (Italian: Ducato di Mantova; Lombard: Ducaa de Mantua) was a duchy in Lombardy, northern Italy. Its first duke was Federico II Gonzaga, member of the House of Gonzaga that ruled Mantua since 1328.[1] The following year, the duchy also acquired the March of Montferrat, thanks to the marriage between Gonzaga and Margaret Paleologa, Marchioness of Montferrat.[2]
The duchy's historic power and influence under the Gonzaga family made it one of the main artistic, cultural, and especially musical hubs of Northern Italy and the country as a whole. Mantua also had one of the most splendid courts of Italy and Europe in the fifteenth, sixteenth, and early seventeenth centuries.[3]
In 1708, after the death of Ferdinando Carlo Gonzaga, the last heir of the Gonzaga family, the duchy was partitioned. The domains were divided between the House of Savoy, that obtained the remaining half of Montferrat, and the House of Habsburg, that obtained the city of Mantua itself.[4]