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Margaret of Savoy, Vicereine of Portugal

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Name
  
Margaret Savoy,


Margaret of Savoy, Vicereine of Portugal httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Noble family
  
House of Savoy (by birth) House of Gonzaga (by marriage)

Father
  
Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy

Mother
  
Catherine Micaela of Spain

Born
  
28 April 1589 Turin (
1589-04-28
)

Died
  
June 26, 1655, Miranda de Ebro, Spain

Spouse
  
Francesco IV Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua (m. 1608)

Children
  
Maria Gonzaga, Duchess of Montferrat

Parents
  
Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy, Infanta Catherine Michelle of Spain

Grandchildren
  
Charles II, Duke of Mantua and Montferrat, Eleonora Gonzaga

Similar People
  
Francesco IV Gonzaga, Charles Emmanuel I - Duke of, Infanta Catherine Michelle, Vincenzo Gonzaga - Duke of, Eleanor de' Medici

Margaret of Savoy (28 April 1589 – 26 June 1655) was the last Habsburg Vicereine of Portugal. In Portuguese she is known as Duquesa de Mântua, being by marriage the Duchess of Mantua and Montferrat.

Contents

Margaret of Savoy, Vicereine of Portugal Margaret of Savoy Vicereine of Portugal Wikipedia

Early life and Duchess of Montferrat

She was born in Turin, as the fifth child of Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy (1562–1630) and Infanta Catherine Micaela of Spain, the daughter of Philip II of Spain. She was married to the future Francis IV, Duke of Mantua (1586–1612) and Montferrat on 19 February 1608. The wedding was celebrated in Turin. In 1612 Margaret's husband succeeded his father, Vincent I, as Duke of Mantua. Their marriage produced three children, but only one daughter, Maria, survived childhood. Francis died in 1612.

As the couple had no surviving male issue, Duke Francis' next brother succeeded him in the Duchy of Mantua, whereas in the Duchy of Montferrat he was succeeded by his three-year-old daughter Maria, because it had been historically inherited by females, as it was a margraviate. Indeed, it had been brought to the Mantuan princely dynasty (the House of Gonzaga) by the marriage of Margherita Paleologa, Margravine of Montferrat, in 1531. Accordingly, Maria's claims were asserted and Dowager Duchess Margaret required to be made her regent in Montferrat.

This was a contested inheritance - Maria was a minor for the next decade - and ultimately, Duke Francis' brothers failed to produce any legitimate issue, and the entire inheritance became subject to Mantuan War of Succession (1627–32).

Duchess Margaret's daughter Maria was in 1627 married to Charles, the eldest son of the distant Gonzaga heir-male (at that point Charles I, Duke of Mantua), in order to join two of the Mantuan claims. They had to wage war, but in the end their line prevailed and they commanded universal recognition as Dukes of Mantua and Montferrat.

Vicereine of Portugal

Upon the death in 1633 of her maternal aunt, Archduchess Isabella Clara Eugenia, ruler of the Low Countries, her brother Victor Amadeus became heir to the rights of their maternal grandmother Elisabeth of Valois, eldest daughter and in her issue the heiress of Henry II of France and Catherine of Medici.

She had ancestral links to Portugal: two of her great-grandmothers (i.e. Empress Isabella and Beatrice, Duchess of Savoy) had been daughters of king Manuel I of Portugal.

In 1635, after the demise of the Count of Basto, she was named by her cousin Philip IV of Spain Vicereine of Portugal, at the time in a dynastic union with Spain, where she moved to in 1634. This nomination was the result of the efforts of Diogo Soares, member of the Council of Portugal at Madrid, a friend of the Count-Duke of Olivares and a relative of Miguel de Vasconcelos who, in 1635, would be named secretary of state of Portugal.

As a result of the Portuguese revolution (called the Restoration of Independence) of 1640, Vasconcelos was assassinated and the Duchess of Mantua tried to calm the Portuguese people during demonstrations in the Portuguese Terreiro do Paço (at the time Lisbon's main square). The Portuguese proclaimed the Duke of Braganza as their new king. Margaret was surrounded in her headquarters in Lisbon, and her support collapsing, the new potentate allowed her to depart to Spain.

She died in Miranda de Ebro in 1655, her daughter Duchess Maria of Rethel and Montferrat surviving her, with two grandchildren, of whom the daughter Eleanor had in 1651 become the Holy Roman Empress and the son Charles in 1637 the reigning duke of Mantua. At her death, both her grandchildren had already produced great-grandchildren for her.

Issue

Margaret had three children

  • Maria (29 July 1609 – 14 August 1660); married Charles II Gonzaga, duke of Nevers, in 1627.
  • Ludovico (21 April 1611 – 3 August 1612).
  • Eleonora (12 September 1612 – 13 September 1612).
  • References

    Margaret of Savoy, Vicereine of Portugal Wikipedia