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  1. Archduchess Eleanor of Austria (2 November 1534 – 5 August 1594) was Duchess of Mantua by marriage to William I, Duke of Mantua. She was the daughter of Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor and Anna of Bohemia and Hungary.

    • 26 April 1561 – 14 August 1587
    • Habsburg
  2. Eleanor de' Medici (28 February 1567 – 9 September 1611) was a Duchess of Mantua by marriage to Vincenzo I Gonzaga. She served as regent of Mantua 1595, 1597 and 1601, when Vincenzo served in the Austrian campaign in Hungary, and in 1602, when he left for Flanders for medical treatment.

    • 14 August 1587 – 9 September 1611
  3. Eleanor de' Medici (28 February 1567 – 9 September 1611) was a Duchess of Mantua by marriage to Vincenzo I Gonzaga. She served as regent of Mantua 1595, 1597 and 1601, when Vincenzo served in the Austrian campaign in Hungary, and in 1602, when he left for Flanders for medical treatment .

  4. Archduchess Eleanor of Austria (2 November 1534 – 5 August 1594) was Duchess of Mantua by marriage to William I, Duke of Mantua. She was the daughter of Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor and Anna of Bohemia and Hungary. Eleanor of Austria. Duchess consort of Mantua and Montferrat. Tenure.

  5. Duchess Eleonora died early, at age 44, in 1611. Her husband survived her by less than a year. All three of her short-lived sons eventually succeeded their father to the throne of Mantua. The portrait of Eleonora de Medici by Pulzone, located in the Pitti Gallery, shows her to be of considerable beauty. sources: Simon, Kate.

  6. Mother. Eleonora de' Medici. Eleonora Gonzaga (23 September 1598 – 27 June 1655), was born a princess of Mantua as a member of the House of Gonzaga, and by marriage to Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor, was Holy Roman Empress, German Queen, Queen of Hungary and Bohemia. [1]

  7. Eleonora of Mantua. * 1598, † 1655. Eleonora Gonzaga, also called Eleonora of Mantua, was from the ducal family of Mantua. On her marriage to Emperor Ferdinand II in 1622, she brought the opera, then a very new art form, to the court at Vienna. Under her father Vincenzo, Mantua had become a centre of Italian art.