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  1. Room 041. On 16 April 1529 Federico II Gonzaga, First Duke of Mantua (1500-1540), apologised to his uncle Alfonso d’Este for retaining Titian: perché ha conienzo un retratto mio qual molto desidero sii finito (because he has started a portrait of me which I greatly desire to be finished). In 1530 a second portrait of Federico in armour is ...

  2. Federico II soon after becoming a hostage, by Francesco Francia He was a son of his predecessor Francesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua and Isabella d'Este . Educated at the French and Papal courts, he inherited the Marquisate from his father in 1519, initially under the regency of his mother and his uncles Sigismondo and Giovanni Gonzaga .

  3. Portrait of Federico II Gonzaga. Portrait of Federico II Gonzaga ( c. 1529) is a painting by Titian, who signed it Ticianus f.. Today in the Museo del Prado, Madrid, it portrays Federico II, Duke of Mantua who married in 1529; the portrait may have been commissioned for the occasion. The dog, a Maltese, is a symbol of faithfulness.

  4. Federico II Gonzaga (May 17, 1500 - August 28, 1540), Marquis of Mantua, was the ruler of the Italian city of Mantua from 1519 until his death. In 1530, he was granted the ducal title, whereby their dynasty became Dukes of Mantua .

  5. Gonzaga, Federico II (1500–40) in The Oxford Dictionary of the Renaissance Length: 112 words. (1500–40),Marquis of Mantua (from 1519), duke of Mantua (from 1530), and marquis of Monferrato (from 1536), the eldest son of Francesco Gonzaga and Isabella d' Este.

  6. Poco después comenzó a trabajar para Federico II Gonzaga, marqués de Mantua, quien a su vez le presentó al emperador Carlos V. Es probable que retratara a este último hacia 1530 en ocasión de su coronación en Bolonia y volvería a hacerlo tres años después, inaugurando así una relación que lo ligó con la casa de Austria durante más de cuarenta años, pues sus pinturas se adecuaron ...

  7. Federico was son of Francesco II Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua and Isabella d'Este. Due to the turbulent politics of the time, from the age of ten, he spent three years as a hostage in Rome under Pope Julius II. From 1515 to 1517, Federico was the hostage of King Francis I of France, to ensure Gonzaga assistance in Italy.