Guglielmo Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua

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Guglielmo Gonzaga
Vincenzo I Gonzaga
Born24 April 1538
Mantua, Duchy of Mantua
Died14 August 1587(1587-08-14) (aged 49)
Goito, Duchy of Mantua
Spouse
Eleonora of Austria
(m. 1561)
Issue
  • Vincenzo I, Duke of Mantua
  • Margherita Gonzaga
  • Anna Juliana Gonzaga
Margaret Palaeologina

Guglielmo Gonzaga (24 April 1538 – 14 August 1587) was

Vincenzo
.

Patron of music

Guglielmo was particularly interested in sacred vocal music, and is known particularly to music historians for his extensive correspondence with the composer Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina. He built a large new church in Mantua, dedicated to Santa Barbara. He engaged in an unprecedented negotiation with the Papacy to create his own rite for Mantua, and devoted considerable resources to developing a musical repertoire for the church, commissioning works by Giaches de Wert and Palestrina. Part of his correspondence with Palestrina discusses the work commissioned in detail, stipulating Guglielmo's requirements, and therefore giving a sense of his musical preferences. Guglielmo's musical tastes were conservative for the day. He enjoyed imitative contrapuntal music but was concerned to maintain clarity of text, thereby showing the influence of Tridentine reforms. Upon his death, his son Vincent invited followers of the more modern trends to his court.

Three months before his death, Gonzaga wounded the organist of the ducal basilica, Ruggier Trofeo, in an encounter over a woman; the latter survived his injuries.[2]

Marriage and children

On 26 April 1561 William married

Anna of Bohemia and Hungary.[1]
They had:

Ancestry

References

Sources

Further reading

Guglielmo Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua
Born: 24 April 1538 Died: 14 August 1587
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Francesco III
Duke of Mantua

1550–1587
Succeeded by
Vincenzo I
Duke of Montferrat

1550–1574–1587