Devotional narratives have been associated with Anna Caterina Gonzaga's decision to pursue religious life, but historical sources document her role in establishing
Servite houses in Innsbruck in the early seventeenth century. In 1606, she founded a women's double convent for the
Servite Order in Innsbruck, consisting of an enclosed convent for cloistered sisters and a Regelhaus for women living in common life without solemn vows. She entered the
Servite way of life under the name Anna Juliana on 2 February 1612, and later supported the establishment of a Servite men's monastery and church in 1614. Repository and local histories note that the
Servite community in Innsbruck was established between 1613 and 1616 and developed significantly in the seventeenth century. Upon the completion of the convent, Anna entered the community and took the Servite
religious habit, along with the name
Anna Juliana, in honour of the founder of the order. It was there that she died in 1621. She was buried in the same crypt in which her daughter Maria was later buried in. Following her death, devotion to Anna as a saint began to develop. In 1693, a process for her
canonization was opened but has not advanced since. ==Ancestry==