by Agnolo Bronzino, 1545. It is considered the first state portrait to depict a ruler's wife with his heir. The picture was intended to demonstrate the wealth, domesticity, and continuity of the Medici. Eleanor's high profile in Florence as ducal consort was initially a public relations exercise promoted by her husband, who needed to reassure the public of the stability and respectability of not only his family, but the new reign. Her motto was
cum pudore laeta fecunditas (meaning "happy fruitfulness with chastity"), making reference to the plentiful
harvests of her lands, her marital fidelity, and numerous children. Eventually, Eleanor gained considerable influence in Florence through her involvement in politics, to the point that Cosimo often consulted with her. So great was his trust in her political skills that in his frequent absences, the Duke made his wife
regent, a station which established her position as more than just a pretty bearer of children. Eleanor ruled during Cosimo's military campaigns in
Genoa in 1541 and 1543, his illness from 1544 to 1545, and again at times when the war for the conquest of
Siena (1551–1554) required either his absence or greater focus on military matters.
Political Influence Eleanor was very keen and interested in business, especially regarding agriculture. She owned great
tracts of grain crops and livestock, such as beekeeping and
silkworm farming. An additional business she took part in was mining. Her harvests were plentiful and
products were shipped as far as Spain. The Duchess managed and sold her goods wisely, which helped to
considerably expand and increase the
profitability of the vast Medici estates. Through her charitable interests, the lot of the
peasantry obtained many economical benefits as well. Although Florentines initially thought of her as a Spanish barbarian and enemy to her husband's homeland, Eleanor not only made solid donations to Florentine charities but to their policies. She financially supported Cosimo's policies to restore the duchy's independence from foreign lands and helped people unable to gain
audiences with the Duke realize that through the Duchess their causes could at least be pleaded. A pious woman, Eleanor made donations to and visited several convents. In 1547, Juan Polanco, sent by
Ignatius de Loyola to preach in
Pistoia, approached the Duchess and asked for her patronage to founding a
Jesuit college. She refused Polanco's petition, but later undertook negotiations with
Diego Laínez that eventually led to the first Jesuit school in Florence. Laínez eventually gained her affection, to the point that she became a constant intercessor to Cosimo on the order's behalf and founded many new churches in the city. However, she didn't completely embrace the entire Jesuit society nor their devotion.
Patronage of Arts painted in 1599 by
Giusto Utens, depicts the Palazzo Pitti before its extensions, with the
amphitheatre and the Boboli Gardens behind. Like her husband, Eleanor of Toledo was a prominent patron of the arts during the
Italian Renaissance. She supported leading artists of the period, including
Agnolo Bronzino,
Giorgio Vasari, and
Niccolò Tribolo, commissioning works that played a significant role in shaping the cultural identity of the Medici court. Her patronage extended to architecture as well, contributing to the construction and embellishment of several enduring landmarks in Florence, such as the
Palazzo Pitti and its surrounding
Boboli Gardens. Eleanor's private chapel in the
Palazzo Vecchio was decorated by Bronzino. From 1559 to 1564, she commissioned Vasari to make a new
fresco in her apartments about famous women whose actions, in his words, have equalled or surpassed men, such as
Queen Esther,
Penelope, and Florentine heroine
Gualdrada. It is thought that the redecorations were a concerted effort by the Duchess to reshape her public persona away from fecundity and towards other her virtues – wisdom, valour, and prudence. In the earlier part of her marriage, the Medici family lived in Florence's Via Larga at what is now the
Palazzo Medici-Riccardi and later at the Palazzo Vecchio. Raised in the luxurious courts of Naples, Eleanor purchased the Palazzo Pitti across the
Arno river in 1549 as a summer retreat for the Medici. In 1550, she commissioned and supervised Tribolo to create the Pitti's famous Boboli Gardens, which possess an openness and expansive view unconventional for its time. The gardens were very lavish and no access was allowed to anyone outside the immediate Medici. Part of Eleanor's final will and testament was the creation and funding of the prestigious but exclusive convent Santissima Concezione, the daughter house of one of her favorite convents, Le Murate. It was built around the
Sale del Papa of the prominent
Dominican monastery Santa Maria Novella, which once functioned as quarters for visiting popes.
Influence on Court Medicine An emphasis on domestic healthcare, largely spearheaded by women, was common practice during the early modern period until the nineteenth century. Women acquired both practical and technical medical knowledge through hands on experience and the oral tradition of passing down medical knowledge. Not confined to the common household however, noblewomen like Eleanora and her mother-in-law
Maria Salviati played an influential role in court medicine, bringing family recipes to the courts they married into. Knowledgeable in daily care routines and rituals, standard medical practices, and newer medicines originating in Asia, Eleanora could be found at the center of medicine in the early
Medici court. Eleanora was instrumental in constructing a formal medical court denoted by a system of hierarchy. Her knowledge and rank often put her in regular contact with court physicians and allowed her to influence important medical decisions. highlighting the wide breadth of medical knowledge Eleanora possessed. Eleanora made household medicine political by bartering healthcare for favors both within and outside the court, contributing to the long-established patronage system. How medicine was employed at the court reinforced a ranking system marked by status, but Eleanora also extended access to healthcare for many relatives, visitors, and courtiers. The early Medici court held an account at the Canto del Giglio apothecary for the benefit of its courtiers, which helped secure future political support. Similar to her mother-in-law, Eleanora demonstrated proficient pharmaceutical ability and knowledge, as a number of correspondences indicate her proclivity for ordering or instructing the creation of medicinal remedies and recipes. Eleanora's name is attached to a popular face tonic made and distributed by the court provisioner Stefano Roselli. Scholars are unsure if Eleanora created the recipe or if her name was merely attached to Roselli's product for marketing purposes. Nevertheless, attaching people of nobility to products became standard practice among producers. Scholars also argue that Eleanora could be responsible for the introduction of a perfume named 'The Queen of Naples's Angel Water' to the Medici court. All perfumes at this time were meant to protect and strengthen the brain from malignant humors, but this one was also good for the heart because it contained myrtle and
neroli in its composition. Scholars believe it was the introduction of this perfume that inspired
Bianca Capello and her stepdaughter
Maria de' Medici to create and distribute more perfumes throughout the Florentine and other Renaissance courts. ==Personality and appearance==