's
Monumento dei Quattro Mori (Monument of the Four Moors) in
Leghorn, showing Ferdinando holding the baton of a field marshal standing victorious above chained Moorish captives. (1623) Ferdinando's foreign policy attempted to free Tuscany from Spanish domination. After the assassination of
Henry III of France in 1589, he supported
Henry IV of France in his struggles against the
Catholic League. Ferdinando provided Henry with financial support and urged him to embrace Catholicism, which Henry ultimately did. Ferdinando also leveraged his influence over Pope Clement VIII to convince him to acknowledge Henry’s conversion. Henry showed no appreciation for these favours, and Ferdinando let the relationship cool, maintaining his cherished independence. He supported
Philip III of Spain in his campaign in
Algeria and
Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor in his against the
Ottoman Empire. For these undertakings, he found it necessary to raise taxes on his subjects. He finally obtained the formal investiture of
Siena, which his father had conquered. Ferdinando sought to reconquer
Cyprus for the Christians and had similar designs on the
Holy Land, while also seeking commercial ties with Aleppo. He sent Ottoman convert
Michel Angelo Corai to
Ali Janbulad as an ambassador to fund rebellion in
Ottoman Syria. Ferdinando reinforced the Tuscan fleet, which achieved victories over
Barbary pirates in 1607 and defeated a larger
Turkish fleet the next year. Ferdinando also dreamed of a small African empire, and then considered the possibility of a colony in
Brazil. A few months before his death, Ferdinando organised an
expedition in 1608 under the command of Captain
Robert Thornton to northern Brazil and the
Amazon River in order to create a colony. ==Issue==