Ferdinando was only 10 years of age when his father Cosimo II died. Because he had not yet reached maturity, his mother Maria Maddalena and paternal grandmother,
Christina of Lorraine, acted as joint regents. His two regents arranged a marriage with
Vittoria della Rovere, a granddaughter of the last
Duke of Urbino, in 1633, in hopes of acquiring the Duchy. However, their political weakness prevented them from securing Urbino, and it was subsequently conquered by the
Papal States. In his seventeenth year, Ferdinando embarked on a tour of Europe, traveling to
Rome,
Bologna,
Ferrara,
Venice, and finally
Austria and
Prague. The dowager Grand Duchess Christina was the power behind the throne until her death in 1636. , circa 1640 With his wife, Vittoria, he had two surviving children:
Cosimo, in 1642, and
Francesco Maria de' Medici, in 1660. The latter was the fruit of a brief reconciliation, as the two became estranged shortly after the birth of Cosimo; Vittoria caught Ferdinando in bed with a page, Count Bruto della Molera. In fact, Ferdinando's sexual preferences tended largely to men. The first calamity of Ferdinando's reign was an outbreak of the plague that swept through Florence in 1630 and took 10% of the population with it. Unlike the Tuscan nobility, Ferdinando and his brothers stayed in the city to try to ameliorate the general suffering, traveling through the city on foot to help and encourage his subjects. Tuscany participated in the
Wars of Castro, the last time Medicean Tuscany was involved in a military conflict and inflicted a defeat on the forces of
Pope Urban VIII in 1643. The treasury was so empty that when the Castro mercenaries were paid for the state could no longer afford to pay interest on government bonds. The interest rate was lowered by 0.75%. The economy became so decrepit that
barter trade became prevalent in rural market places. ==Ferdinando and science==