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Eleonora of Toledo |
From
Smithsonian:
The wealth of biographical information available on Cosimo I allowed
Fornaciari to synthesize contemporary testimony and forensic
investigation. Documentation concerning Cosimo and his descendants is
some of the most extensive in early modern history—the online database
of the Medici Archive Project contains descriptions of some 10,000
letters and biographical records on more than 11,000 individuals.
Portraits of Cosimo I in museums around the world depict his evolution
from a shy, seemingly wary youth in 1538 to a bearded warrior in a
polished suit of armor in 1565, and an elderly, corpulent and
world-weary figure, gazing absently into space, toward the end of his
life in 1574. Reports by court physicians and foreign ambassadors to the
Florentine duchy recount Cosimo’s medical history in excruciating
detail: He survived smallpox and “catarrhal fever” (likely pneumonia) in
youth; suffered in later life from paralysis of his left arm, mental
instability and incontinence; and had a painful condition of the joints
described by contemporaries as gout.
Fornaciari found that Cosimo’s remains indicated he had been an
extremely robust and active man, in whom Fornaciari also noted all of
the “knightly markers”—sacro-lumbar arthritis, hypertrophy and erosion
of certain parts of the femur, rotation and compression of the upper
femur, and other deformations—typical of warriors who rode into battle
on horseback. He noted nodes between Cosimo’s vertebrae, signs that as
an adolescent, the young duke had worn heavy weights over his thorax,
most probably suits of armor. Fornaciari also noticed pervasive
arthritis and ossification between the sixth, seventh and eighth
thoracic vertebrae, possible signs of diffuse idiopathic skeletal
hyperostosis (DISH), a disease of the elderly linked to diabetes. “We
see Cosimo getting fatter in his portraits, and the presence of DISH
suggests he may have had diabetes, too,” says Fornaciari. “The diet of
the Medici and other upper-class families often contained many sweets,
which were a sort of status symbol, but often caused health problems.”
Another vivid marker was Cosimo’s poor dental health. The right side
of his mandible is marred by an enormous gap, the result of a serious
periodontal disease; an abscess had eaten away his first molar and a
considerable chunk of bone, leaving a massive crater in his jaw.
Fornaciari’s examination of the Medici, the Aragonese and other
high-born individuals has revealed appalling abscesses, decay and tooth
loss, bringing home just how painful daily life in that period could be,
even for the rich and famous.
Cosimo’s wife, Eleanora of Toledo, was the daughter of the Spanish
viceroy of Naples and related to the Hapsburg and the Castilian royal
families. Her face was immortalized by the Renaissance master Bronzino,
who in a series of portraits captures her transformation from a radiant,
aloof young bride to a sickly, prematurely aged woman in her late 30s,
shortly before her death at age 40. Fornaciari uncovered the maladies
that beset her. Dental problems plagued her. Slightly curved legs
indicated a case of rickets she had suffered as a child. Childbirth had
taken a major toll. “Pelvic skeletal markers show that she had numerous
births—in fact, she and Cosimo had 11 children,” Fornaciari says. “She
was almost constantly pregnant, which would have leached calcium out of
her body.” Further analysis indicated that Eleanora had suffered from
leishmaniasis, a parasitic disease spread by biting sand flies that can
cause skin lesions, fever and damage to the liver and spleen. DNA
testing also revealed the presence of tuberculosis. “She was wealthy,
and powerful, but her life was brutally hard,” Fornaciari says.
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