Isabella Clara Eugenia of Spain (12 August 1566 – 1 December 1633) was Infanta of Spain, Archduchess of Austria and the joint sovereign of the Seventeen Provinces. In some sources, she is referred to as "Clara Isabella Eugenia".
Isabella grew up together with her sister Catalina, beloved by her father and her stepmother Anna of Austria, Philip's fourth wife. Anna also gave birth to five more children of Philip, most of whom died at an early age, except for his heir Philip III of Spain. However, there was nothing in the world that Philip II loved more than his two daughters Isabella and Catalina, especially Isabella. While Philip II had a reputation of being cold, numerous affectionate letters between him and his daughters show a deep fatherly love, with him always signing his letters with Your good father.
Isabella was also the only person that was allowed to help Philip II with his work, sorting his papers and frequently translating Italian documents into Spanish. Isabella stayed at her fathers side, especially during his last three years, where he was plagued by the gout and heavy fever before Philip II died on September 13 1598.
After her uncle, Henry III of France, was assassinated by a young fanatical monk Jacques Clément on August 2, 1589, Philip II claimed the French crown on behalf of Isabella. However, he had no right to this claim, since France was under the Salic Law, which forbade succession in the female line, and at any rate Philip's second wife and Isabella's mother Elizabeth had to abjure any claims to the French crown with her marriage to Philip II. The Huguenot leader, Henry of Navarre, the rightful king by traditional French inheritance laws, ultimately made good his claim to the throne, converted to Catholicism, and was crowned in 1594.
At age 31, Isabella finally found a husband. On 18 April, 1599, she married her cousin Archduke Albert of Austria, the younger brother of her former fiancé Rudolf II. Albert was the joint sovereign of the Spanish Netherlands and the former viceroy of Portugal. As Albert also was the Archbishop of Toledo, he had to be released from his religious commitments by the Pope. Shortly before Philip II died on September 13, 1598, he renounced his rights to the Netherlands in favor of his daughter Isabella and her husband.
Isabella's marriage with Albert is said to have been happy. However, there were no children, and it was rumored that they had a platonic marriage.
Archduchess Isabella bore three children to her close cousin and husband Albert, all of the chioldren however died as babies: Archduke Philip (born 21.10.1605), Archduke Albert (born 27.1.1607) and Archduchess Anna Mauritia.
The reign of the Archdukes Isabella Clara Eugenia and Albert of Austria is a key period in the history of the Spanish Netherlands. After four decades of war, it brought a period of much-needed peace and stability to the economy of the Southern Netherlands. In addition to economic prosperity, the actions of the Archdukes stimulated the growth of a separate South Netherlandish identity. The Archdukes consolidated the authority of the House of Habsburg over the territory of the Southern Netherlands and largely succeeded in reconciling previous anti-Spanish sentiments.
When it became clear that independence would not be possible, the Archdukes' goal became to reincorporate the Southern Provinces into the Spanish monarchy. In pursuit of that goal and to get their political agenda to all Flemish social classes, the Archdukes used the most diverse mediums. The visual arts, with the baroque popularized in the wake of the Catholic Reformation, was the perfect tool. Thus Isabella and her husband stimulated the growth of this artistic movement, which resulted in the creation of the Flemish Baroque.
Their patronage of such artists as Rubens, Brueghel, Coebergher, the De Nole family, the Van Veens and many others were the beginning of a Golden Age in the Southern Netherlands. This, coupled with the political configuration of the period, made the Archdukes' Court at Brussels one of the foremost political and artistic centers in Europe of that time. It became the testing ground for the Spanish Monarchy's European plans, a boiling pot full of people of all sorts: from artists and diplomats to defectors, spies and penitent traitors, from Spanish confessors, Italian counselors, Burgundian functionaries, English musicians, German bodyguards to the Belgian nobles. The Treaty of London and the Twelve Years Truce were brought about thanks to the active involvement of the Archdukes in the negotiations. Brussels became a vital link in the chain of Habsburg courts and the diplomatic conduits between Madrid, Vienna, Paris, London, Lisbon, Graz, Innsbruck, Prague and The Hague could be said to run through Brussels.
When Albert died in 1621, Isabella joined the order of the Sisters of St. Clare, and became the governor of the Netherlands on behalf of the King of Spain. She was succeeded as Governor by Philip IV's brother, the Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand in 1633.
| Preceded by: Archduke Albert of Austria | Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands | Succeeded by: Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand |
House of Habsburg | Princesses of Spain | History of Belgium | History of Spain | Dukes of Brabant | Dukes of Guelders | Counts of Flanders | Counts of Hainaut | Poor Clares | Spanish nuns | 1566 births | 1633 deaths
Isabel Clara Eugènia d'Habsburg | Isabella Clara Eugenia | Isabel Clara Eugenia | Isabelle d'Espagne (1566-1633) | Isabella van Spanje | Isabel Clara Eugénia
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Infanta Isabella Clara Eugenia of Spain".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world