Book description
Isabella de' Medici was the hostess of a glittering circle in
Renaissance Florence. Beautiful and liberated, she not only matched
the intellectual accomplishments of her male contemporaries, but
sought sexual parity also, engaging in an adulterous affair with her
husband's cousin. It was this affair - and her very success as First
Lady of Florence - that led to her death at the hands of her husband
at the age of just thirty-four. She left behind a remarkable story,
and as her legacy a son who became the best of the Orsini Dukes,
immortalised by Shakespeare as Duke Orsino in Twelfth Night. Caroline
P. Murphy illuminates this often misunderstood figure, and in the
process brings to life the home of creativity, the city of Florence itself.
Caroline P. Murphy is a cultural historian and biographer. She
is the author of Lavinia Fontana: A Painter and Her Patrons in
Sixteenth-century Bologna, praised by Sarah Bradford in the Literary
Review for 'shed[ding] new light on the ground-breaking career of a
brave and talented woman.'Her second book, The Pope's Daughter, was
described as a "remarkable biography" by the Daily
Telegraph. She grew up in Reading, studied art history at University
College London, and now lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.