Federico II Pico della Mirandola | |
Prince of Mirandola | |
Coa: | Coat of arms of Duchy of Mirandola.svg |
More: | no |
Predecessor: | Galeotto III Pico della Mirandola |
Successor: | Alessandro I Pico della Mirandola |
Other Titles: | Marquis of Concordia |
Noble Family: | Pico della Mirandola |
Father: | Ludovico II Pico della Mirandola |
Mother: | Fulvia da Correggio |
Birth Place: | Mirandola |
Death Place: | Mirandola |
Burial Date: | 1631 |
Burial Place: | Church of St. Francis, Mirandola |
Federico II Pico della Mirandola (1564 – 7 September 1602) was an Italian nobleman, last Count of Mirandola and Concordia (1592-1596) and first Prince of Mirandola and Marquis of Concordia (1596-1602).
Second son of Ludovico II Pico della Mirandola, Count of Mirandola and Concordia, and Fulvia da Correggio, Federico II studied literature and philosophy in Ferrara and then law in Padua with his brother Alessandro, pupils of Giacomo Menochio.
Federico II married Ippolita d'Este (1565-1602), natural daughter of Alfonso d'Este, marquis of Montecchio, but they did not have children.
Successor to his brother Galeotto III, who abdicated on 21 February 1592 for health reasons, he abandoned the protection of the King of France (obtained by his grandfather Galeotto I following the assassination of Giovanni Francesco II Pico) to return under the Holy Roman Empire, having petitioned Emperor Rudolph II in 1593, also taking advantage of the fact that the other branch of the Pico family (that of the descendants of the assassinated Giovanni Francesco II) had died out in 1588 for lack of heirs.
Federico II thus obtained the investiture of the fiefs in 1596 together with his brother Galeotto III (who died the following year) and on that occasion Mirandola obtained the title of City and was raised to Principality, while Concordia became a Marquisate.
In 1597, he cooperated in the reintegration of the Sacro Monte di Pietà of Mirandola. He was also a member of the Accademia degli Intenti in Pavia.
In 1602, shortly before his death, he also signed an agreement with Philip III of Spain, who granted him a pension that could also be passed on to his heirs.
In the beginning of 1602, an epidemic of pestilential fever called burraschetta