While a number of recent studies have sought to recuperate the role of nobl
ewomen in the court culture of renaissance Italy, little attention has been
given to the significance of their close ties to the Neapolitan court. An
extraordinarily high percentage of these women were either Neapolitan thems
elves or directly related to one of the principal noble families of Naples
by blood or marriage. The example of the Neapolitans of other Italian noble
women was particularly important since the unique political situation in th
e Kingdom of Naples permitted women to succeed to the throne.
Much can be learned from a careful examination of the lives of two Hispano-
Neapolitan noblewomen, both named Eleonora. In spite of the fact that one l
ived in the fifteenth century, Eleonora d'Aragona, and the other lived in t
he sixteenth, Eleonora di Toledo, the two women seem to have led remarkably
similar lives, engaging in comparable aspects of rulership, financial inve
stment and artistic patronage. Periods as acting heads of state combined wi
th access to vast financial fortunes provided the two Eleonoras with both m
otive and opportunity to engage in significant acts of artistic patronage.
The affinities between their activities suggest that these should not be co
nsidered exceptional; on the contrary, these similarities provide an opport
unity to reconsider which responsibilities would have been expected of nobl
ewomen at courts throughout renaissance Italy.