After his brother’s hands-off approach to ruling, Grand Duke Ferdinando I instead tends to the economic health of his state and his people.



After his brother’s hands-off approach to ruling, Grand Duke Ferdinando I instead tends to the economic health of his state and his people.



Marie de’ Medici believes she finally triumphed over her protege turned archenemy Richelieu and has secured her place as Louis XIII’s benevolent advisor. As the proverb goes, though, pride goeth before a fall…


Marie de’ Medici goes to war against her own son. On a less violent front, she also oversees her most important legacy, a prime example of Baroque art.

Marie de’ Medici’s hope of staying in power by keeping her son in line indefinitely falls apart thanks to a love affair, and her friends pay a heavy price. Still, the Medici aren’t known for accepting even the most devastating of defeats, and Marie is no exception.


Even amidst challenges to her rule, the new queen regent Marie de’ Medici is sure that she has her son, King Louis XIII, firmly in line, at least for now.
Marie de’ Medici finds herself in a turbulent domestic life with an adulterous husband and a troubled son. And history is going to repeat, propelling her toward a more dramatic role.


We wrap up with the shoddy and bloody reign of Grand Duke Francesco and meet his daughter Maria, the lonely girl destined become the other Medici queen of France.

The reign of Grand Duke Francesco was inflicted with multiple scandals, but none were worse than the fates of the Grand Duke’s own sister and sister-in-law.




Cosimo’s legacy was to give Florence stability and prosperity it had not known in about half a century, but there is a much darker side to that legacy too.

Besides being a political reformer, Cosimo was also a master at using art and literature to glorify not only himself, but his ancestors.


