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While Wert endured the humiliating situation in Mantua through the late 1560s, he kept his job: he was to remain at least nominally maestro di cappella in Mantua until 1592.
The 1560s were productive years for Wert musically, as he produced his first four books of five-voice madrigals during this time, and his first book for four voices.
The dedications are significant: one is to Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba, Duke of Sessa, and in the dedicatory preface Wert thanks him for the opportunity to lead his choir.
( Fernández de Córdoba was Governor of Milan from 1558 to 1560.
) During the late 1560s Wert had several offers of employment elsewhere, but turned them down.
The most significant came in Augsburg in 1566, where Wert's spectacular ability to improvise counterpoint engendered an offer to join the imperial court in Prague, serving Maximilian II, the Holy Roman Emperor.
The next job offer he refused came from Parma the next year, the home of the Farnese family.
However he became increasingly close to the Este court in Ferrara during the 1570s and 1580s, without actually becoming employed there.
While the two courts were closely connected by marriage and mutual interchange of musicians, Ferrara was a place with a profoundly different outlook than Mantua: Ferrara was progressive, while Mantua was supportive of the Counter-Reformation ; the progressive tendencies of Ferrara better fitted Wert's musical inclinations.
Wert had a good time there ; so much so that his employer in Mantua sent a strongly worded letter on 22 December 1584 demanding his immediate return to his post.
Wert, however, had fallen in love with the widowed Tarquinia Molza, the most famous female singer and poet in Italy, who was a lady-in-waiting at the Este court, so he endeavored to spend as much time as possible in Ferrara.
This was the same year that Lucrezia, Wert's wife, died in prison in Novellara.

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