After his wife's death he also had two illegitimate children (Laura and Antonio) from a relationship with a servant.
In 1570 he started building the Giardino Giusti on a hillside ten minutes from the city centre - it was visited in 1611 by the English traveller Thomas Coryat, who called it "a second paradise".
[1] Venice sent him on several diplomatic missions and he also hosted the Medici family in his home as well as accompanying them on several major journeys.
In 1567 he entered the Académie philharmonique de Vérone, two years after it set itself up in the house at San Vitale in Verona, owned by the Giusti family.
Also in 1583 he set up his own 'Ridotto Letterario', a salon at his home to speak informally about literature and philosophy.