The life of Caterina Cornaro could easily be the plot of a novel or TV drama. One of the most significant women of Venice’s golden age, Cornaro (1454–1510) was an important figure in Renaissance politics, diplomacy, and arts. She reigned as the queen of Cyprus for 16 years under immense pressure.
As a patron of the arts, she was painted by greats such as Dürer, Titian, Bellini, and Giorgione. Yet today she is relatively little known outside of Venice and Cyprus.
Caterina was the last monarch of the Kingdom of Cyprus between 1474 and 1489. Her tragic reign saw the Mediterranean island transfer from the hands of the Lusignan Dynasty that had dominated the island since the Crusades, to the Republic of Venice, one of the clearest signs of the mercantile nation-state flexing its imperial muscle.
This significant event took place against the backdrop of interference from Venice’s rival, Genoa, and the rise of the Ottoman Empire in the east. Despite the complex political intrigue, Caterina became a much-admired figure in contemporary European society. Still, separating the real Caterina from the romanticized version of her can be a challenge.
Early Life
Caterina was born in 1454, into one of the most noble and influential Venetian families. (It had produced four doges, the senior-most elected official of the Republic.) She grew up in the family palace on the Grand Canal. Among the family’s many financial interests were rich sugar plantations on Cyprus. They developed close relations with the Lusignan family who had reigned over Cyprus since 1192.
After a period of instability, James II became King of Cyprus in 1468 and chose Caterina as his wife. The marital bond was supported by Venice: Commercial rights on the island were now secured for Venetian interests. She was presented with a dowry of 100,000 ducats, a not inconsiderable sum of gold and silver coinage.
She and James married by proxy in St. Mark’s Cathedral on July 30, 1468, when Caterina was 14 years old. She set sail for Cyprus in 1472 to finally meet her husband.
Caterina arrived and married James in person at the Cypriot harbor city of Famagusta. James, however, died a mere 10 months after the two met, leaving the heavily pregnant queen consort to become regent to her newborn son, James III.
Tragedy struck the young queen again on Aug. 26, 1474, when her son and last legitimate heir to the Lusignan line died. The child’s passing left Caterina as queen regnant, a role she would hold for 16 years. Rumors spread that James II had been poisoned by the queen’s relatives.
Thrust into a position of power and prestige through the title, Caterina was immediately the center of various intrigues within the court. She survived conspiracies from within to overthrow her, and pressure from Naples and the Papal state.
It was Venice that exerted the greatest threat to Caterina. Control of Cyprus would consolidate the Republic’s influence over the entire Mediterranean, so they removed many of the queen’s trusted advisers and replaced them with commissioners and counselors influencing decision making. While it is easy to portray her as a victim of Venetian manipulation, for years she faced down considerable pressure by the Republic to surrender the throne.
Removal From Cyprus
In 1489, Caterina finally relented to the Republic’s exertions, mediated by her brother, to abdicate. Although she lost political power, she was still able to stage manage her image successfully. Contemporary chronicler George Boustronios’s account tells us:
“On 15 February 1489, the queen exited from Nicosia for Famagusta to leave … she went on horseback wearing a black silken cloak, with all the ladies and the knights in her company. … Her eyes, moreover, did not cease to shed tears throughout the procession. The whole population was bewailing.”
The reality was more complex. Cyprus was locked into a feudal system, which was retained by the Venetians; for most Cypriots, life would not change with their queen’s exile and the collapse of the monarchy.
The pageantry of the fleet carrying the exiled queen home was played as a brilliant piece of propaganda by both the doge and by the former queen. Her disembarkation in Venice became a common scene in contemporary painting.
Queen of the Arts
On return to Italy, Caterina was granted for life the fiefdom of Asolo, a town in the Veneto region of northern Italy, in 1489.
Under Caterina, it became a flourishing court for Late Renaissance art and learning. Painters such as Gentile Bellini and poet Andrea Navagero were welcomed. The reputation of the queen’s court soon spread, particularly after humanist Cardinal Pietro Bembo used it as the setting for his famed dialogues on platonic love, “Gli Asolani.”
There is some debate about who really spent time in Asolo, leading one historian to describe the “mirage of Asolo.” Whatever the true nature of the court, the image of the cultured queen in exile was manipulated by Caterina. She became a standard figure of portraitists. In later life, and even in death, Cornaro had far greater control than she ever did during her reign.
In 1510 she died in Venice. The crowds wanting to participate in the funeral of Caterina were so large that a bridge of boats was constructed to allow greater pedestrian movement. She was buried in the church of San Salvador near the Rialto Bridge.
Legacy
Death was not the end of Caterina’s story. Even centuries later, she continued to influence the arts. The audience hall of Caterina’s castle at Asolo was converted to a theater in 1798; the theater itself was later purchased by the John Ringling Museum of Art, where it has been reassembled in Sarasota, Florida.
In 2017, a portrait of Caterina from a private collection underwent conservation and was exhibited in the Leventis Museum in Nicosia in Cyprus for the first time. The conservation work included both art historical research and scientific analysis and confirmed a 16th-century date for the portrait.
Copies of original portraits of the queen continued to be made into the 18th and 19th centuries. The University of Sydney has within its art collection a large oil painting of unknown hand but from the tradition of a lost Titian. The queen wears a black widow’s gown, a coronet, and a necklace.
Robert Browning wrote of Asolo. The libretto based on her life by Jules-Henri Vernoy de Saint-Georges would go on to form the basis of five operas. A highly romanticized novel, “Royal Pawn of Venice: A Romance of Cyprus,” was published in 1911.
It is time her story was once again better known—the story of the republican queen of arts.
Craig Barker is the education manager of Sydney University Museums at the University of Sydney in Sydney, Australia. This article was originally published on The Conversation.