- Vittoria Colonna
Vittoria Colonna (April,
1490 -February 25 ,1547 ),marchioness ofPescara , was an Italiannoblewoman andpoet .Biography
The daughter of
Fabrizio Colonna , grand constable of the kingdom of Naples, and ofAgnese da Montefeltro , Vittoria Colonna was born at Marinoa fief of the Colonna family in theAlban Hills nearRome .Betrothed when four years old at the insistence ofFerdinand , king of Naples toFrancesco Ferrante D'Avalos , son of the marquis of Pescara, she received the highest education and gave early proof of a love of letters. Her hand was sought by many suitors, including the dukes of Savoy and Braganza, but at nineteen, by her own ardent desire, she was married to de Avalos on the island ofIschia .There the couple resided until 1511, when her husband offered his sword to the League against the French. He was taken prisoner at the
battle of Ravenna (1512) and conveyed to France. During the months of detention and the long years of campaigning which followed, Vittoria and Ferrante corresponded in the most passionate terms both in prose and verse. They saw each other but seldom, for Ferrante was one of the most active and brilliant captains of Charles V; but Vittoria's influence was sufficient to keep him from joining the projected league against the emperor after thebattle of Pavia (1525), and to make him refuse the crown of Naples offered to him as the price of his treason.In the month of November of the same year he died of his wounds at
Milan . Vittoria, who was hastening to tend him, received the news of his death atViterbo ; she halted and turned off toRome , and after a brief stay departed for Ischia, where she remained for several years. She refused several suitors, and began to produce those "Rime spirituali" which form so distinct a feature in her works. In 1529 she returned to Rome, and spent the next few years between that city,Orvieto , Ischia and other places. In 1537 we find her atFerrara , where she made many friends and helped to establish a Capuchin monastery at the instance of the reforming monkBernardino Ochino , who afterwards became a Protestant.In 1536 she was back in Rome, where, besides winning the esteem of Cardinals
Reginald Pole andContarini , she became the object of a passionate friendship on the part ofMichelangelo , then in his sixty-first year. The great artist addressed some of his finest sonnets to her, made drawings for her, and spent long hours in her society. Her removal toOrvieto and Viterbo in 1541, on the occasion of her brotherAscanio Colonna 's revolt against Paul III, produced no change in their relations, and they continued to visit and correspond as before. She returned to Rome in 1544, staying as usual at the convent of San Silvestro, and died there onFebruary 25 1547.Pietro Bembo ,Luigi Alamanni andBaldassare Castiglione were among her literary friends. She was also on intimate terms with many of the Italian Protestants, such asPietro Carnesecchi , Juan de Valdés and Ochino, but she died before the church crisis in Italy became acute, and, although she was an advocate of religious reform, there is no reason to believe that she herself became aProtestant .The example of her life helps counteract the impression of the universal corruption of the
Italian Renaissance conveyed by such careers as those of theBorgia . Her amatory and elegiac poems, which are the fruits of a sympathetic and dainty imitative gift rather than of any strong original talent, were printed atParma in 1538; a third edition, containing sixteen of her "Rime Spirituali", in which religious themes are treated in Italian, was published at Florence soon afterwards; and a fourth, including a still larger proportion of the pious element, was issued atVenice in 1544.References
*1911
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