Cecilia Gallerani | |
Birth Date: | early 1473 |
Birth Place: | Siena, Republic of Siena |
Death Place: | Castle of San Giovanni in Croce, near Cremona, Italy |
Known For: | being the subject of Leonardo da Vinci's painting The Lady with an Ermine being the mistress of Ludovico Sforza, Duke of Milan |
Children: | Cesare Sforza Giovan Pietro Girolamo Francesco Ascanio Maria Felice |
Parents: | Fazio Gallerani Margherita Busti |
Nationality: | Italian |
Cecilia Gallerani (pronounced as /it/; early 1473 – 1536) was the favourite and most celebrated of the many mistresses of Ludovico Sforza, known as Lodovico il Moro, Duke of Milan. She is best known as the subject of Leonardo da Vinci's painting The Lady with an Ermine (circa 1489). While posing for the painting, she invited Leonardo, who at the time was working as court artist for Sforza, to meetings at which Milanese intellectuals discussed philosophy and other subjects. Cecilia herself presided over these discussions.
Cecilia was born in early 1473 into a large family from Siena.[1] Her father's name was Fazio Gallerani. He was not a member of the nobility, but he occupied several important posts at the Milanese court, including the position of ambassador to Republic of Florence and Republic of Lucca. Her mother was Margherita Busti, the daughter of a noted doctor of law.
She was educated alongside her six brothers in Latin and literature. In 1483 at the age of ten, Cecilia was betrothed to Stefano Visconti, but the betrothal was broken off in 1487 for unknown reasons. In May 1489, she left home for the Monastero Nuovo, and it was possibly there where she met Ludovico.
Gallerani was a lifelong scholar with a musical gift and love of poetry, which she composed in Latin and Italian. She became a mistress of the Duke of Milan, Ludovico Sforza "il Moro" when she was 16 or 18 and enjoyed entertaining the intellectual elite out of her apartments in his Milanese castle and seat of the ducal court at the Porta Giovia. It is supposed that she was Sforza's preferred partner but too low in social rank to be politically acceptable match; after their son Cesare was born May 3, 1491, Sforza continued to provide for the family with palatial homes, an arranged marriage for Gallerani with an Italian count, and senior church appointments for Cesare in Milan.
Gallerani and son continued to live in Castello Sforza for up to a year, around when the duke's long-negotiated marriage to a daughter of the Duke of Ferrara (and niece of the Queen of Hungary) could celebrated. The 16-year-old Duchess Beatrice d'Este discovered the liaison and insisted on their removal. They were first installed in the Verme Palace until Gallerani was given a Carmagnola Palace in 1492, when she married the son of a duke who had pledged service to Sforza.
Cecilia and Ludovico's son Cesare was made the abbot of the Church of San Nazaro Maggiore (San Nazaro in Brolo) of Milan in 1498 and 1505 he became canon of Milan. He died in 1512.
Although at times the details have been disputed, Leonardo da Vinci's famous lifelike portrait is considered by experts to be of Cecilia Gallerani while she still lived in Castello Sforzeco; in 1992 Shell and Sironi concluded it to have been painted around 1490 by cross-referencing and correcting the interpretation of contemporaneous evidence. Da Vinci was the Castello Sforza court artist and engineer, yet it is believed he never painted the Duchess, which could mean she refused her own sitting on the basis of insult relating to the mistress. (He later painted other misstresses and the second wife of Sforza.) Da Vinci used the ermine/stoat was a symbol of purity in his works and wrote about its meaning. But other theories on its meaning include that it is a play on Cecilia's last name and the Greek word for the animal (gallay) and/or an emblem of Sforza, whose sobriquet became 'l'Ermellino' after being awarded the Order of the Ermine by the King of Naples. Art critics have noted that the skulls and hands/paws of the two figures are remarkably similar and these subtle details not only a testament to the skill of Da Vinci but also a hint at symbolism.
The academic disagreements over the year and subject of the painting (but not its authenticity) owe to a lack of artifacts describing the work before its purchase in 1800 by Polish Prince Adam Jerzy Czartoryski as a gift to his mother Princess Isabella. But correspondence exists about a portrait of Gallerani once borrowed by Isabella d'Este who was herself a known admirer of da Vinci's artwork. In her reply to the request, Gallerani said it no longer looked like her because she had been so young then and "nobody seeing it and me together would suppose it was made for me".[2] "Though reluctant because it no longer resembled her,[3] Cecilia complied, and by the following month the picture was gratefully returned".[4]
The Countess and Count Ludovico "Il Bergamino" were given a palace, the Carminati de' Brambilla, as their wedding gift by Duke Sforza in 1492. They had five children. After the deaths of both her son in 1512 and husband in 1515, she retired to San Giovanni in Croce, a castle near Cremona that had been enfeoffed to the Count's father by the Duke in 14.
Cesare, the son of Cecilia and Ludovico Sforza was made abbot of the Church of San Nazaro Maggiore of Milan in 1498; in 1505, he became canon of Milan. He died in 1514.
Cecilia died on an unknown date in 1536. She was purportedly buried in the Carminati family tomb in the Church of San Zavedro.
Bandello described her as a patron of the arts. According to others, hers was the first salon in Europe.
By her lover Ludovico Sforza, she had a son:
By her husband, she had four sons and a daughter:
The Leonardo portrait of Cecilia plays an important role in the plot of the alternative historical novel Fatherland by Robert Harris. In the novel the painting is misappropriated by corrupt Nazi officials during the World War 2. The book's epilogue states that in real life, the portrait 'was recovered from Germany at the end of the war and returned to Poland.'The portrait also takes center stage in the novel The Night Portrait. The novel splits timelines between the late 1400s to depict Leonardo painting the portrait, and the 1940s, as the Nazis and the Monument Men contend over The Lady in Ermine painting.