1. Caterina's Bequest - Nicosia
Part
three - Nicosia
(detail of a Venetian
Winged Lion in
the fortifications
of Famagusta )
If you came to this page directly, you might wish to read a page with an introduction to this
section first.
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3. Caterina's Bequest - Nicosia
(left) Venetian
bastion; (right)
Venetian Column
which probably supported
a statue of the
Winged Lion; the column
was taken from the
ancient town of Salamis
The walls were yet to be completed when in March 1570 Sultan Selim II sent an ultimatum
with insulting terms to the Council of Ten in Venice, demanding the immediate cession of Cyprus:
a few months later an Ottoman army landed near Salina (Larnaka), on the southern coast of
the island, and laid siege to Nicosia on July 25. On September 9 the Ottomans managed to
conquer one of the bastions and overwhelmed the Venetian garrison; Lala Mustafa Pacha,
the Ottoman commander, deliberately acted with great cruelty with the objective of sending
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4. Caterina's Bequest - Nicosia
a message to the defenders of the other two Venetian fortresses in Cyprus: Famagusta and
Cirenes (Kyrenia/Girne): Niccolò Dandolo, the Venetian commander was beheaded and his head
was sent to Famagusta in a tin box.
(left) Kyrenia Gate
(Porta del
Provveditore);
(right) enlargement
showing: a) a 1562
Latin inscription (parts
of which are missing but
the sense is clear:
URBE DERELI(CTA) is
a reference to the
poor state of Nicosia
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5. Caterina's Bequest - Nicosia
before the
Venetians rebuilt its
walls and gates); b)
a tablet with verses
from the Koran (above
the Latin inscription);
c) GVRI and 1931 (at
the sides of the
Latin inscription),
a reference to a
British restoration made
in 1931 during the reign
of King George V (Georgius
V Rex et Imperator)
The Venetian enclosure had only three gates; in 1931 the northern one was isolated from the
huge rampart into which it was located (you may wish to see it in a separate window before
the changes).
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6. Caterina's Bequest - Nicosia
Cathedral of Nicosia
(Hagia Sophia): (left)
side entrance; (right) apse
In 1208, soon after taking control of Cyprus, the Lusignan kings started building a new cathedral
in Nicosia; it took them more than a century to complete it (1328); with reference to that
of Constantinople they dedicated it to Hagia Sophia, but the two buildings could not be
more different, as the cathedral of Nicosia was designed in pure French Gothic style. It
was converted into a mosque with the addition of two minarets and dedicated to Sultan Selim II,
so it was called Selimiye Camii, a name which in turn recalls the mosque by the same name at
Edirne, the masterpiece of Mimar Sinan, the great Ottoman architect.
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7. Caterina's Bequest - Nicosia
(left/centre)
St. Nicholas'; (right)
St. Catherine's
In addition to the cathedral other large churches in Gothic style were built by the Kings of
Cyprus; the Venetians assigned St. Nicholas' to the Greek Orthodox Metropolitan; the
Ottomans turned the building into a bedesten (covered market) while
St. Catherine's became a mosque.
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8. Caterina's Bequest - Nicosia
Detail of the portal of
St. Nicholas'
The portal of St Nicholas was decorated with six fine coats of arms of Frankish noble families.
The image used as background for this page shows a relief with another coat of arms of a
local family. Some families from France played a major role in the running of the Kingdom of
Cyprus; the Ibelin family held important positions including that of seneschal, a royal officer
in charge of the administration of justice; similar to the Ibelin, the Giblet held key positions;
these and other families took side in various quarrels which occurred in the House of Lusignan.
Henri de Giblet was one of the three knights who in 1369 assassinated King Peter I in his own bed.
The influence of these families subsided in the last years of the kingdom when Italian and
Catalan merchants and bankers replaced them as advisers to the king and were assigned the
most important positions.
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9. Caterina's Bequest - Nicosia
Portals of Lusignan
House (left) and of
the Lapidary
Museum (centre);
(right) coat of arms
of Francesco Donà, Doge
of Venice between 1545-53
Because of the events which occurred between 1950 and 1974 when Nicosia was partitioned
along ethnic lines, little attention has been paid to preserving the historical heritage of the city and
in particular that belonging to the Franco-Venetian period, which Greeks and Turks alike regard
as extraneous to their cultures. Yet by wandering in the streets of Lefkosa (the Turkish part
of Nicosia) it is possible to come across some interesting memories of that period.
See the other pages of this section:
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10. Caterina's Bequest - Nicosia
Famagusta - The Walls
Famagusta - The Churches
Cirenes
SEE THESE OTHER EXHIBITIONS (for a full list see my detailed list).
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