Abstract
Vittoria Colonna used a series of role models, such as the heroines of
classical mythology, or female saints such as Catherine of Alexandria and
Mary Magdalene, in the construction of her image as an intellectually
aspiring and moral exemplary noblewoman. This chapter argues that
Birgitta of Sweden (1303–73) should be added to Colonna’s gallery of female
models. As an aristocratic widow in Rome with reform inclinations, with
a strong public voice, and above all with an extensive textual presence
that extended throughout Italy and to other European countries, no one
could fit better as Colonna’s exemplum than Birgitta. As this chapter
explores, the clearest traces of Birgittine imitations are to be found in
Colonna’s radical meditations on the Virgin Mary.
Publisher
Amsterdam University Press