Margherita Costa
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Margherita Costa ( – after 1657), singer, poet, playwright and feminist, is the most
Baroque The Baroque (, ; ) is a style of architecture, music, dance, painting, sculpture, poetry, and other arts that flourished in Europe from the early 17th century until the 1750s. In the territories of the Spanish and Portuguese empires including t ...
of the seventeenth-century Italian women writers and stands out for her original style and themes. As a poet, she employs a variety of genres, using humor and irony to criticize prevailing attitudes towards women and to mock the politics of her times. She is the first Italian woman writer to use humor and satire in her published works. Some of her poems are partially autobiographical for they include allusions to events in her life and complaints about her lack of fortune and literary recognition. Her poetry stresses the obstacles she faced as a woman and the difficult life of women in general. Costa was a prolific writer, publishing two books of prose, six volumes of poetry, three plays, two narrative poems and an allegorical pageantry, in verse, for knights on horseback. (See "Introduction" to Margherita Costa, *, p. 19).


Biography

Costa was born in Rome, Italy. She and her sister, Anna Francesca, began their careers as singers and perhaps courtesans in Rome, where they received the patronage of families such as the Aldobrandini. In 1628, Costa moved to Florence, where she began her literary career. At the ducal court, she obtained the protection of Ferdinando II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany,
Vittoria della Rovere Vittoria della Rovere (7 February 1622 – 5 March 1694) was Grand Duchess of Tuscany as the wife of Grand Duke Ferdinando II. She had four children with her husband, two of whom would survive infancy: the future Cosimo III, Tuscany's longest- ...
, and other members of the Medici family. She may have also married the court buffoon Bernardino Ricci, known as "Tedeschino" (as well as the "Cavalier of Pleasure"), to whom she dedicated a 1641 comedy entitled ''The Buffoons''. During this period, Costa also published several volumes of poetry, a drama, and a collection of love letters. Also printed under her name was a historical account of Ferdinando's 1627 voyage to Germany, but because Costa acknowledged that she received her information from a member of the ducal court, her detractors accused her of not having composed the work herself. In 1644, Costa left Florence and returned to Rome under the protection of Cardinal Francesco Barberini, to whom she dedicated a sacred poem about the Roman
Saint Cecilia Saint Cecilia ( la, Sancta Caecilia), also spelled Cecelia, was a Roman virgin martyr and is venerated in Catholic, Eastern Orthodox Church, Orthodox, Anglican Communion, Anglican, and some Lutheran churches, such as the Church of Sweden. She b ...
, the patron saint of music. Costa briefly left the city the following year in order to assume a post as a singer at the court of Duchess Christine of Savoy. Costa would later portray the Turin court in a collection of poems dedicated to the duchess and published in 1647, at which time she had been invited to travel from Rome to Paris with the group of musicians of the composer Luigi Rossi, to sing in his opera , which was performed to glorify the court of the young Louis XIV of France. Over the course of that year, under the patronage of Cardinal Mazarin, she published a volume of poetry in honor of the king's mother and regent, Anne of Austria, and the text for an equestrian ballet dedicated to the cardinal, as well as the volume for Christine of Savoy. Little is known about the latter part of her life. She was in Venice in August 1650 and from there she most likely traveled to Germany. In the dedication to the
dukes of Brunswick-Lüneburg Duke is a male title either of a monarch ruling over a duchy, or of a member of royalty, or nobility. As rulers, dukes are ranked below emperors, kings, grand princes, grand dukes, and sovereign princes. As royalty or nobility, they are ...
of her play, *, (The Loves of the Moon Goddess), she claims that she lived for four years under a foreign sky. The play was published in Venice in 1654 on her way back to Rome. The last preserved document by Margherita is a letter written on May 4, 1657, to Mario Chigi, commander-in-chief of the papal armies and brother to Pope Alexander VII, imploring assistance. In this letter, she describes herself as a widow with two daughters. The date of her death is unknown.


List of works

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * ''Die schöne Frau bedarf der Zügel nicht''; Porträt, Werkauswahl und Übersetzung von
Christine Wunnicke Christine may refer to: People * Christine (name), a female given name Film * ''Christine'' (1958 film), based on Schnitzler's play ''Liebelei'' * ''Christine'' (1983 film), based on King's novel of the same name * ''Christine'' (1987 fil ...
, Zweisprachige Ausgaben: Deutsch / Italienisch, Berlin : Berenberg Verlag GmbH, 2023,


References

* * * *


External links

{{DEFAULTSORT:Costa, Margherita 1600s births Year of death uncertain Italian women singers Italian women poets Italian opera librettists Women librettists 17th-century Italian singers 17th-century Italian women writers 17th-century Italian poets Baroque writers Italian women dramatists and playwrights