Caterina Sforza: Difference between revisions
imported>LargenBai No edit summary |
imported>LargenBai No edit summary |
||
| Line 26: | Line 26: | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
{{ACII}} | {{ACII}} | ||
[[Category:Assassin's Creed II Characters|Sforza, Caterina]] | [[Category:Assassin's Creed II Characters|Sforza, Caterina]] | ||
[[Category:Historical Characters|Sforza, Caterina]] | [[Category:Historical Characters|Sforza, Caterina]] | ||
Revision as of 03:44, 23 February 2010
Caterina Sforza (1463 - 28 May 1509) was the Countess of Forlì and Imola and the daughter of Galeazzo Maria Sforza. She married the Pope's nephew, Girolamo Riario, at only 14 years of age. Girolamo later became the Count of Forlì and Imola. She is depicted as a strong, fierce woman with a dirty mouth, but also seems to be quite maternal and caring. Her actions of being foul mouthed were depicted in Sequence 12.
She is seen at the ending of Sequence 7, where after somehow trapping herself on a small rock in the middle of a lake, Ezio Auditore da Firenze came and helped her back to land. Because he helped her, Caterina thanked Ezio by telling the guard of the Venetian ship to grant Ezio passage on the ship in order to get to Venice, and to use it whenever he wants to or needs to.
While sailing away from Forlì, Ezio stated that Caterina was "[his] next conquest", before being reprimanded by Leonardo da Vinci, who explained Caterina's importance to Ezio and remarked that seducing her would not be such a good idea. Leonardo described her as being "as powerful and dangerous as she is young and beautiful". Ezio replied that makes Caterina his "type" of lady.
Caterina and Ezio meet again during the Battle of Forli sequence. She tells Ezio that she had her most recent husband, Girolamo Riario, killed by the Orsi brothers for he was a Templar and a number of different reasons, including being "boring in bed", "lazy father" and a "real pain in her arse". When Ezio came to store the Piece of Eden in Forlí, the Orsi brothers came to the city once again to steal the Piece of Eden from Ezio and take control of Forlí, taking Caterina's children hostage as a guise to steal the Piece of Eden. When they threatened to kill her children if she did not gave them the Apple, she lifted her skirt, and showing her genitals, cried that she had the instrument to make more. They succeeded until Ezio found and killed them both before having the Apple stolen again from him by Girolamo Savonarola.
Caterina died on May 28th, 1509 at the age of 46, from pneumonia, after being exiled in Florence for 3 years.
Gallery
-
Concept art.
-
Portrait of Caterina Sforza, by Lorenzo di Credi, now in the Museum of Forlí.