Teodora Contanto: Difference between revisions
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{{Quote|I find that men are more... open, to religious change when it comes to women like me.|Sister Teodora}} | {{Quote|I find that men are more... open, to religious change when it comes to women like me.|Sister Teodora}} | ||
'''Sister Teodora''' (born Teodora Contanto in 1450) is the leader of the Venetian [[Courtesans]]. Her family the Contantos where jewellers and from a young age Teodora was apprenticed to her mother as a shop girl. Visitors to the shop noticed Teodora's beauty and charm, in 1462, one man buying diamond earrings for his wife, Margarita, noticed the twelve year old Teodora and left wishing he had never married. Five years later in 1467, court records show that on 26th of November she was caughte having an affair with a married man and his wife had alerted the authorities. | '''Sister Teodora''' (born Teodora Contanto in 1450) is the leader of the Venetian [[Courtesans]]. Her family the Contantos where jewellers and from a young age Teodora was apprenticed to her mother as a shop girl. Visitors to the shop noticed Teodora's beauty and charm, in 1462, one man buying diamond earrings for his wife, Margarita, noticed the twelve year old Teodora and left wishing he had never married. Five years later in 1467, court records show that on 26th of November she was caughte having an affair with a married man and his wife had alerted the authorities. To avoid legal action her parents sent her to a convent as punishment to live out the rest of her days in peace and prayer. Later that year, Teodora entered the Santa Maria degli Angeli convent. However after five years, 1473, at the age of 23, Teodora grew tired of convent life due to her own personal beliefs. She left leaving a statement nailed to the door in which she talked about life as a nun being "earthly" and sterile. She concluded her letter with a brief description of her own belief "only in partnership with another can one truly enter the arms of God". She opened the bordello, La Rosa Della Virtu, the "Rose of Virtue" in Dorsoduro, Venice, which was staffed entirely by former nuns, and became leader of the Venetian Courtesans. One of her regular customers, Pietro, said her bordello is "the Church for a new sect of Catholicism". Like all the Italian Assassins, the fate of Sister Teodora remain unknown. The only hint is the burning of La Rosa Della Virtu in 1516, 17 years after the events of Assassin's Creed II, which could indicate a number of possible fates for Teodora. | ||
To avoid legal action her parents sent her to a convent as punishment to live out the rest of her days in peace and prayer. Later that year, Teodora entered the Santa Maria degli Angeli convent. However after five years, 1473, at the age of 23, Teodora grew tired of convent life due to her own personal beliefs. She left leaving a statement nailed to the door in which she talked about life as a nun being "earthly" and sterile. She concluded her letter with a brief description of her own belief "only in partnership with another can one truly enter the arms of God". | |||
She opened the bordello, La Rosa Della Virtu, the "Rose of Virtue" in Dorsoduro, Venice, which was staffed entirely by former nuns, and became leader of the Venetian Courtesans. One of her regular customers, Pietro, said her bordello is "the Church for a new sect of Catholicism". Like all the Italian Assassins, the fate of Sister Teodora remain unknown. The only hint is the burning of La Rosa Della Virtu in 1516, 17 years after the events of Assassin's Creed II, which could indicate a number of possible fates for Teodora. | |||
== Trivia == | == Trivia == | ||
Revision as of 03:10, 13 September 2010
- "I find that men are more... open, to religious change when it comes to women like me."
- ―Sister Teodora
Sister Teodora (born Teodora Contanto in 1450) is the leader of the Venetian Courtesans. Her family the Contantos where jewellers and from a young age Teodora was apprenticed to her mother as a shop girl. Visitors to the shop noticed Teodora's beauty and charm, in 1462, one man buying diamond earrings for his wife, Margarita, noticed the twelve year old Teodora and left wishing he had never married. Five years later in 1467, court records show that on 26th of November she was caughte having an affair with a married man and his wife had alerted the authorities. To avoid legal action her parents sent her to a convent as punishment to live out the rest of her days in peace and prayer. Later that year, Teodora entered the Santa Maria degli Angeli convent. However after five years, 1473, at the age of 23, Teodora grew tired of convent life due to her own personal beliefs. She left leaving a statement nailed to the door in which she talked about life as a nun being "earthly" and sterile. She concluded her letter with a brief description of her own belief "only in partnership with another can one truly enter the arms of God". She opened the bordello, La Rosa Della Virtu, the "Rose of Virtue" in Dorsoduro, Venice, which was staffed entirely by former nuns, and became leader of the Venetian Courtesans. One of her regular customers, Pietro, said her bordello is "the Church for a new sect of Catholicism". Like all the Italian Assassins, the fate of Sister Teodora remain unknown. The only hint is the burning of La Rosa Della Virtu in 1516, 17 years after the events of Assassin's Creed II, which could indicate a number of possible fates for Teodora.
Trivia
- Although no longer a part of the Catholic Church, Teodora considers herself a nun, in her own brand of faith.