Caterina Tezio Bernini

Is your surname Bernini?

Research the Bernini family

Caterina Tezio Bernini's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Caterina Bernini (Tezio)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Rome, Rome County, Lazio Province, Italy
Death: August 1673 (55)
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Paolo Tezio and Eugenia Valeri Tezio
Wife of Gian Lorenzo Bernini
Mother of Monsignor Pietro Filippo Bernini; Paolo Bernini; Angelica Bernini; Agnese Celeste Bernini; Paolo Valentino Bernini and 6 others

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Caterina Tezio Bernini

Bernini, Domenico (Franco Mormando, translator & commentator). The Life of Gian Lorenzo Bernini (Penn State Press, 2012), page 321. … http://books.google.com/books?id=W3RniniFSXgC&pg=PA321&lpg=PA321&dq...Documentation for the parents of Caterina Tezio, birth and death of Caterina, marriage of Caterina to Gian Lorenzo Bernini, and the Bernini’s eleven children.

Schama, Simon. “Power Of Art” (BBC Books, England, 28 September 2006) … “Matteo Bonarelli had come to Rome from Lucca around 1636 and joined Bernini's workshop, where he had the usual details - angels and such-like - farmed out to him by the Cavaliere. His wife, Costanza, was, however, evidently no angel, nor especially constant. The affair between her and Bernini was apparently not his first, since Baldinucci writes of the romantic adventures, very much in the plural, of his youth. The "youth", however, was by now nearly 40, and his liaison with Costanza was obviously more than just a fling. He was, as his son Domenico candidly wrote, "fieramente inamorato" with her. … There came a day when someone approached Bernini and whispered (doubtless nervously, given his reputation for hot temper) that his mistress was, alas, also sleeping with someone else. That someone else was his younger brother, Luigi. That evening, at the family table, he announced that the next day he would be going to the country to see to some business. But instead he went to Costanza's house in time to see his brother emerge with her "mezza vestita" - which means, probably, not half-clothed but in her nightdress. In the violent fight that followed, Gianlorenzo, trying to kill his brother with an iron crowbar, succeeded in breaking two of his ribs. At home Bernini made another attempt to kill Luigi, this time with his sword, and when the younger brother took sanctuary in the church of Santa Maria Maggiore, Bernini was left vainly trying to kick in the door. … He had not yet exhausted his rage. That same afternoon a servant was sent to the Bonarelli house. He found Costanza in bed and there, fulfilling the orders he had been given by Bernini, he cut her face to ribbons with a razor. The servant was arrested, tried and sent to prison for his assault. Costanza was sent to prison on charges of adultery and fornication. Luigi was exiled to Bologna for his own safety. Bernini was penalised - by a 3,000 scudi fine. But his patron and friend Urban VIII then waived the fine on the understanding that now the Cavaliere would marry. This turned out to be something short of severe corrective punishment, since the intended bride, Caterina Tezio, was reputedly the most beautiful woman in Rome. Bernini did indeed go through with the marriage, never (as far as one knows) strayed again and had 11 children by Caterina.

Hibbard, Howard. “BERNINI (Bernino), Gian Lorenzo”, Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, 1967, Volume 9 … “Nel 1639 sposò Caterina Tezio (morta nel 1673), figlia di un avvocato non abbiente che non poté dotarla. Caterina gli diede undici figli, dei quali nove raggiunsero la maturità.”

view all 14

Caterina Tezio Bernini's Timeline