Cyprus The Lusignan and Venetian Eras
St. Chryssostomos Monastery near the Castle of Buffavento in
the Kyrenia Range was built in the eleventh century.
Kolossi Castle and its domed sugar storehouse, west of
Limassol, were built by Crusaders in the thirteenth century.
Courtesy Embassy of Cyprus, Washington
Guy de Lusignan lived only two years after assuming
control in
1192, but the dynasty that he founded ruled Cyprus as an
independent kingdom for more than three centuries. In
religious
matters, Lusignan was tolerant of the Cypriot adherence to
Orthodoxy, but his brother Amaury, who succeeded him,
showed no
such liberality, and the stage was set for a protracted
struggle,
which dominated the first half of the Lusignan period. At
issue was
the paramountcy of the Roman Catholic Church over the
Orthodox
church. Latin sees were established at Famagusta,
Limassol,
Nicosia, and Paphos; land was appropriated for churches;
and
authority to collect tithes was granted to the Latins. The
harshness with which the Latin clergy attempted to gain
control of
the Church of Cyprus exacerbated the uneasy relationship
between
Franks and Cypriots. In 1260 Pope Alexander IV issued the
Bulla
Cypria, declaring the Latin church to be the official
church of
Cyprus, forcing the Cypriot clergy to take oaths of
obedience, and
claiming the right to all tithes. The papal ordinance had
no more
effect than the constant persecution or the frequent
visits of
high-ranking papal legates sent to convert the islanders.
The
Cypriots remained loyal to their Orthodox heritage, and by
the
middle of the fourteenth century the Latin clergy had
become less
determined in its efforts to Latinize the population. The
dominance
of the Latin church officially continued for another 200
years, but
Cypriots followed the lead of their own clergy and refused
to
accept the imposition of their Western rulers' form of
Christianity.
In the thirteenth century, the kings of Cyprus,
particularly
Hugh III (reigned 1267-84), tried to assist the Latin
Christians of
the Syrian mainland in their final efforts to retain their
holdings. The Mamluks of Egypt, however, proved to be the
decisive
defeating factor, capturing Christian fortresses one after
another
as they moved along the eastern Mediterranean littoral
toward Acre.
With the fall of Acre in 1291, the remaining Christian
positions
were given up, and the Frankish lords and merchants
retreated to
Cyprus, which became a staging area for spasmodic and
unprofitable
attacks on Syria.
For a century after the fall of Acre, Cyprus attained
and held
a position of influence and importance far beyond that
which such
a small kingdom would normally enjoy. As the only
remaining eastern
base of operations against the Muslims, the island
prospered, and
its kings gained importance among the ruling families of
Europe.
Under the rigid feudal system that prevailed, however, the
newfound prosperity fell to the Franks; the native Cypriots,
who were
mostly serfs, benefited little or not at all. This was a
period of
great architectural achievement, as the Frankish lords
directed the
construction of beautiful castles and palaces, and the
Latin clergy
ordered the building of magnificent cathedrals and
monasteries. The
prosperity of the island attracted adventurers, merchants,
and
entrepreneurs, and two Italian trading conglomerates
gained
particular importance in the kingdom's economy; these were
from the
republics of Genoa and Venice. Through intrigue, force,
and
financial power, the two Italian republics gained
ever-increasing
privileges, and at one point in the fourteenth century
Famagusta
was ceded to Genoa, which exercised suzerainty over the
thriving
port for ninety-one years.
The Lusignans' ability to control Cypriot cultural,
economic,
and political life declined rapidly in the first half of
the
fifteenth century. The situation was particularly
desperate after
the capture of King Janus I by the Mamluks in 1426. The
captors
demanded an enormous ransom, putting Cyprus again in the
position
of paying tribute to Egypt. Janus was succeeded by his son
John II,
whose reign was marked by dissension and intrigue.
The most important event in the reign of John II was
his
marriage to Helena Palaeologos, a Greek who was a
granddaughter of
a Byzantine emperor and a follower of the Orthodox faith.
Queen
Helena, stronger in character than her husband, took over
the
running of the kingdom and brought Greek culture out of
the
oblivion in which it had languished for three centuries.
Her
actions in favor of the Orthodox faith and Greek culture
naturally
disturbed the Franks, who came to consider her a dangerous
enemy,
but she had become too powerful to attack. Greek Cypriots
have
always revered Queen Helena as a great heroine because of
her
boldness. John II and Helena died within a few months of
each other
in 1458 and were succeeded by their seventeen-year-old
daughter
Charlotte, but the succession was contested by John's
illegitimate
son. After six years of treachery and conniving (even with
the
Mamluks), James ousted his half sister and ascended the
throne as
James II. He is generally known as James the Bastard and
was
renowned for his political amorality.
After years of enduring rapacious forays by neighboring
states,
the weakened Kingdom of Cyprus was forced to turn to its
ally
Venice to save itself from being dismembered. In 1468, by
virtue of
a marriage between James II and Caterina Cornaro, daughter
of a
Venetian noble family, the royal house of Cyprus was
formally
linked with Venice. James died in 1473, and the island
came under
Venetian control. Caterina reigned as a figurehead until
1489, when
Venice formally annexed Cyprus and ended the 300-year
Lusignan
epoch.
For ordinary Cypriots, the change from Lusignan to
Venetian
rule was hardly noticeable. The Venetians were as
oppressive as
their predecessors, and aimed to profit as much as
possible from
their new acquisition. One difference was that the wealth
that had
been kept on the island by the Frankish rulers was taken
to
Venice--Cyprus was only one outpost of the far-flung
Venetian
commercial empire.
During the long Lusignan period and the eighty-two
years of
Venetian control, foreign rulers unquestionably changed
the Cypriot
way of life, but it was the Cypriot peasant with his Greek
religion
and Greek culture who withstood all adversity. Throughout
the
period, almost three centuries, there were two distinct
societies,
one foreign and one native. The first society consisted
primarily
of Frankish nobles with their retinues and Italian
merchants with
their families and followers. The second society, the
majority of
the population, consisted of Greek Cypriot serfs and
laborers. Each
of these societies had its own culture, language, and
religion.
Although a decided effort was made to supplant native
customs and
beliefs, the effort failed.
Data as of January 1991
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