Katarina Vilioni
Katarina Vilioni (died 1342) was one of the first Europeans known to have resided in China. She was apparently a member of an Genoese trading family that lived in Yangzhou during the mid-14th century.
Vilioni is known through her tombstone, which was rediscovered at Yangzhou in 1951. It suggests that Vilioni died in 1342 and was the daughter of a man named Domenico Vilioni.
Historical background
The early presence of Europeans at Yangzhou may have been linked to the silk trade and a reported sojourn there, during the 1280s, by Marco Polo, who was said to have served the Chinese emperor in an official position at Yangzhou.
Members of the Franciscan order were apparently established at Yangzhou before 1322, when Odoric de Pordenone visited and resided among Franciscans there.[1]
The existence of the tombstone suggests that, by the time Vilioni died, there was a well-established community originating from the Italian peninsula in the city.[2]
Tombstone
The tombstone, which is inscribed in an upper-case Lombardic Latin script, reads:
- In nomine D[omi]ni amen hic jacet
- Katerina filia q[u]ondam Domini
- D[omi]nici de Vilionis que obiit in
- anno Domini mileximo [lower-alpha 1] CCC
- XXXX II de mense Junii
("In the name of the Lord, amen. Here lies Caterina daughter of the deceased lord Domenico de Vilionis, who died in A.D. 1342, in the month of June.")
Vilioni's tombstone also carries a depiction of the martyrdom of Saint Catherine of Alexandria. As such, it may represent the oldest surviving Roman Catholic artefact in China. (Older Christian monuments in China are the work of the Nestorian Church of the East. Odoric de Pordenone also mentions the existence, in 1322, of three Nestorian churches in Yangzhou.)
The tombstone was rediscovered in 1951 by members of the People's Liberation Army, among material that had been used to build ramparts at Yangzhou.
Later research
The Vilioni family of Yangzhou has been linked to a named Pietro Vilioni, who in 1264 was involved in trade at Tabriz (in modern Iran).[3]
Following the rediscovery of Katarina Vilioni's tombstone, a smaller plaque was discovered in Yangzhou, with an inscription mentioning the death in November 1344 of an Antonio Vilioni, who was also a son of Domenico Vilioni.
The surname Vilioni may have been a precursor or variant of the later surname Ilioni. The medieval scholar Robert Lopez has suggested that the Domenico Vilioni of Yangzhou was a man named "Domenico Ilioni", who in 1348 was mentioned in records kept by the city of Genoa. The Genoese records state that Domenico Ilioni mentioned in relation to a merchant named Jacopo de Oliverio, who was said to have lived in the "Kingdom of Cathay" (China), where he had multiplied his capital fivefold.[1]
Notes
- Mileximo for millesimo
References
- Spence, Jonathan D. "Chapter One". The Chan's Great Continent. also: "Les Mondes de Marco Polo", p.9 Archived 2008-04-09 at the Wayback Machine
- Wood, Frances (2002). The Silk Road. pp. 125–126.
- Arnold, Lauren (1999). Princely Gifts and Papal Treasures: The Franciscan Mission to China and Its Influence on the Art of the West, 1250-1350. San Francisco: Desiderata Press. p. 174.
Bibliography
- Rouleau, Francis A. (1954). "The Yangchow Latin Tombstone as a Landmark of Medieval Christianity in China". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. Harvard-Yenching Institute. 17 (3/4): 346–65. doi:10.2307/2718316. JSTOR 2718316.
- Spence, Jonathan D. (1998). The Chan's Great Continent: China in Western Minds. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-02747-1.
- Wood, Frances (2002). The Silk Road: Two Thousand Years in the Heart of Asia. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24340-8.