On the occasion of the 540thanniversary of the death of Katarina Kosača, the last Queen of Bosnia Herzegovina buried in Rome at the Basilica of Santa Maria in Ara Coeli, the Aja Cultural Foundation and the Classical Lyceum of the Franciscans of Visoko, in collaboration with Florence Opera, has organized an educational-training workshop addressed to young international opera singers.
The workshop will be held in Visoko from 8th to 12th October 2018, and the 13 selected candidates will take part in the activities under the guidance of the soprano and director Patrizia Morandini, the pianist and vocal coach Seho Lee, and the mezzo-soprano and artistic director Jasmina Polic.
The singers who will participate in the lyrical workshop will then perform in Visoko, Kraljeva Sutjeska and Sarajevo with the staging of the opera “Suor Angelica” by the famous Italian composer Giacomo Puccini, on the 160th anniversary of his birth. The closing event will be held in Rome on October 25 at the Basilica of Santa Maria in Ara Coeli at 19.
Catherine of Bosnia was Queen of Bosnia as the wife of King Stephen Thomas, the penultimate Bosnian sovereign. She was born into the powerful House of Kosača, staunch supporters of the Bosnian Church. Her marriage in 1446 was arranged to bring peace between the King and her father, Stjepan Vukčić. The Queenship of Catherine, who at that point embraced Roman Catholicism, was marked with an energetic construction of churches throughout the country.
Following her husband’s death in 1461, Catherine’s role receded to that of queen dowager at the court of her stepson, King Stephen Tomašević. Two years later, forces of the Ottoman Empire led by Mehmed the Conqueror invaded Bosnia and put an end to the independent kingdom. Catherine’s stepson was executed, while Sigismund and Catherine, her son and daughter by Thomas, were captured and taken to Constantinople, where they converted to Islam. Queen Catherine escaped, taking refuge in Dubrovnik and eventually settling in Rome, where she received a pension from the papacy. From Rome she strove to be reunited with her children. Her efforts to negotiate and offer a ransom proved futile. She died a Franciscan tertiary in Rome, having named the papacy guardians of Bosnia and her children heirs to the throne, should they ever return to Christianity.
Queen Catherine remains one of the most important figures in the folk tradition and history of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Despite there being no evidence that she was beatified, the Queen has long been venerated by Catholics in Bosnia and Herzegovina and is increasingly seen as an important transethnic state symbol.