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=== Early life ===
=== Early life ===
[[File:Tala - Cyprus.jpg|left|thumb|The village of [[Tala, Cyprus|Tala]], Zena's birthplace]]
Zena Gunther de Tyras was born {{Circa}} 1922{{efn|name=yob}} in the village of [[Tala, Cyprus|Tala]], near [[Paphos]], Cyprus.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}}{{Sfn|Odysséos|2017}}{{Sfn|Stavrou Karayanni|2019}} Her birth name was Theognosia, "Zena" and the surnames being adopted later in life. Zena was born into poverty and was the youngest of ten children;{{Sfn|Odysséos|2017}} she had six older brothers and three older sisters.{{Sfn|Lambis|2021}} By the time of her birth all of her siblings, save for a seventeen-year old elder sister, had left home.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}} Zena had a difficult childhood; her father was an abusive womanizer who often shouted at and beat her mother, herself and her sister.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}}{{Sfn|Neophytou|2020}} In one incident, her father rubbed her mother's face into the ground in an attempt to deform her.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}}{{Sfn|Christou|2018}} As his attempts to seek a divorce were unfruitful, Zena's father repeatedly threatened to kill her mother. For most of Zena's early life, her elder sister took care of her and much of the housework.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}} Her father became even more violent and succumbed to [[alcoholism]] after being wrongfully accused of committing a robbery, but he eventually left the family.{{Sfn|Odysséos|2017}}
Zena Gunther de Tyras was born {{Circa}} 1922{{efn|name=yob}} in the village of [[Tala, Cyprus|Tala]], near [[Paphos]], Cyprus.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}}{{Sfn|Odysséos|2017}}{{Sfn|Stavrou Karayanni|2019}} Her birth name was Theognosia, "Zena" and the surnames being adopted later in life. Zena was born into poverty and was the youngest of ten children;{{Sfn|Odysséos|2017}} she had six older brothers and three older sisters.{{Sfn|Lambis|2021}} By the time of her birth all of her siblings, save for a seventeen-year old elder sister, had left home.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}} Zena had a difficult childhood; her father was an abusive womanizer who often shouted at and beat her mother, herself and her sister.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}}{{Sfn|Neophytou|2020}} In one incident, her father rubbed her mother's face into the ground in an attempt to deform her.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}}{{Sfn|Christou|2018}} As his attempts to seek a divorce were unfruitful, Zena's father repeatedly threatened to kill her mother. For most of Zena's early life, her elder sister took care of her and much of the housework.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}} Her father became even more violent and succumbed to [[alcoholism]] after being wrongfully accused of committing a robbery, but he eventually left the family.{{Sfn|Odysséos|2017}}


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=== Involvement in Cypriot affairs ===
=== Involvement in Cypriot affairs ===
[[File:Fountain in Nicosia historical Municipal gardens in Republic of Cyprus.jpg|thumb|The [[Nicosia municipal gardens]], created in 1969, were funded by Zena]]
Through the funds secured through her marriage, Zena began to spend enormous amounts of money on various charity works. She paid for housing for families and orphans, education for children and donated large sums to various organizations, churches, schools and hospitals.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}}{{Sfn|Odysséos|2017}} She also subsidized the construction of sport stadiums, financed sport teams, financially supported communities and municipalities, and financed the construction of several schools and churches.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}} Among the prominent Cypriot projects she financed was the [[Nicosia municipal gardens]] in 1969, the largest municipal gardens in the city.{{Sfn|Stavrou Karayanni|2019}} Numerous poor people who asked her for help were also given financial support and aid.{{Sfn|Christou|2018}}
Through the funds secured through her marriage, Zena began to spend enormous amounts of money on various charity works. She paid for housing for families and orphans, education for children and donated large sums to various organizations, churches, schools and hospitals.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}}{{Sfn|Odysséos|2017}} She also subsidized the construction of sport stadiums, financed sport teams, financially supported communities and municipalities, and financed the construction of several schools and churches.{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}} Among the prominent Cypriot projects she financed was the [[Nicosia municipal gardens]] in 1969, the largest municipal gardens in the city.{{Sfn|Stavrou Karayanni|2019}} Numerous poor people who asked her for help were also given financial support and aid.{{Sfn|Christou|2018}}


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=== Princess of Tyre ===
=== Princess of Tyre ===
[[File:Zena Kanther and Paul Crivez.png|thumb|Zena with [[Paul Crivez]] at a reception at the Grand Hotel in [[Rome]]]]
In 1967, Zena was adopted by the French eccentric [[Paul Crivez]].{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}}{{Sfn|Neophytou|2020}}{{Sfn|Odysséos|2017}} Crivez had himself been adopted into the French-Romanian Paléologue family and through them claimed to be the heir of the medieval [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine]] [[Palaiologos|Palaiologos dynasty]] and the rightful [[List of Byzantine emperors|Byzantine emperor]].{{Sfn|Cheesman|Williams|2000|pp=125–126}} Crivez was childless and adopted Zena as the heir to his claims and titles,{{Sfn|giorgioqp.blogspot.com|}} designating her as the "princess of [[Tyre, Lebanon|Tyre]]".{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}}{{Sfn|Neophytou|2020}}{{Sfn|Odysséos|2017}} She was made the chancellor of Crivez's self-founded [[chivalric order]] and accompanied Crivez during an audience with [[Pope Paul VI]] during which she was presented as the "heiress to the Empire of the Orient". Documents published by Crivez referred to Zena as "Zena Paléologue de Tyras", though she herself later went under the name Zena Gunther de Tyras.{{Sfn|giorgioqp.blogspot.com|}} After her adoption as "imperial heir", Zena continued to be a global socialite, a major charity donor and a prominent personality both in Cyprus and elsewhere.{{Sfn|giorgioqp.blogspot.com|}}
In 1967, Zena was adopted by the French eccentric [[Paul Crivez]].{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}}{{Sfn|Neophytou|2020}}{{Sfn|Odysséos|2017}} Crivez had himself been adopted into the French-Romanian Paléologue family and through them claimed to be the heir of the medieval [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine]] [[Palaiologos|Palaiologos dynasty]] and the rightful [[List of Byzantine emperors|Byzantine emperor]].{{Sfn|Cheesman|Williams|2000|pp=125–126}} Crivez was childless and adopted Zena as the heir to his claims and titles,{{Sfn|giorgioqp.blogspot.com|}} designating her as the "princess of [[Tyre, Lebanon|Tyre]]".{{Sfn|Drousiotou|2019}}{{Sfn|Neophytou|2020}}{{Sfn|Odysséos|2017}} She was made the chancellor of Crivez's self-founded [[chivalric order]] and accompanied Crivez during an audience with [[Pope Paul VI]] during which she was presented as the "heiress to the Empire of the Orient". Documents published by Crivez referred to Zena as "Zena Paléologue de Tyras", though she herself later went under the name Zena Gunther de Tyras.{{Sfn|giorgioqp.blogspot.com|}} After her adoption as "imperial heir", Zena continued to be a global socialite, a major charity donor and a prominent personality both in Cyprus and elsewhere.{{Sfn|giorgioqp.blogspot.com|}}



Revision as of 10:48, 27 March 2022

Zena Gunther de Tyras
Ζήνα Κάνθερ ντε Τύρας
Portrait taken before Zena's audience Pope Paul VI (1960s/70s)
Born
Theognosia

c. 1922[a]
Tala, Paphos, Cyprus
Died3 July 2012 (aged 90)
Nicosia, Cyprus
OccupationPhilantropist
Spouse
(m. 1952; died 1983)
ParentPaul Crivez (adoptive father)

Zena Gunther de Tyras (Greek: Ζήνα Κάνθερ ντε Τύρας; c. 1922[a] – 3 July 2012), also known as Zena Kanther,[2][4][b] was a prominent Cypriot philantropist.

Background

Early life

The village of Tala, Zena's birthplace

Zena Gunther de Tyras was born c. 1922[a] in the village of Tala, near Paphos, Cyprus.[1][5][6] Her birth name was Theognosia, "Zena" and the surnames being adopted later in life. Zena was born into poverty and was the youngest of ten children;[5] she had six older brothers and three older sisters.[7] By the time of her birth all of her siblings, save for a seventeen-year old elder sister, had left home.[1] Zena had a difficult childhood; her father was an abusive womanizer who often shouted at and beat her mother, herself and her sister.[1][4] In one incident, her father rubbed her mother's face into the ground in an attempt to deform her.[1][3] As his attempts to seek a divorce were unfruitful, Zena's father repeatedly threatened to kill her mother. For most of Zena's early life, her elder sister took care of her and much of the housework.[1] Her father became even more violent and succumbed to alcoholism after being wrongfully accused of committing a robbery, but he eventually left the family.[5]

As her family was unable to support themselves financially, Zena left school, having only been taught the basics of reading and writing. During this time she spent most of her time seated under a tree in the village square, relying on the kindness of strangers for food and money.[7] When Zena was ten years old, she moved to Limassol with her mother and sister.[4] In Limassol she secured a job as a maid, working until the age of sixteen.[5] For the first year she worked completely unpaid. During the family's time in Limassol, Zena also simultaneously worked two years in a clinic.[1] A few years later Zena met and fell in love with a 23-year old man named Lefkos, originally from Paphos. Though her mother was hesitant at first, she eventually gave her consent for the two to become engaged.[1][5] After four or five months of living together, Zena became pregnant. At the same time, Lefkos's mother expressly forbade the two to marry each other. As a result, Lefkos abandoned her and Zena gave birth to their son, Socrates, alone.[1][5]

Because she needed to work, Zena left Socrates with other women and only saw him when she picked him up at night. After a few months, Zena befriended a man named Alexander. Despite working for nearly all waking hours every day, Zena had by this point little to no money left and owed money both to her local grocer and in rent. After she confessed her difficulties to Alexander one day, he took pity on her and paid off her debts.[1] Around the same time, the woman who took care of Socrates asked to adopt him.[1][3] Though Zena saw this as cruel,[1] she was forced to accept due to her financial situation.[4] At the same time, Zena was more or less abandoned by her family; although her elder sister had asked her for money to get married and Zena sent funds immediately, she was the only sibling not invited to the wedding.[1] Zena increasingly fell in love with Alexander. The two were engaged after a few years of living together but he died shortly thereafter.[1]

Cabaret dancer

Once again unable to support herself financially, Zena began working as a cabaret dancer after receiving the suggestion from a friend.[5] At the time of taking the job, Zena was not yet aware of how exploitative the nightclub industry was.[1] She worked hard to prepare, taking fitness and rhythmic classes for five hours a day, and her debut in Limassol was a resounding success.[1] She also worked in other cities, including Nicosia and Larnaca, and quickly became one of the most famous cabaret dancers in Cyprus,[5] well-known for her sophisticated and raunchy shows.[3][4] Zena later described her work as a cabaret dancer as tormenting, and remembered having to handle men who hugged and stuck on to her carefully and politely in order to not lose her job.[1]

Marriage to Christian Gunther

Zena's luck turned when she met her future husband, Christian Gunther. The two first met when Zena rushed to his aid after he had been robbed and beaten in the street. Gunther came back to the nightclub where Zena worked to thank her,[7] and the two quickly became friends; they ate and drank together, and Gunther frequently drove her home from work.[1] Gunther was American,[1] though he had been born on Cyprus,[8] and was unbeknownst to Zena a millionaire,[1][4] having acquired a fortune through mining and through the oil industry.[1] Shortly after Gunther proposed to her he was involved in a serious car accident, from which Zena helped him recover.[5] Upon their marriage in 1952, several newspapers in Cyprus wrote that she was lucky and compared her to Cinderella. Zena took great offense to such articles since she only learnt of her husband's wealth after the marriage, when she was told about his fortune by his lawyer during the process of getting an American passport.[1][5]

Gunther, thirty years old at the time of their marriage,[1] suffered from alcoholism and was constantly unsuccessfully tried to recover;[5] after their honeymoon in Beirut, Gunther continued to drink. Though Zena tried to guard her husband's health, he fell deeper into alcoholism. Although Zena often felt that her efforts were in vain and that she was slowly losing her husband, the two at times also enjoyed more stable periods of travelling and spending time together. Although grateful of having escaped poverty, Zena later surmised that her life with Gunther had been "another hell", filled with anxiety and marked with constant monitoring, attention, visits to clinics and visits by doctors.[1] Gunther passed away in 1983, having been seen little in public for the last twenty years of his life.[8]

Career

Involvement in Cypriot affairs

The Nicosia municipal gardens, created in 1969, were funded by Zena

Through the funds secured through her marriage, Zena began to spend enormous amounts of money on various charity works. She paid for housing for families and orphans, education for children and donated large sums to various organizations, churches, schools and hospitals.[1][5] She also subsidized the construction of sport stadiums, financed sport teams, financially supported communities and municipalities, and financed the construction of several schools and churches.[1] Among the prominent Cypriot projects she financed was the Nicosia municipal gardens in 1969, the largest municipal gardens in the city.[6] Numerous poor people who asked her for help were also given financial support and aid.[3]

The projects supported by Zena were not limited to Cyprus; she also supported numerous projects in Greece, as well as in other countries.[1] In the early years of her marriage to Gunther, she often faced problems with the managers of his property, who intervened every time she wanted to do a charity project and forced her to fight.[1]

Zena was heavily involved in the Cypriot struggle for independence from the British from 1955 to 1959.[1][3][4] A friend of Georgios Grivas,[3][4] leader of the paramilitary EOKA, Zena helped finance groups who opposed British rule over the island and also financed purchases of weapons.[4] Her actions were not merely financial; at one time during the struggle she hid Grivas in her own basement.[7] Zena's political involvement continued after Cyprios independence was achieved. She may have funded the later EOKA B during its 1974 coup attempt and in July 1978 she was implicated in a supposed conspiracy reported by Cypriot president Spyros Kyprianou which involved the German ambassador and various politicians and celebrities. As a result, she was held by the police for eight days.[4]

In 1960, Zena built a massive summerhouse in Prodromos, Cyprus. The house had around 650–825 square meters (7000–8900 square feet) of interior space, several verandas and a swimming pool. Throughout the 1960s Zena often used to house to host important and influential people and musicians. From 1970 onwards, the house largely ceased to be used and Zena unsuccessfully worked to sell it.[1][4]

Princess of Tyre

Zena with Paul Crivez at a reception at the Grand Hotel in Rome

In 1967, Zena was adopted by the French eccentric Paul Crivez.[1][4][5] Crivez had himself been adopted into the French-Romanian Paléologue family and through them claimed to be the heir of the medieval Byzantine Palaiologos dynasty and the rightful Byzantine emperor.[9] Crivez was childless and adopted Zena as the heir to his claims and titles,[10] designating her as the "princess of Tyre".[1][4][5] She was made the chancellor of Crivez's self-founded chivalric order and accompanied Crivez during an audience with Pope Paul VI during which she was presented as the "heiress to the Empire of the Orient". Documents published by Crivez referred to Zena as "Zena Paléologue de Tyras", though she herself later went under the name Zena Gunther de Tyras.[10] After her adoption as "imperial heir", Zena continued to be a global socialite, a major charity donor and a prominent personality both in Cyprus and elsewhere.[10]

Later life and death

Zena published her autobiography A Life in the Wind[1] in 1971. She spent her last years living in relative isolation in her villa in the Lykabittos area of Nicosia.[1] For the last ten years of her life Zena suffered from Alzheimer's disease.[7] She died at the age of 90 on 3 July[2] 2012[4][5] after an extended period of time in a coma.[5]

Legacy

Zena remains recognized as one of the greatest benefactors of Cyprus[1][5] and has achieved a somewhat legendary status on the island.[7] She was in her lifetime honored with multiple awards, including the title of Knight of St. Dionysios of Zakynthos, the Holy Cross of the Apostle and Evangelist Mark (granted by the Patriarchate of Alexandria), as well as numerous golden keys to cities in various countries, most prominently in Greece.[1] Numerous locations in Cyprus are named in Zena's honor, including a street and a cinema in Nicosia.[11] In addition to her own autobiography, Zena's life story has also found its way into other writings. In 1997, the Cypriot author Gristakis Georgiou published Archipelagos: Twenty Years in Labour, a thinly fictionalized rendition of Zena's life story.[11] In 2021, Zena's granddaughter Maria Kanther wrote a best-selling biography of Zena's life titled Princess Zena Kanther de Tyras.[7]

After Zena's death in 2012, her large summerhouse in Prodromos fell into the ownership of the Bank of Cyprus and it was purchased by a private owner in 2019.[3][4] Though not officially recognized as architectural heritage by the Cypriot government, the summerhouse was in 2020 archived and studied as 20th-century architectural heritage as part of Nonument, an international artistic and research project created by the Museum of Transitory Art in Ljubljana, Slovenia.[4]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Zena's date of birth varies between sources. She herself claimed to have been born "around 1930".[1][2] Some other sources give 1927 as the year of her birth. The 1922 date derives from multiple sources giving her age at her marriage to Christian Gunther (1952) as 30 and her age at the time of death (2012) as 90.[2][3]
  2. ^ "Kanther" being a hellenized version of Gunther

References

Sources

  • Cheesman, Clive; Williams, Jonathan (2000). Rebels, Pretenders and Imposters. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0312238667.
  • Christou, Jean (11 September 2018). "Two historical mountain properties go under the hammer". Cyprus Mail. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  • Drousiotou, Antigoni (11 November 2019). "Η μοναδική πριγκίπισσα της Κύπρου και η θλιβερή ιστορία πίσω από τα βήματά της" [The only princess of Cyprus and the sad story behind her steps]. Woman TOC (in Greek). Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  • Dubin, Marc (2009). The Rough Guide to Cyprus. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-1-85828-993-9.
  • "Giorgio Quintini Paleologo: Friends - His Imperial Highness Prince Paul-Théodore Paléologue-Crivez (1894-1984)". Giorgio Quintini Paleologo. 24 May 2015. Retrieved 27 March 2022.[better source needed]
  • Lambis, Paul (30 July 2021). "The last princess of Cyprus". Cyprus Mail. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  • Makris, A. (4 July 2012). "Born Into Poverty, Married Into Riches: Zena Kanther Dies Aged 90". Greek Reporter. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  • "Memorial: Christian Godfrey Gunther '42". Princeton Alumni Weekly. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  • Neophytou, Elia (2020). "The House of Zena Kanther". Nonument!. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  • Odysséos, Mýria (5 November 2017). "Ζήνα Κάνθερ: Από χορεύτρια στα μπαρ… Πριγκίπισσα της Κύπρου" [Zena Gunther: From a dancer in bars… Princess of Cyprus]. Reporter (in Greek). Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  • Stavrou Karayanni, Stavros (2019). "Gardening Desire". In Adil, Alev; Ali, Aydin Mehmet; Kemal, Bahriye & Petrides, Maria (eds.). Nicosia Beyond Barriers: Voices from a Divided City. London: Saqi Books. ISBN 978-0-86356-674-5.