Luchetto's first diplomatic activity occurred in 1266, when he acted as an ambassador from Genoa to
Pope Clement IV and Charles of Anjou. In 1270 he was assigned by the
Angevins to "examine" the government of the
podestà Orlando Putagio in
Parma. His first major political assignment is related in the
Chronicon of
Pietro Cantinelli under the year 1272:
Dominus Luchittus de Cataluxiis de Janua fuit potestas Bononiae ("Lord Luchetto Gattilusio of Genoa made podestà of
Bologna"). Luchetto was still acting as Guelph podestà of Bologna on 6 March 1277, when
Enzo of Sardinia, son of the
Emperor Frederick II and long languishing in a Bolognese prison, dictated his testament in the presence of
nobili viro Luchitto de Gatalusiis cive januensi Bonon. Praetore ("nobleman Luchetto Gattilusio, citizen of Genoa,
praetor of Bologna," praetor being synonymous with podestà at that time). The next year (1273), however, he was also
capitano del popolo of
Lucca under Charles. He was still at Lucca in 1277. In 1282 Luchetto served a term as podestà of
Milan. Then, on 13 October 1284 he was a member of the Genoese delegation which reconfirmed the alliance between Genoa, Lucca, and
Florence against
Pisa. In 1295 he again acted as Genoese ambassador to the pope, this time
Boniface VIII, and helped seal a peace with
Venice. On that mission he also received a
papal bull for a church he had built at Priano in
Sestri Ponente. His last position of state was in
Cremona, where he served as podestà in 1301. He appears in documents for the last time in 1307. ==Private life==