|
Everything is related
to Naples
entry April 2008
Number 4 in a
series. Links to parts
Shape-Shifters,
Boston Legal,
and
the
“other”
Queen Caroline
This one just fell on
me from deep space —Deep Space Nine, really. I was
watching
a rerun of that TV program the other day, and as the credits ran I was
reminded
of something that had occurred to me on other occasions. I wondered how
many
mangled pronunciations of his beautiful name the actor René
Auberjonois has had to endure in his life, especially in his
home town
of New York City.
(Yeah...uh... Mistuh ...uh... Uh-BIRD-yer-nose, ya wanna
step oudda da cah, please?) Out of
curiosity, I researched him a bit. He is an
esteemed and accomplished
stage actor; TV fans know him also as Odo,
the shape-shifter or “changeling” on Deep
Space Nine (which ran from 1993-99) and
as attorney Paul Lewiston in the currently popular series, Boston
Legal. AND (!) for our purposes, it is interesting that his
full name is René Murat Auberjonois; he is named for—and is a
direct
descendant, on his mother’s side, of—Joachim (in Italian,
Gioacchino) Murat (the
king of Naples in the very early 1800s) and the “other” Queen Caroline,
Caroline Bonaparte, Napoleon’s sister.
In Neapolitan
history, when you say “Queen Caroline,” you generally mean Maria Carolina of
Austria, the daughter of empress Maria Theresa; that Caroline
married onto the
throne of the Kingdom of Naples by marrying King Ferdinand, the oafish King
Nasone, (a word that was a
term of endearment as well as an augmentative of “nose”; thus, he was
known as
“King Shnozz”).
No, this time we
mean Napoleon’s sister: Maria Annunziata Carolina Murat
(née Bonaparte) (1782-1839). She was
simply “Queen Caroline” of Naples during her short reign and was
quite
well-liked, as a matter of fact, as was her husband.
Like the rest of her siblings, she was born
on the island
of Corsica. In
1793, during the French
Revolution, the family moved to France,
where their fate became inextricably woven into that of their ambitious
brother, the future emperor. In Paris,
Caroline fell in love with Joachim Murat, one of her brother's
generals; they
were married in 1800. In 1808 when Murat was promoted to King of
Naples
(yes, he worked his way up from son of an inn-keeper!) by his
brother-in-law,
Caroline became queen consort.
Gioacchino
&
Caroline
Interestingly, with
the Napoleonic wars raging in northern
Europe, Naples
wasn’t a bad place at all to live in the years 1805-15. None of the
horrors
that had occurred in the run-up to the earlier Neapolitan
Republic of
1799 took place. This time, Napoleon
just sent in the French army, and King Ferdinand IV with his own
Caroline and
the entire Bourbon court, army, and silverware moved to Sicily,
no resistance and no questions asked. The new king in 1806 was
Napoleon’s brother,
Joseph, replaced by Murat two years later. That period of French rule
in Naples
is
still benignly called “The Decade” by Neapolitan historians. The
Napoleonic
Code was instituted—a vast improvement over the earlier Divine Right of
Shnozz;
the arts and sciences were cultivated; and, at least in the south, it
was a
time of peace. Murat, himself—although a silly peacock when it came to
designing his own uniforms—was as dashing a king as he had been a
cavalry
officer. And his wife was beautiful. They had four children
together—two boys
and two girls.
They had little more than six good years as
king and queen in
Naples, and then the tide turned, meaning that Napoleon was through—and
with him, all of
his relatives. After the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy in 1815,
Murat
tried to retake his old kingdom by a small-scale invasion on the
Calabrian
coast; he failed and was executed. His
wife, Caroline, fled to Trieste,
where she wrote some memoirs, styling herself as the “Countess of
Lipona”—an
obvious anagram of “Napoli.” (Better
than
“Anilop,” I suppose. On the other hand, “Alpion” isn’t bad, and it even
recalls
“perfidious Albion"! In any event, at
that
stage of her life she had a lot of time to play word games.)
Stories and rumors about Caroline are
endless, including one
that says she became Metternich’s lover (M. had brokered the Congress
of Vienna
in 1815, which had restored the Crowned Heads of Europe) in order to
achieve a
royal future for her son, Achille. (If it’s true, it didn’t work,
Achille died
in 1847 in Florida! The future Napoleon III, the later and only emperor
of The Second
French Empire, Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte [1808-73], was the son
of one of
Caroline’s other brothers, Louis.) Whatever the rumors, even Caroline’s
political enemies respected her. Tallyrand said that she had
“…Cromwell’s head
on the shoulders of a pretty woman.” (That doesn't mean that Caroline
actually looked like
Cromwell; it's a comment on her abilities.) Caroline died in Florence, Italy,
in 1839.
to main index
to portal index for history
|