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Everything is related
to Naples
entry Oct 2008 Number
12
in
a
series.
Links to
parts:
Tosca & the queen of Naples
If you are a Protestant music-lover with no
knowledge of history, you might just let that mention of a queen slide.
(Uh, sure…queen of Rome…sounds right…I guess.) If you are an
opera-loving Roman Catholic, however, you may think, “Now hold on just
a minute. Queen of Rome? I know we've had some scoundrel popes, but…”
(Actually, Peter and a few others were
married—before they became
pope.) No, you can relax. The queen in question in Tosca is not Mrs. Pope, but
rather Maria Carolina, the queen
consort
of King Ferdinand of the Kingdom of
Naples. She, the queen of Naples, was briefly “Queen of Rome.” The background is convoluted and
violent—totally
normal for Europe around 1800: —In February of 1798, forces of the French Republic enter Rome and proclaim the Roman Republic. This is in line with the French Republic’s setting up of client states, “sister” republics, in the territory under French control, including the Neapolitan (aka “Parthenopean”) Republic in January of 1799. The French demand that Pope Pius VI renounce his temporal authority; that is, that he abdicate as king of the Vatican States. He refuses. He is arrested and removed to Valence in south-eastern France. He dies in captivity in August of 1799. —There is an immediate attempt by the
Kingdom of Naples to overthrow the Roman Republic in 1798. It fails
miserably. Shortly thereafter, the republic in Naples is proclaimed and
King Ferdinand and queen Caroline flee to Sicily. —While Napoleon is
off in Egypt, Austrian-Russian forces
cross into northern Italy; between April and August of 1799 they defeat
and dissolve various republics previously set up by the French.
At the same time, Bourbon royalists under Cardinal
Ruffo come back, overthrow the
republic in Naples in June of 1799 and reinstall Ferdinand and
Caroline. Palazzo Farnese in Rome (print by
—Queen Caroline to the rescue. She appoints herself “regent” (for the absent Pope) of Rome, and she rules as such from September 1799 to July 1800, when the new pope (Pius VII, elected in Venice a few months earlier) reenters the Eternal City. —But before that, in June 1800, Napoleon
(who has really just been warming up all this time) crosses the Alps
and invades Italy again, winning a major battle at Marengo on June 14.
The battle is see-saw for a while and the events in Tosca revolve
around a celebration in honor of Napoleon’s anticipated defeat, a
celebration at which Tosca is to sing. That never happens, of course.
News trickles in of Bonaparte’s victory at Marengo. Tosca, herself,
then…well, go see the opera. Caroline’s non-fictional behavior as the
“queen” of Rome has not been the subject of a lot of literature. At
least one book (Le
Palais Farnese: Ambassade De France, by Raoul De Broglie. 1953,
Paris:
Henri Lefebvre Editor), in describing the Bourbon
property, the Palazzo Farnese
in Rome (illustration, above) where Queen Caroline held court and where
the events of Tosca take
place, speaks of mass
arrests of
Roman republicans and executions. No numbers are given, but
it is an obvious comparison with Caroline's behavior in Naples after
she and her husband retook the throne there. That she was
vindictive and
vicious is a matter of record, but claims that she was a
wholesale butcher in Naples
responsible for "thousands of executions" (as some claim) are
exaggerated. In The Bourbons of Naples by
Harold Acton
(London:
Prion Books, 1957), the author says:
The author has a
Bourbon axe to grind in his book, yes, but he is a reliable historian
and it is not likely that he simply made up those numbers. Thus, I
suspect that there were certainly some anti-Republican reprisals in
Rome and that Maria Carolina was responsible for them. Beyond that, I
don't know.
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