'Heroine' may have been accidental revolutionary
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Gioacchino Toma's painting, Luisa Sanfelice in Prison, in the National Museum of Capodimente |
Sanfelice was hailed as a heroine by supporters of the short-lived republic after revealing a plot among monarchist supporters to stage a violent uprising and reinstate Ferdinand and his wife, Queen Maria Carolina, who had been ousted by an invading French army in 1799.
She ultimately paid for her actions with her life when King Ferdinand - known also as Ferdinand IV of Naples - returned to power, yet historians believe she had no strong loyalty to either side and perhaps the unwitting victim of her own circumstances, which cast her as a revolutionary almost by accident.
Born Maria Luisa Fortunata de Molina, the daughter of Bourbon general of Spanish origin, she became Luisa Sanfelice - sometimes known as Luigia - at the age of 17 after marrying a dissolute Neapolitan nobleman, Andrea Sanfelice.
Despite their lack of means, the young newlyweds enjoyed an extravagant lifestyle, running up huge debts, which only worsened when the marriage produced three children.
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King Ferdinand had Sanfelice killed for her part in a failed insurrection |
When even these measures failed to curb their excesses, they were forcibly separated, Luisa placed in a conservatory at Montecorvino Rovella, a village in the mountains above Salerno, Andrea in a convent in Nocera, some 40km (25 miles) away. Both managed to escape their captivity and returned to Naples and their home in the Palazzo Mastelloni in the centre of the city, on what is now Piazza Carità.
In 1797, however, Andrea was arrested and thrown into a debtors’ prison.
Luisa’s life now took a different course, ultimately leading to her downfall.
She began to attend the city’s salons, where wealthy members of society would rub shoulders with artists and intellectuals. Luisa had no political affiliations, mixing with monarchists as comfortably as with republicans. Still a relatively young woman, Luisa inevitably attracted male attention.
One of her suitors was Gerardo Baccher, an officer in the royal army who was loyal to Ferdinand. It was he who confided in her about the plot, for which he and his co-conspirators, had enlisted the help of the Bourbons and of the British fleet under the leadership of Horatio Nelson, to explode bombs during a festival in Naples, and in the ensuing chaos kill the Republic leaders and take control of the city.
Aware that having such knowledge might put her in danger, she asked Gerardo for a safe conduct warrant, so that her life would be spared after the insurrection had taken place. Baccher, smitten with her, willingly acceded to her request.
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Actress Laetitia Casta played Sanfelice in a 2004 TV drama |
Luisa’s part in the foiling of this plot might never have come to light had it not been for Eleonora Pimentel Fonseca, a journalist and a major figure in the republican movement, who wrote an editorial in Monitore Napoletano, the republican periodical, in which she felt compelled to name ‘one of our distinguished fellow citizens, Luisa Molina Sanfelice, [who] revealed to the government on Friday evening the conspiracy of a few people who were no more wicked than idiots’, adding that ‘Our Republic must not fail to perpetuate the fact and the name of this illustrious citizen.’
After the Parthenopean Republic did collapse, in June 1799, only six months after coming into existence, and King Ferdinand resumed his rule, Luisa was promptly arrested and condemned to death.
She won a stay of execution by claiming she was pregnant, her assertion supported by two doctors in Naples. But Ferdinand sent her to Palermo to see another physician, who determined that she was not pregnant. She was ultimately executed on September 11, 1800.
Luisa Sanfelice’s story has captured the imagination of writers, painters and film-makers, old and new.
The celebrated 19th century French writer and playwright, Alexandre Dumas père, made her the protagonist of his novel, La sanfelice, which was turned into a film, Luisa Sanfelice, directed by Leo Menardi in 1942. The most recent interpretation of the story for the screen was a TV film made in 2004, directed by the Taviani brothers, Paolo and Vittorio.
The story also inspired works of art in the 19th century, notably Modesto Faustini's canvas The Arrest of Luisa Sanfelice and several by Gioacchino Toma, who created Sanfelice Taken to Prison in Palermo (1855), Sanfelice's Cell (approx 1876), and two versions of Luisa Sanfelice in Prison, which are considered as Italian masterpieces.
The staircase inside the Palazzo Mastelloni in Naples |
The Sanfelice family’s home in Naples was in the Palazzo Mastelloni, a palace on the Piazza Carità, a square on the Via Toledo in central Naples. They occupied the first floor of the palace, which has existed at least since the 16th century and in which the Mastellone family had an interest since the late 17th century. At the time of Luisa Sanfelice’s arrest in 1799, it was owned by the Marquess Emanuele Mastellone, a minister in the Parthenopean Republic The palace was badly damaged by an earthquake in 1732, after which the Mastelloni bought the entire building and decided to renovate it in Rococo style, the work being carried out under the supervision of Nicola Tagliacozzi Canale, a Neapolitan architect active between about 1723 and 1760. Among the most striking architectural features of the building is the elliptical staircase with two symmetrical ramps that rises from the first floor courtyard and which was designed with Luisa Sanfelice’s input.
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Agropoli's harbour, seen from the elevated position of the Cilento town's historic centre |
Agropoli, where the Safelice family owned an estate to which Luisa and Andrea were exiled after running up huge debts in Naples, is a seaside town in Campania at the start of the Cilento coastline. Its name comes from the strategic hilltop location of the old part of the town, which took the name Acropolis, meaning high town, during Greek rule of the area. Byzantines, Saracens and Aragonese all left their mark on its architecture and culture, notably via the Aragonese Castle, on top of the elevated promontory, which offers breathtaking views. The area is renowned for crystal-clear waters and picturesque beaches, as well as having a historic centre with narrow, winding streets and historical buildings. While preserving its historical charm, Agropoli also offers modern amenities around a bustling harbour, including a variety of restaurants and shops. It is a popular location for Italian tourists, in particular.
Also on this day:
1783: The birth of poet and academic Gabriele Rossetti
1907: The birth of entrepreneur Domenico Agusta
1915: The birth of jam and juice maker Karl Zuegg
1940: The birth of racing driver Mario Andretti
1942: The birth of goalkeeper and coach Dino Zoff
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