Maria Carolina and Marie Antoinette: Sisters and Queens in the mirror of Jacobin Public Opinion
Journal Title: Royal Studies Journal - Year 2014, Vol 1, Issue 1
Abstract
Marie Antoinette of France and Maria Carolina of Naples, both consorts, contributed to a flourishing of matronage, reproducing conceptions of royal femininity that embraced both the private and public roles they were expected to fulfil. However, while the political role of the first Queen has been largely reconsidered, her sister Maria Carolina has not yet been adjudicated impartially. This is somewhat curious, because Maria Carolina inherited from her sister the same disregard towards the Revolution and this, as perceived by the Jacobins, was duly proposed in their acrimonious criticism of her political role. This paper aims to focus on this criticism, analysing how the charges against Maria Carolina in the post-French revolutionary period, were a political duplication of the Jacobin attacks on Marie Antoinette from 1791 onwards. From this point of view, the paper will focus on the portrait of Maria Carolina in 1793 revolutionary Parisby Giuseppe Gorani, an Italian Jacobin noble. His Mémoires Secrets – where Maria Carolina was represented as a wicked woman in the same terms previously employed to denounce her sister Marie Antoinette by the French Republicans – was well known across Italy. This subject dominated the main pamphlets and brochures published in Naples in 1799, during the brief duration of the Neapolitan Republic, because it legitimised the rebellion against the monarchy. After the fall of the Neapolitan Republic, the political attacks on Maria Carolina continued likewise in France, where many Neapolitan patriots were obliged to flee. Analysing Giuseppe Gorani's Mémoires we gather that the portrait of Marie Antoinette’s sister was painted according to the main stereotypes of French revolutionary political culture.
Authors and Affiliations
Cinzia Recca
Knecht, Hero or Tyrant? Henry III, King of France (Ashgate, 2014)
Review of Robert Knecht, Hero or Tyrant? Henry III, King of France (Farnham: Ashgate, 2014)
Aikin, A Ruler's Consort in Early Modern Germany: Aemilia Juliana of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt (Ashgate, 2014)
Review of Judith P. Aikin, A Ruler's Consort in Early Modern Germany: Aemilia Juliana of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt (Farnham: Asghate, 2014)
Lott, Death and Dynasty in Early Imperial Rome (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
Review of J. Bert Lott, Death and Dynasty in Early Imperial Rome (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010)
Aristocrats and Refined Peasants: The Concept of Aristocracy in Swedish Historiography
This article investigates the evolution of aristocracy as a concept in Swedish historiography from the early nineteenth century to the present. In the political climate of the early 1800s, aristocracy became an increasin...
Elizabeth's Ghost: The Afterlife of the Queen in Stuart England
Toward the end of James I's reign in John Reynolds' 1624 pamphlet, Vox Coeli, or News from Heaven, Queen Elizabeth I discusses England's contemporary events with her father, her siblings, Anne of Denmark and Prince Henry...