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Shape-Shifters,
Boston Legal
& the “other” Queen Caroline
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
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. |