
Monza's nun, Giuseppe Molteni, 1847, Museum of Pavia.

Henrietta Caracciolo was born on February 17 th in 1821. Her life was an extraordinary lifethat seems to be a novel, one of those written by some her contemporary to denounce and exemplify the status of women but, on the other hand,does not take a cue from an emblematic example but from her life, her biography, a life story lived on the skin, like that of many heroines, and this word was nevermore fitting if not for her.
She born in Naples by Don FabioCaracciolo, son of the Prince of Forino, Marshalof the Neapolitan army, and by thenoblewoman Teresa Cutelli, in one of the "first and most substantial families of Naples" [1]. She lived a fairly quiet existence between Bari, Naples and Reggio Calabria, apart from a break of a few years when her father loss his job. When her beloved father dies of infection to internal organs, her mother wishes to remarry, so started the procedure to let Henriettato get in the convent, without she was aware of it. It implements what a"forced" nun a few centuries before, the Tarabotti, identifies as the greatest betrayal, that of ones parents.
Henrietta seeks shelter from the maternal decision and despairing and crying she obtened from her mother the promise that she will stay in the convent only a few months and then could come back to home.
So Henrietta finds himself bound and, as in the "best" tradition, was collocated in a convent where were already present her paternal aunts, at the Convent of SanGregorio Armeno in Naples, following the Benedictine tradition, because: "(...) they gave me the name of Henrietta , name of a nun paternal aunt: one of the innumerable offeringsto the order of St. Benedict, in whichmy ancestry was consecrated". [2]
Henrietta undergoes what the society hadas an ordinary habit worn on the skin of women, in fact her older sisters weremarried but she, with two love gone wrong and no dowry after the death of her father, will be the only one to be, the fifth of seven daughters, a forced nun, even the malformed Josephine, now lame aftera disastrous fall, will get married.
So Henrietta finds himself bound and, as in the "best" tradition, was collocated in a convent where were already present her paternal aunts, at the Convent of SanGregorio Armeno in Naples, following the Benedictine tradition, because: "(...) they gave me the name of Henrietta , name of a nun paternal aunt: one of the innumerable offeringsto the order of St. Benedict, in whichmy ancestry was consecrated". [2]
Henrietta undergoes what the society hadas an ordinary habit worn on the skin of women, in fact her older sisters weremarried but she, with two love gone wrong and no dowry after the death of her father, will be the only one to be, the fifth of seven daughters, a forced nun, even the malformed Josephine, now lame aftera disastrous fall, will get married.
Henrietta is the victim of a practice that in theory was alreadycondemned by the Counter-Reformationof the sixteenth century but that in the practice had not actually had any effect on the much more establishedhabits in use in the culture of the society of pre-Italic demonstrating a unified habit of costume even before the unified process of Italy as a nation.
Henrietta, at least initially, left the convent, determined not to take the vows inspite of the insistence of all the other nuns and of the abbess, her aunt, of the prelates and the confessors, and took refuge in the home of a brother in law where, however, she learnsfrom her older sisters, who got married in Reggio, that their mother is about to remarry in Reggio and wants to take her there to join a convent in Calabria, and moreover that her boyfriend courtinganother girl . So Henrietta at this point, is alone, without support andwithout a place to go, achieved by the gendarmeswho accuse her of insubordinationto the will of her mother, to follow them to the embarkation point for Reggio, then she is forcedto return to the convent and take vows: "Mysacrifice was consumedby that time: I saw myself as a victim". [3]
So in 1841, Henriette takes her final vows and finds herself unwillingly nun but if "I had made to the community the sacrifice of my person not already one of my reason, which is an inalienable right" [4] now "dead is the past, extinct the future for me, and memories are just a vain dream, and hopes a crime "[5]" it was supposed for me not to have a mother, neither sisters, no relatives, no friends, no whatsoever substance; I had abdicated even my personality"[6].
The first impact in the convent was of the worst, she educated and lover of the arts and literature, finding herself to live in claustration, with rough, uncultivated, semi-illiterate nuns: "most of them are young, or at least not old, and all, as I said, belonging to the most significant, if not always the richest, families of the former capital.
But I had the opportunity to observe, since the first day I entered the convent, that the intellectual and moral point of those nuns did not respond to the loftiness of 'their birth ". [7]
But I had the opportunity to observe, since the first day I entered the convent, that the intellectual and moral point of those nuns did not respond to the loftiness of 'their birth ". [7]
Her existence, we said it, seems like a novel, and so even Henriette, like any self-respecting heroine, had her bad: the archbishop of Naples, Riario Sforza, to which she devotes an entire chapter, the seventeenth, of her Memoirs.
With the election of Pope Pius IX, Henrietta thought to have a glimmer of hope in solving her condition, asking for clemency directly to the Pope who did not seem contrary to her demands except that the archbishop of Naples, Riario Sforza would not release the authorization that would allow Henrietta to start a new life, even in contravention of papal preferences.
During the riots of '48, for the independence of Italy, Enricchetta takes courage and start to read, even in a loud voice in the convent, "revolutionary" newspapers, careless of the fame that is given to her of being involved in secret societies and a revolutionary.
She appeals once again to the Pope for her freedom, informing him that otherwise she would have taken advantage of the freedom of the press to publicize her condition of forced nun. So the Pope gave her the authorization to go to a conservatory, of Constantinople, but the archbishop Sforza, becoming aware of his defeat, forces her to leave at the convent her family assets, and the precious silverware.
At the Conservatory of Constantinople, the nun found an environmentthat isn’t open and conciliatory, and in which she had to abandon all hope of being able to cultivate her readings andso she had to concentrate herself exclusively on the biographies of the saints and martyrs of the Church, discovering how the female figures had contributed, revealing those fundamental but also the lack of an official acknowledgment by the Church about this importance.

Enrichetta Caracciolo as in the cover of Her "Memories"

ReplyDeleteExcellent write-up. I absolutely appreciate this website.
Keep it up!
Feel free to surf to my blog post: seo (seofornown4eva.com)