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Rosa Vercellana

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Rosa Vercellana
Countess of Mirafiori and Fontanafredda
Rosa Teresa Vercellana, the ‘Bela Rosina’
Full name
Maria Rosa Teresa Aloisia Vercellana
Born11 June 1833
Nice, Kingdom of Sardinia
Baptised15 June 1833
Died26 December 1885(1885-12-26) (aged 52)
Turin, Piedmont, Italy
BuriedMausoleum of La Bela Rosin, Turin
Spouse(s)
(m. 1869; died 1878)
Issue
  • Vittoria Guerrieri
  • Emanuele Guerrieri, Count of Mirafiori and Fontanafredda
FatherGiovanni Battista Vercellana
MotherMaria Teresa Griglio

Rosa Vercellana, 1st Countess of Mirafiori and Fontanafredda (11 June 1833 – 26 December 1885), commonly known as 'Rosina' and, in Piedmontese, as La Bela Rosin, was the mistress and later wife of Victor Emmanuel II, King of Italy. Despite this, the morganatic status of her marriage meant that she was never recognized as Queen of Italy.

Life

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She was born in Nice, then part of the Kingdom of Sardinia, the youngest child of Giovanni Battista Vercellana and his wife, Maria Teresa Griglio. Four days later she was baptised as Maria Rosa Teresa Aloisia.[1] [2]

Her father, from Moncalvo in the Province of Asti, had been a standard bearer in the Napoleonic Imperial Guard. After the fall of Napoleon, he was appointed an Officer in the King's Guards and commanded the Royal Garrison in the hunting estate of Racconigi by 1847. There, while living with her family, the fourteen-year-old Rosa met Crown Prince Victor Emmanuel.[1]

Vercellana became his mistress and later had two children by him.

Their affair caused a great scandal in 1849 when Victor Emanuel was crowned King of Sardinia. When his Queen died in 1855, the King named Rosa Countess of Mirafiori and Fontanafredda by royal decree in 1858. The King also recognized their two children and assigned them the surname Guerrieri.[1][3] In 1860, Victor Emmanuel established her in a new residence in a restored castle of La Mandria, near Venaria.

In 1864, the capital of Italy was moved from Turin to Florence and Vercellana established herself there in the villa La Pietraia. Five years later the king fell gravely ill at San Rossore, the royal estate near Pisa. Fearing death, on 18 October 1869, he hurriedly married his mistress, in a purely religious ceremony which conferred no civil rights upon his wife. Telegrams to Rome followed, seeking papal benediction.[4][5]

A civil ceremony was held in Rome eight years later in 1877. This was a morganatic marriage, so she was never made queen and her children had no rights of succession to the throne.[1]

Victor Emanuel died two months after the ceremony. Rosa Vercellana survived him by eight years, dying on 26 December 1885.[1]

The mausoleum

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Vercellana's mausoleum in Turin.

As the Savoy family refused to allow Vercellana to be buried next to her husband in the Pantheon, her children had a mausoleum built for her in a similar form (if on a smaller scale) in Turin, next to the road to the Castello di Mirafiori. The circular, copper-domed, neoclassical monument, surmounted by a latin cross and surrounded by a large park, was designed by Angelo Dimezzi and completed in 1888.[4][6]

In 1970 it was purchased by the Turin city council from a descendant of Rosa Vercellana for the sum of 132 million lire. The park was opened to the public two years later but almost immediately the mausoleum was broken into and the remains of Vercellana and her descendants were mutilated by people searching for jewels. Further acts of vandalism took place over subsequent years and the structure fell into a state of dereliction. Major restoration work was carried out at the start of the twenty-first century and the park was re-opened to the public in 2005.[4]

Issue

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Victor Emmanuel and Rosa Vercellana's children were:

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e ‘Rosa Vercellana, the “Bela Rosin”’[permanent dead link], La Veneria Reale (Consorzio di Valorizzazione Culturale “La Venaria Reale”).
  2. ^ Roberto Gervaso, La Bella Rosina, amore e ragion di stato in Casa Savoia (Milan: Bompiani 1991).
  3. ^ Victor Emanuel had numerous children out of wedlock, by various mistresses in various parts of Italy. All were given the surname ‘Guerriero’ or ‘Guerrieri’. See ‘Parco fluviale del Po tratto torinese: Punti di Interesse’, Parks.it (Rome: Federazione Italiana Parchi e Riserve Natural).
  4. ^ a b c ‘Parco fluviale del Po tratto torinese: Punti di Interesse’, Parks.it (Rome: Federazione Italiana Parchi e Riserve Natural).
  5. ^ Denis Mack Smith, Modern Italy:A political history (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1997), p. 88.
  6. ^ ‘Mausoleo della Bela Rosin’, Piemontefeel (Regione Piemonte, 2005).
  7. ^ William Addams Reitwiesner, ‘The Descendants of Donna Vittoria Guerrieri (1848-1905)’, wargs.com (William Addams Reitwiesner Genealogical Services)
  8. ^ a b Davide Shamà, ‘Savoia’ Archived 2012-12-08 at archive.today, Genealogie delle famiglie nobile italiani.