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Tuesday, 23 April 2013

EUGENIA DE MONTIJO, THE SPANISH EMPRESS OF THE FRENCH




Legend says that that Eugenia was born in the middle of an earthquake, and that she was brought up among bohemian, prostitutes, lenders, bandits, dukes and beggars. Eugenia was born in Granada, where she spent the first four years of her life, then moved with her family to Madrid.

Maria Eugenia was actually Baroness Countess of Teba and her older sister, Francisca de Sales, the real Countess of Montijo. Francisca was a brown-haired person whose sweet nature and spiritual calm contrasted with that of her sister, one-year younger, reddish hair, vivacious and confident. Both sisters were very beautiful. If the goal of the two daughters of Count de Montijo had been marrying well, they both got indeed. The eldest daughter married the Duke of Alba and the youngest became Empress of France.




After a few years, their mother Maria Manuela Kirkpatrick (of Scottish descent), decided to move with her children to Paris, alternating with brief stays in Madrid, England and Granada. By the way, it is said that Prosper Merimée wrote the famous opera “Carmen” based upon Manuela.



The Duke of Alba for some time was torn between Francisca and Eugenia, but finally settled on the first. It was written that Eugenia was so upset by the election, that she poisoned the milk diluted with matches to kill herself. It was her first love disappointment of her life and shortly after this disappointment would be followed by another, perhaps not so impetuous, but appeared to leave a deeper mark. Since then, in love relationships Eugenia ruled a coldness and prevention feeling. She was not going back to trust any man. Not even her future husband.

It seems that the meeting between Eugenia and Napoleon III was not casual. According to sources, they met through her mother, who wanted a good match for her two daughters. At 27 Eugenia had a reputation of being adventurous, ambitious and unscrupulous. The beauty of the young grenadine aristocrat enchanted the future emperor of France, Louis Napoleon.

It is said that Napoleon went crazy about Eugenia, who to inflame him, used a tactic as old as effective: to deny him her virginity. The courtship lasted two years.


In addition, if it is true the story that is told, the future emperor had to be stopped in their carnal cravings by young Andalusian. In one of the first meetings, he asked her where the way to her bedroom was and she replied him emphatically, but with her best smile: “through the Church”. Whether this story is or it is not certain, the situation would explain fully the moral behaviour of each of them. Louis Napoleon, after his marriage, kept public infidelities with several lovers, while Eugenia, quite a conservative Catholic, had close relations with Rome and financially protected several religious communities.

Although the desire for Eugenia was extinguished after a wedding night as wild as disappointing, Napoleon the Little, as Victor Hugo called him, was diagnosed by his doctor as "a tortured man in the flesh." They say that he slept with so many women who had to design for him a special chair to have sex.


He was unfaithful just right from the wedding trip, although it seems that it did not affect Eugenia  too much, since she did not love him. She married him only to be empress. And his love affairs suited her in order to let her to take active part in politics, giving ideas to turn Paris into the City of Light, supporting the establishment of an empire in Mexico, financing the opening of the Suez Canal, whose pomp on this occasion were very important, including representation for the first time on the banks of the Nile, Verdi's famous opera “Aida”.

She was the first woman to be granted with the Legion of Honour; in fact, she was the most decorated person in all France, with 20 medals and many titles.

She advocated for women's suffrage and humanistic ideas, but also invented the decorative style Napoleon III, discovered the great couturier Worth and dictated fashion for decades, devised crinoline, perfume, large mounted stones, necklaces.... She invented colours, furniture, food and makeup tried. Her dresses were imitated throughout Europe.



She was a great traveller who spoke several languages ​​and chatted with intellectuals and Gypsies. She was the first woman who went to a gym and learned boxing.

In addition, thanks to her, summers in Biarritz became very popular and the centre of European nobility. She and her husband built the palace on the beach now known as Hotel du Palais.


She had a rebellious, energetic and eccentric character, and also she was smart, intriguing, cocky and ambitious.

In 1879, her only son, the Prince Imperial, died in the war against the Zulus. Afterwards, Eugenia de Montijo, widowed and alone, lived in England, thought making frequent trips to Spain. On one of these trips, in 1920, at the age of 94 years, she died in Madrid. She was buried in the imperial crypt of the Abbey of Saint Michael in Farnborough (England), next to her husband and her son.




There is a story, told by Eugenia herself, which must have left her a deep shock. It happened in Granada, an evening that she went up to Sacromonte, some gypsies harassed her and several of her companions for  begging. One of the gypsies wanted to read the hand to her. Her nurse did not let her but she insisted by saying: "Although you don’t show me your hand, I know that this child will be more than a queen." These words were engraved in her mind.


And some years later, at a party in Paris, Abbe Boudinet, a renowned palm reader, insisted on reading the lines of Eugenia’s hand and then he said, amazed: "I saw in her right hand one imperial crown!".


An exciting life, not very happy, but very exciting, no doubt .......


Sources:


www.ideal.es


mujeresdeleyenda.blogspot.com
Book “Pasión Imperial”, written by Pilar Eyre

Sunday, 17 March 2013

ANDREW MORTON AND HIS LADIES OF SPAIN



 The man who confessed to Diana of Wales two decades ago (“Diana, Her True Story”) now dissects the ladies of another monarchy that is now living his particular "annus horribilis", the Spanish monarchy, which is facing its biggest crisis since it was restored in 1975.

Andrew Morton (*) has been recently to Madrid introducing his latest book, "Ladies of Spain. Sofia, Elena, Cristina and Letizia. Between duty and love", which analyzes the current situation of the Reina Sofia, the Princesses Elena and Cristina and Princess of Asturias, Letizia.


In his book, Morton addresses without taboos the “separated”  marriage of the King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia, the marriages with  love of their children and the personalities of their spouses commoners, and even surprising anecdotes, like the Princess Elena is a great fan of teleshopping.


To write this book and to defend himself against accusations by some people of plagiarism and unoriginal, he says he has worked in it during three years and he has spoken to many people very close to the Spanish court.

The author also discussed the current situation of the Spanish monarchy, cornered by financial scandals because of Iñaki Urdangarin’s dirty business and kings’s sex scandals, recognizing that the world is now more interested in the Spanish monarchy that in the Windsors. Even the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal regularly write about it.

According to Morton the monarchy in Spain is like a coat you wear and take off, depending of the different historical situations, while in England, for example, the monarchy is like the rain, it's always there.

According to Morton, Letizia is the mirror Catherine of Wales should look at

Asked about which of the four ladies he is most interested. he said he preferred Cristina and Letizia. Cristina, because of the situation she is living at the moment, halfway between her love for Iñaki Urdangarin and her love for her father and her duty to the monarchy. And Letizia, because she is a woman of extremes, who has had a rich and varied love life and from whom he tells she is bossy, perfectionist and very intelligent.





Related to Doña Sofia, the author says she has got a full loyalty in her DNA and that when she got married to the king she did it for duty. And also he explains that she is not a victim but, on the contrary, she deserves the utmost respect.


Regarding to the King Juan Carlos he tells in his controversial book that he has been with 1500 women throughout his life (he even explains that during the honeymoon of Lady Diana Spencer and Prince Charles in Palma de Mallorca, the Spanish king made a pass at her, although unsuccessfully).


And his last advice for the King is as simple as: Keep calm and carry on........

And finally, the author is already threatening to write his next book about the German Princess Corinna zu Sayn-Wittgenstein, the last "very close friendship" of the king, as she acknowledged in a recent interview with a Spanish newspaper. Thus, the story does not end here, but it will be continued .....




(*) Andrew Morton's controversial author of other books like:

Diana: Her story brings in her own words (1992)
Monica's Story (1999)
Posh & Becks (2000)
Madonna (2001)
Tom Cruise: An Unauthorized Biography (2010)
Angelina: An Unauthorized Biography (2010)
William & Catherine: Their Story (2011)

Monday, 7 January 2013

THE MOST POPULAR POSTS IN THIS BLOG IN 2012




A new year has just started and in the beginning of a new year it is time to take stock of the past year. I felt curious about which posts were the most visited in  2012 and after having a look at the statistics I saw that these were the 10 most visited posts, perhaps you missed any of them and you want to read it or just re-read it again. Make the most of it!

  1. Famous Spanish actors now in Hollywood
  2. Mona Lisa’s twin sister painting at the Prado Museum
  3. Anita Delgado, the Spanish maharani of Kapurthala
  4. The Madrazo, a family of realists painters
  5. Elena Arzak, best female chef in the world
  6. Are all Spanish stereotypes still valid?
  7. Los Manolos shoes of Manolo Blahnik
  8. John Bagnold Burgess and other Victorian painters
  9. Ronda, Pepa Borrego and her Goyescas costumes
  10. This position is shared between: La Alhambra Palace and people who were inspired by it and 6 easy steps to enjoying a vino tinto from Spain

And that was all, now it is time to look forward 2013 and see which new subjects this blog will find interesting enough to share with all their readers during this year. Ready, steady, there we go!


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