Here we are, March 25th already. It's Lady Day: the Feast of the Annunciation, and the source of all sorts of traps and trouble for generations of historians.
Until the
mid 18th century, this was - for official purposes - New Year's Day. For long after that, it was the traditional
date on which deeds were signed, rent paid, and indentures activated. It is the reason our tax year starts on April
6th (allowance having been made for the transition from the Julian to the
Gregorian calendar in 1752, when Britain 'lost' 11 days).
Anyone
studying letters and diaries from the Early Modern period will be familiar with the
problem of dating documents written between January and March. Some scribes
helpfully straddle the social and administrative years: changing the date on
January 1st, but writing (say) 1697/8 in the months before Lady Day. But when
only one year is given, we can't know whether the writer is sticking with the
'old' year, or anticipating the 'new’. It could be either. Only
context can help us establish exactly when something was written.
If you look at the top of this diary entry, you will see that both years are given. |
With Lady Day gone by, the entries for April are firmly set in 1698 |
Even secondary sources can be a problem. Some historians adjust to start all years in January, and/or to match British dates from before the calendar change with those on the continent (where the Gregorian calendar was already in use). Some don't. Until recently, it was not usual for authors to state their policy.
I was
going to say more about all this, but while I was cruising the Internet for
Lady Day facts, I came across the news (to me) that March 25th 1782 was the
birth date of Caroline Bonaparte, Queen of Naples.
I had never heard of her, but after a quick
trawl of the Web, and a skim through her granddaughter's memoir, I would like
to know more. It's quite a story - and
it ends with an unexpected Scottish link.
Caroline
was Napoleon's youngest sister. At first
a friend, but then an enemy of the Empress Josephine, she married one of
Bonaparte's most flamboyant and successful generals. Caroline was 17, and awash with love and lust,
when she wed Joachim Murat in 1800.
Napoleon
described Murat as the bravest man in the world, and rewarded his many military successes with a shower of titles,
culminating in the crown of Naples in 1808.
Whether
Caroline or Murat was the more dynamic political operator is a matter for
debate. Their relationships with each
other, and with with Napoleon and his enemies, fluctuated - with passionate entanglements and rifts in all departments. Murat came to a sticky end as Napoleon's
authority crumbled, and he posthumously became a hero of the Risorgimento. He features in Tolstoy's War and Peace, and Napoleon is said to have blamed the defeat at Waterloo on his rejection of Murat's help. The memoir written by Caroline's namesake and granddaughter tells of a life of extravagance and intrigue. Murat's wealth was immense. Among his possessions was the Elysee Palace in Paris.
Defeated by the Austrians, and sentenced
to death by firing squad in 1815, Murat is said to have faced execution courageously, but with enduring concern for his good looks. Tradition has it that his
last words, as he refused a blindfold, were, "Soldiers!
Do your duty! Straight to the heart but spare the face. Fire!"
Having
fled to Trieste, where she called herself the Comtesse de Lipona (an anagram of
Napoli), Caroline survived, and remarried.
Her second husband was the intriguingly named Francesco MacDonald,
another character of whom I knew nothing until this week. As far as I can make
out, he belonged to the same Jacobite family that produced Flora of 'over the
sea to Skye' fame.
Caroline
and Francesco ended their days in Florence. When Caroline, now widowed for a second time, died in 1839, her
servants organised the systematic looting of her fabulous possessions. Her
children had by then dispersed; some to exile in America, where Caroline has
descendants today. I wonder whether they know that this is the 231st
anniversary of her birth.
Anyway,
Happy Birthday, Queen Caroline, and Happy Lady Day to you all.
www.eleanorupdale.com
I never realised that was the reason why the tax year begins & ends when it does! Thankyou! And Caroline and Murat - what characters! Love those portraits.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this lovely post! I'm afraid Lady Day means Billie Holiday to me, mostly! Love Murat's hair!
ReplyDeleteHave just come across Lady Day for the first time in the book Adele recommended– John Saturnall's Feast by Laurence Norfolk. How odd! But thank you for the fascinating post and introduction to new histories.
ReplyDeleteI am constantly astonished at how complex history is and how challenging the effort of researching it. Queen Caroline sounds like a character worthy of at least one book, if not two!
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