Marie-José of Belgium
Marie-José of Belgium (Marie-José Charlotte Sophie Amélie Henriette Gabrielle; 4 August 1906 – 27 January 2001) was the last Queen of Italy. Her 34-day tenure as queen consort earned her the nickname "the May Queen".
Marie-José of Belgium
9 May 1946 – 12 June 1946
Ostend, Belgium
27 January 2001
Thonex, Switzerland
Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (until 1920)
Belgium (from 1920)
On 8 January 1930, she married Crown Prince Umberto of Italy, from the House of Savoy, at the Quirinal Palace in Rome, and so became Princess of Piedmont (Italian: Principessa di Piemonte).
Among the wedding gifts was a turquoise and diamond parure, worn by the bride at her pre-wedding reception,[4] and a diamond bow worn as a sash decoration at state occasions.[5]
The couple had four children:[6]
Princess of Piedmont[edit]
In October 1939, Princess Marie-José was made President of the Red Cross in Italy. The Princess and Duchess of Aosta attended the ceremony where Marie-José was installed as President of the Italian Red Cross.
During the Second World War she was one of the very few diplomatic channels between the German/Italian camp and the other European countries involved in the war, as she was the sister of Leopold III of Belgium (kept hostage by the German forces) and at the same time, as the wife of the heir to the throne, close to some of the ministers of Benito Mussolini's cabinet.[1] A British diplomat in Rome recorded that the Princess of Piedmont was the only member of the Italian Royal Family with good political judgment.
Mussolini's mistress, Claretta Petacci, claimed in her diary that in 1937 the then princess and wife of the heir to the throne tried and failed to seduce the dictator at a beach resort near Rome. However, Mussolini's son, Romano, claims that the princess and dictator entered into a sexual relationship.[7]
In 1943, the Crown Princess involved herself in vain attempts to arrange a separate peace treaty between Italy and the United States; her interlocutor from the Vatican was Monsignor Giovanni Battista Montini, a senior diplomat who later became Pope Paul VI. She also interceded with Adolf Hitler to ask for mercy towards the people of Belgium.[1]
Her attempts were not sponsored by the king and Umberto was not (directly, at least) involved in them. After her failure (she never met the American agents), she was sent with her children to Sarre, in the Aosta Valley, and isolated from the political life of the Royal House.
She sympathised with the partisans, and while she was a refugee in Switzerland, smuggled weapons, money and food for them.[1] She was nominated for appointment as chief of a partisan brigade, but declined.
Styles of
Queen Marie-José
Your Majesty
Exile[edit]
In exile, the family gathered for a brief time on the Portuguese Riviera, but she and Umberto separated. She and their four children soon left for Switzerland, where she lived most of the time for the rest of her life, while Umberto remained in Portugal. However, the couple, both of whom were devout Catholics, never divorced. The republican constitution forbade the restoration of the monarchy and also barred all male members of the House of Savoy, as well as former queens consort, from returning to Italian soil.[1]
Death[edit]
For some time, she lived in Mexico with her daughter, Princess Marie-Beatrice, and her grandchildren.[8]
Queen Marie-José returned to Italy after her husband's death in 1983. She died on 27 January 2001 in a Geneva clinic of lung cancer at the age of 94, surviving her two brothers and some of her nieces and nephews, including King Baudouin of the Belgians.[9]
The funeral was held at Hautecombe Abbey, in Savoy in the south of France, and was attended by 2,000 mourners. Among them were King Albert II of the Belgians, King Juan Carlos I of Spain and Farah Pahlavi, the last Empress of Iran.[10] She was buried in Hautecombe Abbey alongside her husband.
Musical foundation[edit]
Like her mother, Duchess Elisabeth in Bavaria, Marie-José inspired a musical contest. In 1959 she established the Fondation du prix de composition Reine Marie-José. It awarded its biennial prizes for the first time the following year. The first prize at the 1960 Concours was awarded to Giorgio Ferrari for his Quatuor à cordes avec une voix chantée. Subsequent prize winners have included William Albright (1968), Georg Katzer (1978), and Javier Torres Maldonado (2000). The 2017 prize was awarded to Jaehyuck Choi.[11]