Anna Maria Arduino

Anna Maria Arduino (1672 – 1700) was an Italian socialite, painter and writer, active in the 17th century in Southern Italy.[1][2] She was a descendant of the Notarbartolo family, an aristocratic family of the Sicilian nobility. She authored writings and attended school under the pseudonym Getilde Faresia.

Anna Maria Arduino
Anna Maria Arduino (1819)
Born1672
Messina, Italy
DiedDecember 29, 1700
Naples, Italy
Other namesGetilde Faresia, Maria Ardoini Lodovisia
EducationPontifical Academy of Arcadia
TitlePrincess of Piombino, from Messina

About

She was born in Messina, Italy in 1672, to Giovanna Furnari and Paolo Arduino, the Prince of Polizzi and Marquis of Floresta.[3] She was married in 1697 to the Prince of Piombino, Giovan Battista Ludovisi (1647– 24 August 1699) and together they had a child named Niccolò II Ludovisi (c.1698–1699) and lived in Rome. She attended the Pontifical Academy of Arcadia (Accademia dell'Arcadia) in 1697.[4]

She wrote poems and sonnets in Latin and Italian under the pseudonym Getilde Faresia.[5]

Her spouse died in 1699 and the principality succession fell to Niccolò II Ludovisi for a few months, after his father's death and Anna Maria Arduino served as the regency. That same year, in 1699 her young son died. Arduino died shortly after in Naples, Italy on December 29, 1700 at the age of 28. She is buried in the church of San Diego all'Ospedaletto, her grave is shared with her son and the sepulchres are marked by two marble bas-reliefs that depict the son and the half-length of the mother, they were sculpted between 1703 and 1704 by Giacomo Colombo.[6][7][8]

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See also

References

  1. Vittorini, Elio (1973). Women of Messina. Frances Frenaye (translator), Frances Keene (translator). New Directions Publishing Corporation. ISBN 9780811204965.
  2. Grosso Cacopardo, Giuseppe (1972). Memorie de'pittori Messinesi. Volume 31 of Italica Gens: Repertori di Bio-Bibliografia Italiana. Forni. ISBN 9788827109267.
  3. Fiume, Marinella (2006). Siciliane: Dizionario Biografico (in Italian). E. Romeo. p. 195. ISBN 978-88-7428-057-5.
  4. "Donne in Arcadia (1690-1800)". www.arcadia.uzh.ch. Retrieved 2020-08-09.
  5. "Ardoini Lodovisi, Anna Maria". New Women Writers. Retrieved 2020-08-09.
  6. "Giacomo Colombo". Immacolata di Torre del Greco. 2009. Retrieved 2020-08-09.
  7. Moral, Roberto Alonso (2013). The Immaculate Conception by Giacomo Colombo, a sculpture in its Italian context (PDF). Bilbao Fine Arts Museum Foundation, Bilbao Museum of Fine Arts Foundation. p. 6.
  8. Borrelli, Gian Giotto (2005). Sculture in legno di età Barocca in Basilicata [Baroque Wood Carvings in Basilicata] (in Italian). Paparo Edizioni. ISBN 9788887111385.
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