Christina, Queen of Sweden
Christina | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Portrait by Sébastien Bourdon, who exaggerated her eyes.[1] | |||||
Queen of Sweden | |||||
Reign | 6 November 1632 – 6 June 1654 | ||||
Coronation | 20 October 1650 | ||||
Predecessor | Gustav II Adolf | ||||
Successor | Charles X Gustav | ||||
Born |
18 December [O.S. 8 December] 1626 Tre Kronor Castle, Stockholm | ||||
Died |
19 April 1689 62) Rome, Papal States | (aged||||
Burial |
22 June 1689 St. Peter's Basilica, Vatican City | ||||
| |||||
House | Vasa | ||||
Father | Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden | ||||
Mother | Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg | ||||
Religion |
Roman Catholic prev. Lutheran |
Christina (18 December [O.S. 8 December] 1626 – 19 April 1689) reigned as Queen of Sweden from 1632[2] to 1654.[note 1] She was the only surviving legitimate child of King Gustav II Adolph and his wife Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg. At the age of six,[8] Christina succeeded her father on the throne upon his death at the Battle of Lützen, but began ruling when she reached the age of 18.
Christina is remembered as one of the most educated women of the 1600s.[9] She was fond of books, manuscripts, paintings, and sculptures. With her interest in religion, philosophy, mathematics and alchemy, she attracted many scientists to Stockholm, wanting the city to become the "Athens of the North". She was intelligent, fickle and moody; she rejected what the sexual role of a woman was at the time. She caused a scandal when she decided not to marry[10] and in 1654 when she abdicated her throne and converted to Roman Catholicism. She changed her name from Kristina Augusta Wasa,[11] adopting the name Christina Alexandra.[note 2]
At the age of 28, the "Minerva of the North" moved to Rome.[13] The Pope described Christina as "a queen without a realm, a Christian without faith, and a woman without shame".[10] Notwithstanding all that, she became a leader of the theatrical and musical life and protected many Baroque artists, composers, and musicians.
Being the guest of five consecutive popes,[14] and a symbol of the Counter Reformation, she is one of the few women buried in the Vatican grotto. Her unconventional lifestyle and masculine dressing and behavior have been featured in countless novels, plays, opera and film. In all the biographies on Christina her gender and cultural identity play an important role.[15]
Early life
Christina was born in the royal castle Tre Kronor. The king had already sired two daughters – a nameless princess stillborn in 1620 and then the first princess Christina, who was born in 1623 and died the following year.[note 3] Excited expectation surrounded Maria Eleonora's third pregnancy in 1626. When the baby was born it was first thought to be a boy as it was "hairy" and screamed, "with a strong, hoarse voice".[16] She later wrote in her autobiography that, "Deep embarrassment spread among the women when they discovered their mistake". The king, though, was very happy, stating, "She'll be clever, she has made fools of us all!".[17] From most accounts, Gustav Adolf appears to have been closely attached to his daughter, and she appears to have admired him greatly.
Swedish and Polish Vasa
The Crown of Sweden was hereditary in the House of Vasa, but from King Charles IX's time onward (reigned 1604–11), it excluded Vasa princes descended from a deposed brother (Eric XIV of Sweden) and a deposed nephew (Sigismund III of Poland). Gustav Adolf's legitimate younger brothers had died years earlier. The one legitimate female left, his half-sister Catharine, came to be excluded in 1615 when she married a non-Lutheran. So Christina became the only heiress presumptive.[note 4] From Christina's birth, King Gustav Adolph recognized her eligibility even as a female heir, and although called "queen", the official title she held as of her coronation by the Riksdag in February 1633 was King.[20]
As queen, Christina held the titles of Queen of the Swedes, Goths (or Geats) and Wends[3] (Suecorum, Gothorum Vandalorumque Regina);[4] Grand Princess of Finland, and Duchess of Estonia, Livonia and Karelia,[5] Bremen-Verden, Stettin, Pomerania, Cassubia and Vandalia,[6] Princess of Rugia, Lady of Ingria and of Wismar.[7]
Regency
Before Gustav Adolf left for Germany to defend Protestantism in the Thirty Years' War, he secured his daughter's right to inherit the throne, in case he never returned, and gave orders to Axel Gustafsson Banér,[13] his marshall, that Christina should receive an education of the type normally only afforded to boys.[21]
Her mother, of the House of Hohenzollern, was a woman of quite distraught temperament and was melancholic. It is possible she was insane. After the king died on 6 November 1632 on the battlefield, his corpse was brought home in a coffin, with his heart in a separate box. Maria Eleonora ordered that the king should not be buried until she could be buried with him. She also demanded that the coffin be kept open, and went to see it regularly, patting it and taking no notice of the putrefaction. Eventually, the embarrassed Chancellor, Axel Oxenstierna, saw no other solution than to have a guard posted at the room to prevent further episodes.[22] As a result, he was not buried until 22 June 1634, more than eighteen months later.
In 1634, the Instrument of Government (1634), a new constitution, was introduced by Oxenstierna. The constitution stipulated that the "King" must have a Privy Council, which was headed by Oxenstierna himself.[23]
Christina then became the belated center of her mother's attention. Having previously shown her daughter indifference, Maria Eleonora became attentive to her. Gustav Adolf had decided that in the event of his death, his daughter should be cared for by his half-sister, Catherine of Sweden[note 5] and half-brother Carl Gyllenhielm as regent. This solution did not suit Maria Eleonora, who had her sister-in-law banned from the castle. In 1636, Chancellor Oxenstierna saw no other solution than to exile the widow to Gripsholm castle, while the governing regency council would decide when she was allowed to meet her nine-year-old daughter.[24] For the subsequent three years, Christina thrived in the company of her aunt Catherine and her family. In 1638, after the death of Catherine the (royal?) council appointed two foster mothers for the queen: countess Ebba Leijonhufvud and Christina Nilsdotter (Natt och Dag).[25]
Queen regnant
Christina was educated as a royal male would have been. The theologian Johannes Matthiae Gothus became her tutor; he gave her lessons in religion, philosophy, Greek and Latin. Chancellor Oxenstierna taught her politics and discussed Tacitus with her. Oxenstierna wrote proudly of the 14-year-old girl that, "She is not at all like a female" and that she had "a bright intelligence". Christina seemed happy to study ten hours a day. Besides Swedish she learned at least eight other languages: German, Dutch, Danish, French, Italian, Arabic and Hebrew.[note 6]
In 1636–1637, Peter Minuit and Samuel Blommaert negotiated with the government about the founding of New Sweden, the first Swedish colony in the New World. In 1638, Minuit erected Fort Christina in what is now Wilmington, Delaware; also Christina River was named after her.
In 1644, she was declared an adult, although the coronation was postponed because of the war with Denmark. In December 1643, Swedish troops overran Holstein and Jutland in the Torstenson War. The Swedes achieved much from their surprise attack. At the Treaty of Brömsebro Denmark handed over the isles of Gotland and Ösel to Sweden while Norway lost the districts of Jämtland and Härjedalen. Sweden now virtually controlled the Baltic, had unrestricted access to the North Sea and was no longer encircled by Denmark–Norway.[26]
In 1648 she commissioned 35 paintings from Jacob Jordaens for a ceiling in Uppsala Castle. In 1649, 760 paintings, 170 marble and 100 bronze statues, 33,000 coins and medallions, 600 pieces of crystal, 300 scientific instruments, manuscripts and books (including the Sanctae Crucis laudibus by Rabanus Maurus, the Codex Argenteus and the Codex Gigas[27]) were transported to Stockholm. The art, from Prague Castle, had belonged to Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor and was captured by Hans Christoff von Königsmarck during the Battle of Prague and the negotiations of the Peace of Westphalia.[28] By 1649–1650, "her desire to collect men of learning round her, as well as books and rare manuscripts, became almost a mania," Goldsmith wrote.[29] To catalogue her new collection she asked Isaac Vossius to come to Sweden and Heinsius to purchase more books on the market.[30]
In 1649, with the help of her uncle, John Casimir, and her cousins Christina tried to reduce the influence of Oxenstierna, and she declared Casimir's son, her cousin Charles Gustav, as her heir presumptive. The following year, Christina resisted demands from the other estates (clergy, burghers and peasants) in the Riksdag of the Estates for the reduction of tax-exempt noble landholdings. She never implemented the policy.[31]
Thirty Years' War
Her father Gustavus Adolphus had come to the aid of the German Lutherans in an attempt to diminish Catholic influence in his frontiers and to obtain economic influence in the German states around the Baltic Sea. Count Oxenstierna while acting as regent, continued Sweden's part in the war. After the Battle of Nördlingen the Swedish army retreated from the south. Cardinal Richelieu decided to support the Swedish with money and soldiers and the Treaty of Paris (1634) and the Treaty of Compiègne (1635) were signed. Two years later the Swedish army was pushed back to Swedish Pommerania.
Chancellor Oxenstierna soon discovered that Christina held differing political views from his own. In 1645 he sent his son, Johan Oxenstierna, to the Peace Congress in Osnabrück and Münster, presenting the view that it would be in Sweden's best interest if the Thirty Years' War continued. Christina, however, wanted peace at any cost and sent her own delegate, Johan Adler Salvius.
The Peace of Westphalia was signed between May and October 1648 in the Westphalian cities of Osnabrück and Münster, effectively ending the European wars of religion. Sweden received an indemnity of five million talers, used primarily to pay its troops. Sweden further received Western Pomerania (henceforth Swedish Pomerania), Wismar, and the Prince-Bishoprics of Bremen and Verden as hereditary fiefs, thus gaining a seat and vote in the Imperial Diet of the Holy Roman Empire as well as in the respective circlediets (Kreistag) of the Upper Saxon, Lower Saxon and Westphalian circles.
Shortly before the conclusion of the peace settlement, she admitted Salvius into the Council, against Chancellor Oxenstierna's wishes. Salvius was no aristocrat but Christina wanted opposition to the aristocracy present. In 1648 Christina obtained a seat in the Imperial Diet of the Holy Roman Empire when Bremen-Verden and Swedish Pomerania were assigned to Sweden at the Treaty of Osnabrück; the city of Bremen was disputed.[32]
Patronage of the arts
In 1645 Christina invited Hugo Grotius to become her librarian, but he died on his way in Rostock. That same year she founded Ordinari Post Tijdender (meaning "Regular Mail Times" in English) the oldest currently published newspaper in the world. In 1647 Johann Freinsheim was appointed as her librarian.After the Battle of Prague (1648), where her armies looted Prague Castle, many of the treasures collected by Rudolph II where brought back to Stockholm. Hence Christina acquired for her library a number of valuable illustrated works and rare manuscripts. The inventory drawn up at the time mentions 100 an allerhand Kunstbüchern (‘a hundred art books of different kinds’), among them two world-famous manuscripts: Codex Gigas and Codex Argenteus.[33]
The "Semiramis from the North" corresponded with Pierre Gassendi, her favorite author. Blaise Pascal offered her a copy of his pascaline. She had a firm grasp of classical history and philosophy.[34] Christina studied Neostoicism, the Church Fathers, and Islam; she systematically looked for a copy of Treatise of the Three Impostors, a work bestowing doubt on all organized religion.[35] In 1651 the kabbalist Menasseh ben Israel offered to become her agent or librarian for Hebrew books and manuscripts; they discussed his messianic ideas as he had recently spelled them out in his latest book, Hope of Israel. Other illustrious scholars that came to visit were Claude Saumaise, Johannes Schefferus, Olaus Rudbeck, Johann Heinrich Boeckler, Gabriel Naudé, Christian Ravis, Nicolaas Heinsius , Samuel Bochart together with Pierre Daniel Huet and Marcus Meibomius, who wrote a book about Greek dance.
Christina was interested in theatre, especially the plays of Pierre Corneille; she was herself an amateur actress.[36][37] In 1647 the Italian architect Antonio Brunati was ordered to build a theatrical setting in one of the larger rooms of the palace.[38] The court poet Georg Stiernhielm wrote several plays in the Swedish language, such as Den fångne Cupido eller Laviancu de Diane, performed with Christina in the main part of the goddess Diana.[36][37] She invited foreign companies to play at Bollhuset, such as an Italian opera troupe in 1652 with Vincenzo Albrici and a Dutch theater troupe with Ariana Nozeman and Susanna van Lee in 1653.[36][37] Among the French artists she employed was Anne Chabanceau de La Barre, who was made court singer.[36] From 1638 Oxenstierna employed a French ballet troupe under Antoine de Beaulieu, who also had to teach Christina to move around more elegantly.[36][37]
In 1646 Christina's good friend, ambassador Pierre Chanut, met and corresponded with the philosopher René Descartes, asking him for a copy of his Meditations. Upon showing the queen some of the letters, Christina became interested in beginning a correspondence with Descartes. She invited him to Sweden, but Descartes was reluctant until she asked him to organize a scientific academy. Christina sent a ship to pick up the philosopher and 2,000 books.[39] Descartes arrived on 4 October 1649. He resided with Chanut, and finished his Passions of the Soul. It is highly unlikely Descartes wrote a "Ballet de la Naissance de la Paix", performed on her birthday.[40] On the day after, 19 December 1649, he probably started with his private lessons. With Christina's strict schedule he was invited to the cold and draughty castle at 5:00 AM daily to discuss philosophy and religion. Soon it became clear they did not like each other; she disapproved of his mechanical view, and he did not appreciate her interest in Ancient Greek.[41] On 15 January Descartes wrote he had seen Christina only four or five times.[42] On 1 February 1650 Descartes caught a cold. He died ten days later, early in the morning on 11 February 1650, and according to Chanut the cause of his death was pneumonia.[43][note 7]
Decision not to marry
Already at the age of nine Christina was impressed by the Catholic religion and the merits of celibacy.[48] She read a biography on the virgin queen Elizabeth I of England with interest. Christina understood that it was expected of her to provide an heir to the Swedish throne (her first cousin Charles was infatuated with her, and they became secretly engaged before he left in 1642 to serve in the Swedish army in Germany for three years). Christina revealed in her autobiography that she felt "an insurmountable distaste for marriage" and "for all the things that females talked about and did". As she was chiefly occupied with her studies, she slept three to four hours a night, forgot to comb her hair, donned her clothes in a hurry and wore men's shoes for the sake of convenience. Her unruly hair became her trademark. Her closest female friend was Ebba Sparre, with whom she shared "a long time intimate companionship".[49] Christina, said to possess charm, called her "Belle" and most of her spare time she spent with la belle comtesse. She introduced the passion of her youth to the English ambassador Whitelocke as her "bed-fellow" and praised both her mind and her beauty.[50][51] When Christina left Sweden, she continued to write passionate letters to Sparre, in which she told her that she would always love her.[51]
On 26 February 1649, Christina announced that she had decided not to marry and instead wanted her first cousin Charles to be heir to the throne. While the nobility objected to this, the three other estates – clergy, burghers, and peasants – accepted it. The coronation took place on 22 October 1650. Christina went to the castle of Jacobsdal where she entered in a coronation carriage draped in black velvet embroidered in gold and pulled by three white horses. The procession to Storkyrkan was so long that when the first carriages arrived, the last ones had not yet left Jacobsdal. All four estates were invited to dine at the castle. Fountains at the market place splashed out wine for three days, roast was served, and illuminations sparkled, followed by a themed parade (The Illustrious Splendors of Felicity) on 24 October.[52]
Religion and personal views
Her tutor, Johannes Matthiae, influenced by John Dury and Comenius, who since 1638 had been working on a new Swedish school system, represented a gentler attitude than most Lutherans. In 1644, he suggested a new church order, but it was voted down as this was interpreted as Crypto-Calvinism. Queen Christina defended him against the advice of chancellor Oxenstierna, but three years later, the proposal had to be withdrawn. In 1647, the clergy wanted to introduce the Book of Concord (Swedish: Konkordieboken) – a book defining correct Lutheranism versus heresy, making some aspects of free theological thinking impossible. Matthiae was strongly opposed to this and was again backed by Christina. The Book of Concord was not introduced.[56]
She had long conversations about Copernicus, Tycho Brahe, Bacon, and Kepler with Antonio Macedo, secretary and interpreter for Portugal's ambassador.[57] Macedo was a Jesuit, and in August 1651 smuggled on his person a letter from Christina to his general in Rome.[58] In reply, Paolo Casati and Francesco Malines came to Sweden in the spring of 1652, trained in both natural sciences and theology. She had more conversations with them, being interested in Catholic views on sin, immortality of the soul, rationality and free will. The two scholars revealed her plans to Cardinal Fabio Chigi. Around May 1652 Christina decided to become Roman Catholic. She sent Matthias Palbitzki to Madrid; in August King Philip IV of Spain sent the Spanish diplomat Antonio Pimentel de Prado to Stockholm.[59][60]
After reigning almost twenty years, working at least ten hours a day, Christina had what some have interpreted as a nervous breakdown. She suffered with high blood pressure, complained about bad eyesight and pain in her neck. Grégoire François Du Rietz, since 1642 the court physician,[61] was called when she suddenly collapsed in 1651.[note 8] In February 1652 the French doctor Pierre Bourdelot arrived in Stockholm. Unlike most doctors of that time, he held no faith in blood-letting; instead, he ordered sufficient sleep, warm baths and healthy meals, as opposed to Christina's hitherto ascetic way of life. She was only twenty-five, and advising that she should take more pleasure in life, Bourdelot asked her to stop studying and working so hard[65] and to remove the books from her apartments. For years, Christina knew by heart all the sonnets from the Ars Amatoria and was keen on the works by Martial[66] and Petronius. The physician showed her the 16 erotic sonnets of Pietro Aretino, which he kept secretly in his luggage. By subtle means Bourdelot undermined her principles. She now became an Epicurean.[67] Her mother and de la Gardie were very much against the activities of Bourdelot and tried to convince her to change her attitude towards him; Bourdelot returned to France in 1653 "laden in riches and curses".[68]
Abdication
Christina told the councils: "I do not intend to give you reasons, [I am] simply not suited to marriage." The councils refused and Christina agreed to stay on the condition they never again asked her to marry. In 1651, Christina lost much of her popularity after the beheading of Arnold Johan Messenius, together with his 17-year-old son, who had accused her of serious misbehavior and of being a "Jezebel".[69][70] According to them "Christina was bringing everything to ruin, and that she cared for nothing but sport and pleasure."[71]
In 1653, she founded the Amaranten order. Antonio Pimentel was appointed as its first knight; all members had to promise not to marry (again).[72] In 1653, she ordered Vossius (and Heinsius) to make a list of about 6,000 books and manuscripts to be packed and shipped to Antwerp. In February 1654, she plainly told the Council of her plans to abdicate. Oxenstierna told her she would regret her decision within a few months. In May, the Riksdag discussed her proposals. She had asked for 200,000 rikstalers a year, but received dominions instead. Financially she was secured through a pension and revenue from the town of Norrköping, the isles of Gotland, Öland Ösel and Poel, Wolgast, and Neukloster in Mecklenburg and estates in Pomerania.[73]
Her plan to convert[74] was not the only reason for her abdication, as there was increasing discontent with her arbitrary and wasteful ways. Within ten years, she and Oxenstierna[75] had created 17 counts, 46 barons and 428 lesser nobles. To provide these new peers with adequate appanages, they had sold or mortgaged crown property representing an annual income of 1,200,000 rikstalers. During the ten years of her reign, the number of noble families increased from 300 to about 600,[76] rewarding people like Lennart Torstenson, Du Rietz, Louis De Geer and Johan Palmstruch for their efforts. These donations took place with such haste that they were not always registered, and on some occasions the same piece of land was given away twice.[77]
Christina abdicated her throne on 6 June 1654 in favor of her cousin Charles Gustav.[74] During the abdication ceremony at Uppsala Castle, Christina wore her regalia which were ceremonially removed from her, one by one. Per Brahe, who was supposed to remove the crown, did not move, so she had to take the crown off herself. Dressed in a simple white taffeta gown, she gave her farewell speech with a faltering voice, thanked everyone and left the throne to Charles X Gustav, who was dressed in black. Per Brahe felt that she "stood there as pretty as an angel." Charles Gustav was crowned later on that day. Christina left the country within a few days.
Departure and exile
In the summer of 1654, Christina left Sweden in man's clothing with the help of Bernardino de Rebolledo, and rode as Count Dohna, through Denmark. Relations between the two countries were still so tense that a former Swedish queen could not have traveled safely in Denmark. Christina had already packed and shipped abroad valuable books, paintings, statues and tapestries from her Stockholm castle, leaving its treasures severely depleted.[78][79]
Christina visited Frederick III, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp, and while there thought that her successor should have a bride. She sent letters recommending two of the Duke's daughters to Charles. Based on this recommendation, he wound up marrying Hedwig Eleonora.[80] On 10 July she arrived in Hamburg.
Christina visited Johann Friedrich Gronovius, and Anna Maria van Schurman in the Dutch Republic. In August, she arrived in the Southern Netherlands, and settled down in Antwerp. For four months Christina was lodged in the mansion of a Jewish merchant. She was visited by Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria; the Prince de Condé, ambassador Pierre Chanut, as well as the former governor of Norway, Hannibal Sehested. In the afternoon she went for a ride, each evening parties were held; there was a play to watch or music to listen to. Christina ran quickly out of money and had to sell some of her tapestries, silverware and jewelry. When her financial situation did not improve, the archduke invited her to his Brussels palace on Coudenberg. On 24 December 1654, she converted to the Catholic faith in the archduke's chapel in the presence of the Dominican Juan Guêmes,[82] Raimondo Montecuccoli and Pimentel.[83] She did not declare her conversion in public, in case the Swedish council might refuse to pay her alimony. In addition, Sweden was preparing for war against Pomerania, which meant that her income from there was considerably reduced. The pope and Philip IV of Spain could not support her openly either, as she was not publicly a Catholic yet. Christina succeeded in arranging a major loan, leaving books and statues to settle her debts.[84]
In September, she left for Italy with her entourage of 255 persons and 247 horses. The pope's messenger, the librarian Lucas Holstenius, himself a convert, waited for her in Innsbruck. On 3 November 1655, Christina announced her conversion to Roman Catholicism in the Hofkirche and wrote to Pope Alexander VII and her cousin Charles X about it. To celebrate her official conversion, L'Argia an opera by Antonio Cesti was performed. Ferdinand Charles, Archduke of Austria, already in financial trouble, is said to have been almost ruined by her visit. Her departure was on 8 November.[85]
Setting off to Rome
The southbound journey through Italy was planned in detail by the Vatican and had a brilliant triumph in Ferrara, Bologna, Faenza and Rimini. In Pesaro, Christina became acquainted with the handsome brothers Santinelli, who so impressed her with their poetry and adeptness of dancing that she took them into service, as well as a certain Gian Rinaldo Monaldeschi. The official entry into Rome took place on 20 December, in a couch designed by Bernini[86] through Porta Flaminia, which today is known as Porta del Popolo.[note 9] Christina met Bernini on the next day, she invited him to her apartment the same evening and they became lifelong friends. "Two days afterwards she was conducted to the Vatican Basilica, where the pope gave her confirmation. It was then that she received from the pope her second name of Alexandra, the feminine form of his own."[87] She was granted her own wing inside the Vatican, decorated by Bernini.
Christina's visit to Rome was the triumph of Pope Alexander VII and the occasion for splendid Baroque festivities. For several months, she was the only preoccupation of the Pope and his court. The nobles vied for her attention and treated her to a never-ending round of fireworks, jousts, mock duels, acrobatics, and operas. On 31 January Vita Humana an opera by Marco Marazzoli was performed. At the Palazzo Barberini, where she was welcomed on 28 February by a few hundred privileged spectators, she watched an amazing carousel in the courtyard.[88][89]
Palazzo Farnese
Christina had settled down in the Palazzo Farnese, which belonged to the Duke of Parma. Every Wednesday she held the palace open to visitors from the higher classes who kept themselves busy with poetry and intellectual discussions. Christina opened an academy in the palace on 24 January 1656, called Academy of Arcadia, where the participants enjoyed music, theater, and literature. The poet Reyer Anslo was presented to her. Belonging to the Arcadia-circle was also Francesco Negri, a Franciscan from Ravenna who is regarded as the first tourist to visit North Cape, Norway. [note 10] Another Franciscan was the Swede Lars Skytte, who, under the name pater Laurentius, served as Christina's confessor for eight years.[note 11]
29-year-old Christina gave occasion to much gossip when socializing freely with men her own age. One of them was Cardinal Decio Azzolino, who had been a secretary to the ambassador in Spain, and responsible for the Vatican's correspondence with European courts.[90] He was also the leader of the Squadrone Volante, the free thinking "Flying Squad" movement within the Catholic Church. Christina and Azzolino were so close that the pope asked him to shorten his visits to her palace; but they remained lifelong friends. In a letter on 26 January 1676[91] to Azzolino Christina writes (in French) that she would never offend God or give Azzolino reason to take offense, but this "does not prevent me from loving you until death, and since piety relieves you from being my lover, then I relieve you from being my servant, for I shall live and die as your slave." As he had promised to remain celibate, his replies were more reserved.[note 12] Meantime Christina learned that the Swedes had confiscated all her revenue as the princess had become a Catholic.
Visits to France and Italy
Philip IV of Spain, the King of Spain at that time ruled the Duchy of Milan and the Kingdom of Naples. The French politician Mazarin, an Italian himself, had attempted to liberate Naples from the Spanish rule against which the locals had fought before the Neapolitan Republic (1647) was created. A second expedition in 1654 had failed and the Duke of Guise gave up. Christina's goal was now to become a mediator between France and Spain in their contest to control Naples. Her plan detailed that she lead French troops to take Naples, and rule until bequeathing the crown to France after her death. Christina sent home all her Spanish servants, including her confidant Pimentel and her confessor Guêmes.[93] On 20 Juli 1656 Christina set sail from Civitavecchia for Marseille where she arrived nine days later. Early August she traveled to Paris, accompanied by the Duke of Guise. Mazarin gave her no official sponsorship, but gave instructions that Christina be celebrated and entertained in every town on her way north.
On 8 September she arrived in Paris and was shown around; the ladies were shocked by her masculine appearance and demeanor and the unguarded freedom of her conversation. When visiting the ballet with la Grande Mademoiselle, she, as the latter recalls, "surprised me very much – applauding the parts which pleased her, taking God to witness, throwing herself back in her chair, crossing her legs, resting them on the arms of her chair, and assuming other postures, such as I had never seen taken but by Travelin and Jodelet, two famous buffoons... She was in all respects a most extraordinary creature".[94]
She was treated with respect by the young Louis XIV and his mother in Compiègne. On 22 September 1656, the arrangement between her and Louis XIV was ready. He would recommend Christina as queen to the Kingdom of Naples, and serve as guarantee against Spanish aggression. As Queen of Naples she would be financially independent of the Swedish king, and also capable of negotiating peace between France and Spain.[note 13]
On her way back Christina visited the beautiful and atheistic Ninon de l'Enclos in the convent at Lagny-sur-Marne. Early October she left France and arrived in Turino. During the winter Christina lived in the apostolic palace in Pesaro, probably to flee the plague in Rome. (The plague infested several regions including Naples, where 250,000 people would die within two years.[95]) In July 1657 she returned to France, likely being impatient. It is not known where she stayed that summer. In Fontainebleau she was ordered by the court to halt.
The death of Monaldeschi
On 15 October apartments were assigned to her at the Palace of Fontainebleau, where she committed an action which stained her memory – the execution of marchese Gian Rinaldo Monaldeschi, her master of the horse, and formerly leader of the French party in Rome.[96][97]
For two months, she had suspected Monaldeschi of disloyalty and secretly seized his correspondence, which revealed that he had betrayed her interests. Christina gave three packages of letters to Le Bel, a priest to keep them for her in custody. Three days later, on Saturday afternoon, at one o'clock she summoned Monaldeschi into the Galerie des Cerfs, discussing the matter and letters with him. He insisted that betrayal should be punished with death. She was convinced that he had pronounced his own death sentence. After an hour or so Le Bel was to receive his confession. Both Le Bel and Monaldeschi entreated for mercy, but he was stabbed by her domestics – notably Ludovico Santinelli – in his stomach and in his neck. Wearing his coat of mail, which protected him, he was chased around in an adjacent room before they finally succeeded in dealing him a fatal wound in his throat. "In the end, he died, confessing his infamy and admitting [Santinelli's] innocence, protesting that he had invented the whole fantastic story in order to ruin [him]."[98]
Father Le Bel was told to have him buried inside the church, and Christina, seemingly unfazed, paid an abbey to say a number of Masses for his soul. She "was sorry that she had been forced to undertake this execution, but claimed that justice had been carried out for his crime and betrayal.[99]
Mazarin, who had sent her old friend Chanut, advised Christina to place the blame due to a brawl among courtiers, but she insisted that she alone was responsible for the act. She wrote to Louis XIV who two weeks later paid her a friendly visit without mentioning it. In Rome, people felt differently; Monaldeschi had been an Italian nobleman, murdered by a foreign barbarian with Santinelli as one of her executioners. The letters proving his guilt are gone; Christina left them with Le Bel and only he confirmed that they existed. Christina never revealed what was in the letters, but according to Le Bel, it is supposed to have dealt about her "amours", either with Monaldeschi or another person. She herself wrote her version of the story for circulation in Europe.
The killing of Monaldeschi in a French palace was legal, since Christina had judicial rights over the members of her court, as her vindicator Gottfried Leibniz claimed.[100] As her contemporaries saw it, Christina as queen had to emphasize right and wrong, and her sense of duty was strong. She continued to regard herself as queen regnant all her life.
She would gladly have visited England, but she received no encouragement from Cromwell and stayed in Fontainebleau as nobody else offered her a place. Anne of Austria, the mother of Louis XIV was impatient to be quit of her cruel guest; Christina had no choice save to depart. She returned to Rome and dismissed Santinelli in 1659, claiming to be her ambassador in Vienna without her approval.[101]
Back to Rome
On 15 May 1658, Christina arrived in Rome for the second time, but this time it was definitely no triumph. With the execution of Monaldeschi her popularity was lost. Pope Alexander VII remained in his summer residence and wanted no further visits from her. He described her as 'a woman born of a barbarian, barbarously brought up and living with barbarous thoughts [...] with a ferocious and almost intolerable pride'.[102] She stayed at the Palazzo Rospigliosi, which belonged to Mazarin, the French cardinal, situated close to the Quirinal Palace; so the pope was enormously relieved when in July 1659 she moved to Trastevere to live in Palazzo Riario, on top of the Janiculus, designed by Bramante. It was Cardinal Azzolino, her "bookkeeper" who signed the contract, as well as provided her with new servants to replace Francesco Santinelli, who had been Monaldeschi's executioner.[note 14]
The Riario Palace became her home for the rest of her life. She decorated the walls with tapestries by Giovanni Francesco Grimaldi[104] and paintings, mainly from the Venetian School and Renaissance; and almost no paintings from northern European painters, except Holbein, Van Dyck and Rubens. Her collections included very little religious subject matter and an abundance of mythological imagery, so it seems that Christina was more interested in Rome for its ties to classical history than for its contemporary Catholic church.[105] No Roman collection of art could match hers. There were portraits of her friends Azzolino, Bernini, Ebba Sparre, Descartes, ambassador Chanut and doctor Bourdelot.
Revisiting Sweden
In April 1660 Christina was informed that Charles X Gustav had died in February. His son, Charles XI, was only five years old. That summer, she went to Sweden, pointing out that she had left the throne to her first cousin and his descendant, so if Charles XI died, she would take over the throne again. But as she was a Catholic that was impossible, and the clergy refused to let the priests in her entourage celebrate any Masses. Christina left Stockholm and went to Norrköping. Eventually she submitted to a second renunciation of the throne, spending a year in Hamburg to get her finances in order on her way back to Rome. Already in 1654 she left her income to the banker Diego Teixeira in return for him sending her a monthly allowance and covering her debts in Antwerp. She visited the Texeira family at Jungfernstieg and entertained them in her own lodgings.[106]
In the summer of 1662, she arrived in Rome for the third time, followed by some fairly happy years. A variety of complaints and allegations made her resolve in 1666 once more to return to Sweden. She proceeded no farther than Norrköping, where she received a decree she was only allowed to settle in Swedish Pommerania. Christina immediately decided to go back to Hamburg. There she was informed that Alexander VII, her patron and tormentor, had died in May 1667. The new pope, Clement IX, a victory for the squadrone,[107][108] had been a regular guest at her palace. In her delight at his election she threw a brilliant party at her lodgings in Hamburg, with illuminations and wine in the fountain outside. The party enraged Hamburg's Lutheran populace, and the party ended in shooting, an attempt to seize the Queen, and her escape in disguise through a back door.[109] The Texeira family had to cover the repairs.[110] Again she met with the charlatan Giuseppe Francesco Borri.[111]
On 16 September 1668, John II Casimir abdicated the Polish–Lithuanian throne, and returned to France. The Polish monarchy was elective and Christina made an attempt to gain the right to rule Poland.[112] She recommended herself being Catholic, an old maid and intended to remain one.[113] She had Pope Clement IX’s support; but her failure seemed to please her since this meant that she could return to her beloved Azzolino.[114] She left the city on 20 October 1668.[115] [116]
Home to Rome and death
Christina's fourth and last entry in Rome took place on 22 November 1668. Clement IX often visited her; they had a shared interest in plays. Christina organized meetings of the Accademia in the Great Hall[117] which had ‘a platform for singers and players’.[118] When the pope suffered a stroke, she was among the few he wanted to see at his deathbed. In 1671 Christina established Rome's first public theatre in a former jail, Tor di Nona.[119]
The new pope, Clement X, worried about the influence of theatre on public morals. When Innocent XI became pope, things turned even worse; within a few years he made Christina's theatre into a storeroom for grain, although he had been a frequent guest in her royal box with the other cardinals. He forbade women to perform with song or acting, and the wearing of decolleté dresses. Christina considered this sheer nonsense, and let women perform in her palace. In 1675 she invited António Vieira to become her confessor.[121]
Christina wrote an unfinished autobiography, of which there are several drafts extant,[122] essays on her heroes Alexander the Great, Cyrus the Great and Julius Cæsar, on art and music (“Pensées, L’Ouvrage du Loisir” and “Les Sentiments Héroïques”)[34] and acted as patron to musicians and poets as Vincenzo da Filicaja.[note 15] Carlo Ambrogio Lonati and Giacomo Carissimi were Kapellmeister; Lelio Colista luteplayer; Loreto Vittori and Marco Marazzoli singers and Sebastiano Baldini librettist.[123][124] She had Alessandro Stradella and Bernardo Pasquini to compose for her; Arcangelo Corelli dedicated his first work, Sonata da chiesa opus 1, to her.[125][126] On 2 February 1687 Corelli or Alessandro Scarlatti directed a tremendous orchestra [127] performing a Pasquini cantata in praise for James II, England's first Catholic monarch since Mary I[128] to welcome Roger Palmer, 1st Earl of Castlemaine as the new ambassador to the Vatican, accompanied by the painter John Michael Wright, who knew Rome and spoke Italian.[129]
Her politics and rebellious spirit persisted long after her abdication of power. When Louis XIV of France revoked the Edict of Nantes, abolishing the rights of French Protestants (Huguenots), Christina wrote an indignant letter, dated 2 February 1686, directed at the French ambassador Cesar d'Estrees. The Sun King did not appreciate her views, but Christina was not to be silenced. In Rome, she made Pope Clement X prohibit the custom of chasing Jews through the streets during the carnival. On 15 August 1686, she issued a declaration that Roman Jews were under her protection, signed la Regina – the queen.[130][131]
Christina remained very tolerant towards the beliefs of others all her life. She on her part felt more attracted to the views of the Spanish priest Miguel Molinos, whom she employed as a private theologian. He had been investigated by the Holy Inquisition for proclaiming that sin belonged to the lower sensual part of man and was not subject to man's free will. Christina sent him food and hundreds of letters when he was locked up in Castel Sant'Angelo.[68]
In February 1689, the 62-year-old Christina fell seriously ill after a visit to the temples in Campania, and received the last rites. She suffered from diabetes mellitus.[1] Christina seemed to recover, but in the middle of April she developed an acute streptococcus bacterial infection known as erysipelas, then contracted pneumonia and a high fever. On her deathbed she sent the pope a message asking if he could forgive her insults. She died on 19 April 1689 in Palazzo Corsini at six in the morning.[132]
Burial
Christina had asked for a simple burial in the Pantheon, Rome, but the pope insisted on her being displayed on a lit de parade for four days in the Riario Palace. She was embalmed, covered with white brocade, a silver mask, a gilt crown and scepter. "The Queen wore a thin mantle, decorated with hundreds of crowns and fur bordered with ermine, under this a splendid garment in two pieces, thin gloves and drawers of knitted silk and a pair of elegant textile bootees".[133] In similar fashion to the popes, her body was placed in three coffins – one of cypress, one of lead and finally one made of oak. The funeral procession on 2 May led from Santa Maria in Vallicella to St. Peter's Basilica, where she was buried within the Grotte Vaticane – only one of three women ever given this honour. Her intestines were placed in a high urn. [note 16]
In 1702 Clement XI commissioned a monument for the queen, in whose conversion he vainly foresaw a return of her country to the Faith and to whose contribution towards the culture of the city he looked back with gratitude. This monument was placed in the body of the basilica and directed by the artist Carlo Fontana.[note 17]
Christina had named Azzolino her sole heir to make sure her debts were settled, but he was too ill and worn out even to join her funeral, and died in June the same year. His nephew, Pompeo Azzolino, was his sole heir, and he rapidly sold off Christina's art collections.
Art collector
Until 1649, when Christina was twenty-three, the Swedish royal art collection was unimpressive, with good tapestries but for paintings, little more than "about a hundred works by minor German, Flemish, and Swedish painters".[134] But in May 1649 the fabulous loot from the occupation of Prague Castle the previous year arrived, with the pick of the collection amassed by the obsessive collector Rudolph II, Holy Roman Emperor (1552–1612), one of the most important in Europe. Rudolf's bulk purchases had included the famous collection of Emperor Charles V's leading minister Cardinal Granvelle (1517–86), which he had forced Granvelle's nephew and heir to sell to him. Granvelle had been the "greatest private collector of his time, the friend and patron of Titian and Leoni and many other artists",[135]
Christina was entranced by her new possessions, and remained a keen collector for the rest of her life, and as a female art collector is only exceeded by Catherine the Great of Russia in the Early Modern period. Rudolf had collected old and contemporary works from both Italy and northern Europe, but it was the Italian paintings that excited Christina, and by her death her collection contained relatively few northern works other than portraits.[136]
Most of the Prague booty remained in Sweden after Christina's departure for exile: she only took about 70 to 80 paintings with her, including about 25 portraits of her friends and family, and some 50 paintings, mostly Italian, from the Prague loot, as well as statues, jewels, 72 tapestries, and various other works of art. She was concerned that the royal collections would be claimed by her successor, and prudently sent them ahead to Antwerp in a ship in August 1653, almost a year before she abdicated, an early sign of her intentions.[137]
Christina greatly expanded her collection during her exile in Rome, for example adding the five small Raphael predella panels from the Colonna Altarpiece, including the Agony in the Garden now reunited with the main panel in New York, which were bought from a convent near Rome.[138] She was apparently given Titian's Death of Actaeon by the greatest collector of the age, Archduke Leopold William of Austria, Viceroy in Brussels - she received many such gifts from Catholic royalty after her conversion,[139] and gave some generous gifts herself, notably Albrecht Dürer's panels of Adam and Eve to Philip IV of Spain (now Prado). She also gave away two paintings by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Dull Gret and The Cripples (now Louvre). In such ways the balance of her collection shifted to Italian art.[140]
The Riario Palace finally provided a suitable setting for her collection, and the Sala dei Quadri ("Paintings Room") had her finest works, with thirteen Titians and eleven Veroneses, five Raphaels and several Correggios.[141] Titian's Venus Anadyomene was among them. Venus mourns Adonis by Veronese was from Prague, and is now back in Sweden (Nationalmuseum).
Christina liked to commission portraits of herself, friends, and also notable people she had not met, from 1647 sending David Beck, her Dutch court painter, to several countries to paint notabilities.[142] She encouraged artists to study her collection, including the drawings, and exhibited some of her paintings, but apart from portraits she commissioned or bought few works by living painters, except for drawings. Sculptors did rather better, and Bernini was a friend, while others were commissioned to restore the large collection of classical sculpture which she had begun to assemble while still in Sweden.[143]
On her death she left her collection to Cardinal Decio Azzolino, who himself died within a year, leaving the collection to his nephew, who sold it to Don Livio Odescalchi, commander of the Papal army,[144] at which point it contained 275 paintings, 140 of them Italian.[145] The year after Odescalchi's death in 1713, his heirs began protracted negotiations with the great French connoisseur and collector Pierre Crozat, acting as intermediary for Philippe II, Duke of Orléans, from 1715 the Regent of France. The sale was finally concluded and the 123 paintings included in the sale delivered in 1721, forming the core of the Orleans Collection, the paintings from which were mostly sold in London after the French Revolution, many still remaining in the United Kingdom.[146] The French experts complained that Christina had cut down several paintings to fit her ceilings,[147] and had over-restored some of the best works, especially the Correggios, implicating Carlo Maratti.[148]
At first, removing her collections from Sweden was seen as a great loss to the country; but in 1697 Stockholm castle burned down with the loss of almost everything inside, so they would have been destroyed if they had remained there. The sculpture collection was sold to the King of Spain, and mostly remains in Spanish museums and palaces.[149] Her large and important library was bought by Alexander VIII for the Vatican library, while most of the paintings ended up in France,[110] as the core of the Orleans Collection – many remain together in the National Gallery of Scotland. 1700 drawings from her collection (among them works by Michelangelo (25) and Raphael) were acquired in 1790 by Willem Anne Lestevenon for the Teylers Museum in Haarlem, the Netherlands.[150]
Appearance
Historical accounts of Christina include regular reference to her physical features, mannerisms and style of dress. Christina was known to have a bent back, a deformed chest, and irregular shoulders. Some historians have speculated that references to her physical attributes may be over-represented in related historiography, thus giving the impression that this was of greater interest to her contemporaries than was actually the case.[151] However, given how influential Christina became in her own era (especially for those in Rome), it is likely her style and mannerisms were at least of general interest to those around her, and this is reflected in many accounts.[90][151] As a result of conflicting and unreliable accounts (some no better than gossip), the way in which Christina is described, even today, is a matter of debate.[133]
According to Christina's own autobiography, the midwives at her birth first believed her to be a boy because she was "completely hairy and had a coarse and strong voice". Such ambiguity did not end with her birth; Christina made cryptic statements about her "constitution" and body throughout her life. Christina also believed a wet-nurse had carelessly dropped her to the floor when she was a baby. A shoulder bone broke, leaving one shoulder higher than the other for the rest of her life.[note 18] A number of her contemporaries made reference to the differing height of her shoulders.[153]
As a child, Christina's mannerisms could probably best be described as those of a tomboy. Her father insisted she should receive "the education of a prince", and some have interpreted this as acceptance, on the part of the king, that she had masculine features or that there was some form of gender ambiguity in her upbringing.[68] In reality, she received the same education (from her aunt) as that of her cousins, though accounts suggest she was more physically active and boisterous. She did, however, show a greater interest in boys' sports and games. She was taught (and enjoyed) fencing, horse riding and bear hunting.[154][130]
As an adult, it was said that Christina "walked like a man, sat and rode like a man, and could eat and swear like the roughest soldiers".[68] Christina's contemporary John Bargrave described her comportment in a similar fashion but said witnesses ascribed her style more to childishness or madness than masculinity.[90] When she arrived in Rome in 1655, she had shaven her head and wore a big, dark wig.[68] By 1665, according to Edward Browne, she regularly wore a velvet justacorps, cravat and man's perruke.[68]
While Christina may not have been alone in her own time for choosing masculine dress (Leonora Christina Ulfeldt, for example, was known for dressing the same way), she also had physical features some described as masculine.[68][note 19][155] According to Henry II, Duke of Guise, "she wears men's shoes and her voice and nearly all her actions are masculine".[156] When she arrived in Lyon, she again wore a toque and had styled her hair like that of a young man. It was noted that she also wore large amounts of powder and face cream. In one account she "was sunburnt, and she looked like a sort of Egyptian street girl, very strange, and more alarming than attractive".[68]
Living in Rome, she formed a close relationship with Cardinal Azzolino, which was controversial but symbolic of her attraction to relationships which were not typical for a woman of her era and station.[90][157] She abandoned her manly clothes and took to wearing décolleté gowns so risqué that they drew a rebuke from the Pope.[68]
As an older woman, Christina's style changed little. François Maximilian Misson (visiting Rome in the spring of April 1688) wrote:
She is over sixty years of age, very small of stature, exceedingly fat and corpulent. Her complexion and voice and face are those of a man. She has a big nose, large blue eyes, blonde eyebrows, and a double chin from which sprout several tufts of beard. Her upper lip protrudes a little. Her hair is a light chestnut colour, and only a palms breadth in length; she wears it powdered and standing on end, uncombed. She is very smiling and obliging. You will hardly believe her clothes: a man's jacket, in black satin, reaching to her knees, and buttoned all the way down; a very short black skirt, and men's shoes; a very large bow of black ribbons instead of a cravat; and a belt drawn tightly under her stomach, revealing its rotundity all too well.[68]
Gender ambiguity and sexuality
In her Autobiography (1681) Christina is flirting with her androgynous personality.[158] The question of her sexuality has been debated, even as a number of modern biographers generally consider her to have been a lesbian, and her relationships with women were noted during her lifetime;[51] Christina seems to have written passionate letters to Ebba Sparre, and Guilliet suggested a relationship between Christina and Gabrielle de Rochechouart de Mortemart, Rachel, a niece of Diego Teixeira,[159] and the singer Angelina Giorgino.[14] Some historians assert she maintained heterosexual,[10] non-sexual,[160] lesbian,[161] or bisexual relationships during the course of her life depending on which source is consulted.[162][163] According to Veronica Buckley, Christina was a "dabbler" who was "...painted a lesbian, a prostitute, a hermaphrodite, and an atheist" by her contemporaries, though "in that tumultuous age, it is hard to determine which was the most damning label".[68][164] Christina wrote near the end of her life that she was "neither Male nor Hermaphrodite, as some People in the World have pass'd me for".[68]
Bargrave recounted that Christina's relationship with Azzolino was both "familiar" (intimate) and "amorous" and that Azzolino had been sent (by the Pope) to Romania as punishment for maintaining it.[90] Buckley, on the other hand, believed there was "in Christina a curious squeamishness with regard to sex" and that "a sexual relationship between herself and Azzolino, or any other man, seems unlikely".[68] Based on historical accounts of Christina's physicality, some scholars believe that she may have been an intersex individual (someone with a combination of female and male genitals, hormones or chromosomes).[68][165][166]
In 1965 these conflicting accounts led to an investigation of Christina's remains. Physical anthropologist Carl-Herman Hjortsjö, who undertook the investigation, explained: "Our imperfect knowledge concerning the effect of intersex on the skeletal formation [...] makes it impossible to decide which positive skeletal findings should be demanded upon which to base the diagnosis" of an intersex condition. Nevertheless, Hjortsjö speculated that Christina had reasonably typical female genitalia because it is recorded by her physicians Bourdelot and Macchiati that she menstruated.[167] Hjortsjö's osteological analysis of Christina's skeleton led him to state that they were of a "typically female" structure.[168]
Some of the symptoms could be due to polycystic ovary syndrome, a complex multi-endocrine disorder including hirsutism (male pattern/type hair growth) due to increased androgen hormone levels, and abdominal obesity due to the hormone insulin receptor defects. As she had very little comprehension for the need of most social norms and little desire to act, dress, or do other social norms, preferring to wearing, acting, and doing only that which she deemed logically practical, Buckley suggested Pervasive Developmental Disorder i.e., Asperger's Syndrome.[68][169]
Legacy
The complex character of Christina has inspired numerous plays, books, and operatic works:
- Jacopo Foroni's 1849 opera Cristina, regina di Svezia is based on the events surrounding her abdication. Other operas based on her life, include Alessandro Nini's Cristina di Svezia (1840), Giuseppe Lillo's Cristina di Svezia (1841), and Sigismond Thalberg's Cristina di Svezia (1855)
- August Strindberg's published Kristina (1901)
- Zacharias Topelius wrote a historical allegory Stjärnornas Kungabarn (1899-1900)
- Christina's life was famously fictionalised in the classic feature film Queen Christina (1933). This film, starring Greta Garbo, depicted a heroine whose life diverged considerably from that of the real Christina.
- Kaari Utrio published Kartanonherra ja kaunis Kristin (1969).
- In The Abdication (1974), starring Liv Ullmann, Christina arrives in the Vatican and falls in love with cardinal Azzelino. The script was based on a play by Ruth Wolff.
- Herta J. Enevoldsen wrote two novels in Danish on her life, "Heltekongens Datter" (1975) and "En Dronning Værdig" (1976).
- Laura Ruohonen wrote "Queen C" (2003), which presents a woman centuries ahead of her time who lives by her own rules.
- Comedian Jade Esteban Estrada portrayed her (2004) in the solo musical ICONS: The Lesbian and Gay History of the World Vol. 2.
- Michel Marc Bouchard's play Christina, The Girl King, is a biographical depiction of Queen Christina's short rule premiered in 2012.
- Mika Kaurismäki's film, The Girl King, based on the play, premièred December 11, 2015.
Place names:
Ancestors
Footnotes
- ↑ With the titles of Queen of the Swedes, Goths (or Geats) and Wends[3] (Suecorum, Gothorum Vandalorumque Regina);[4] Grand Princess of Finland, and Duchess of Estonia, Livonia and Karelia,[5] Bremen-Verden, Stettin, Pomerania, Cassubia and Vandalia,[6] Princess of Rugia, Lady of Ingria and of Wismar.[7]
- ↑ Alexandra was a confirmation name in 1654, chosen in honour of the reigning pope, Alexander VII, and one of her heroes, Alexander the Great. The pope had urged her to also add "Maria" in honour of the Virgin Mary, but she did not want it, and signed her name only "Christina Alexandra", although Catholic chroniclers have assigned "Maria" to her [12]
- ↑ Both were buried in Riddarholmskyrkan in Stockholm.
- ↑ The Polish King Władysław IV Vasa, like his father Sigismund III Vasa, had the life ambition of attaining the Swedish throne by using his royal status and power in Poland and Lithuania, which, to serve his purpose, he attempted to strengthen. Having secured the eastern front, the King was able to concentrate on the recovery of Baltic areas lost by his father to Sweden. Władysław IV wanted to take advantage of the Swedish defeat at Nördlingen and fight for both the territories and his Swedish dynastic claims. The Poles were suspicious of his designs and war preparations and the King was able to proceed with negotiations only, where his unwillingness to give up the dynastic claim weakened the Commonwealth's position. Władysław should renounce his claim to the Swedish throne [18] Władysław declined.[19]
- ↑ She was married to John Casimir, Count Palatine of Kleeburg, and moved home to Sweden after the outbreak of the Thirty Years' war. Their children were Maria Eufrosyne, who later married one of Christina's close friends Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie, and Karl Gustav, who inherited the throne after Christina.
- ↑ Letters still exist, written by her in German to her father when she was five. When the ambassador of France, Pierre Hector Chanut, arrived in Stockholm in 1645, he stated admiringly, "She talks French as if she was born in the Louvre!" (According to B. Guilliet she spoke with a sort of Liège dialect.)
- ↑ Over time there have been speculations regarding the death of the philosopher.[44] Theodor Ebert claimed that Descartes did not meet his end by being exposed to the harsh Swedish winter climate, as philosophers have been fond of repeating, but by arsenic poisoning.[45][46] It has been suggested Descartes was an obstacle to Christina's becoming a true Catholic.[47]
- ↑ Petrus Kirstenius was invited by Axel Oxenstierna to become a personal physician of Queen Christina of Sweden and Professor of Medicine at Uppsala University in 1636. Grégoire François Du Rietz became the physician in 1642. Around 1645? she appointed Benedict (Baruch) Nehamias de Castro from Hamburg as her Physician in ordinary. Wullenius was her physician since 1649, and when Descartes fell ill. Hermann Conring was invited in 1650, but he seems to have rejected the offer. Du Rietz was called when she suddenly collapsed in 1651. For an hour she seemed to be dead. In August 1651, she asked for the Council's permission to abdicate, but gave in to their pleas for her to retain the throne. In February 1652, the French doctor Pierre Bourdelot arrived in Stockholm. Otto Sperling, who was doctor at the household of Leonora Christine, met Christina in Sweden in the winter of 1653. In July 1654, the English physician Daniel Whistler returned to London. In Rom and was her physician until her death;[62] Romolo Spezioli after 1675.[63][64] Nikolaes Heinsius the Younger arrived in Rome in 1679, when he became her personal physician until about 1687.
- ↑ Bernini had decorated the gate with Christina's coat of arms (an ear of corn) beneath that of Pope Alexander (six mountains with a star above). Also today one can read the inscription Felici Faustoq Ingressui Anno Dom MDCLV ("to a happy and blessed entry in the year 1655").
- ↑ Negri wrote eight letters about his walk through Scandinavia all the way up to "Capo Nord" in 1664.
- ↑ He too had been a pupil of Johannes Matthiae, and his uncle had been Gustav Adolf's teacher. As a diplomat in Portugal he had converted, and asked for a transfer to Rome when he learnt of Christina's arrival.
- ↑ Christina wrote him many letters during her travels. After her death, Azzolino burnt most of their correspondence; about 80 have survived. Some details were written in a code that was decrypted by Carl Bildt, in Rome around 1900.[92]
- ↑ Mazarin however found another arrangement to ensure peace; he strengthened this with a marriage arrangement between Louis XIV and his first cousin, Maria Theresa of Spain – the wedding took place in 1660. But this was unknown to Christina, who sent different messengers to Mazarin to remind him of their plan.
- ↑ Monaldeschi was a traitor, Santinelli had stolen from Christina' for years.[103]
- ↑ In her basement there was a laboratory, where she, Giuseppe Francesco Borri and Azzolino experimented with alchemy.
- ↑ From 2005 to 2011, her marble sarcophagus was positioned next to that of Pope John Paul II when his grave was moved.
- ↑ Christina was portrayed on a gilt and bronze medallion, supported by a crowned skull. Three reliefs below represented her relinquishment of the Swedish throne and abjugation of Protestantism at Innsbruck, the scorn of the nobility, and faith triumphing over heresy. It is an unromantic likeness, for she is given a double chin and a prominent nose with flaring nostrils.
- ↑ E. Essen-Möller and B. Guilliet suggest it had to do with her alleged intersex condition.[152]
- ↑ Her contemporary Samuel Pepys, for example, describes women riding horses in mannish clothing.
- ↑ Between 1631 and 1648, during the Thirty Years’ War, Erfurt was occupied by Swedish forces,[170] thus the effigy of Queen Christina appears on the 1645 Erfurt 10 Ducat (Portugaloser). There are only seven gold coins known to exist bearing the effigy of Queen Christina: a unique 1649 five ducat,[171] and six 1645 10 ducat specimen.[172]
References
- 1 2 Nathan Alan Popp Beneath the surface: the portraiture and visual rhetoric of Sweden's Queen Christina
- ↑ "Sweden". World Statesmen. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
- 1 2 J. Guinchard (1914). Sweden: Historical and statistical handbook. Stockholm: P. A. Norstedt & Söner. p. 188.
- 1 2 Stefan Donecker/Roland Steinacher (2009) Der König der Schweden, Goten und Vandalen. Königstitulatur und Vandalenrezeption im frühneuzeitlichen Schweden. In: Vergangenheit und Vergegenwärtigung. Frühes Mittelalter und europäische Erinnerungskultur. Ed. by Helmut Reimitz and Bernhard Zeller (= Forschungen zur Geschichte des Mittelalters 14; Wien 2009).
- 1 2 Stolpe, Sven (1974) Drottning Kristina Efter tronavsägelsen, Volume 2 (Bonnier, ISBN 91-0-039241-3) pp. 142 & 145
- 1 2 Stefan Donecker/Roland Steinacher, Rex Vandalorum. The Debates on Wends and Vandals in Swedish Humanism as an Indicator for Early Modern Patterns of Ethnic Perception. In: Der Norden im Ausland – das Ausland im Norden. Formung und Transformation von Konzepten und Bildern des Anderen vom Mittelalter bis heute, ed. Sven Hakon Rossel (Wiener Studien zur Skandinavistik 15, Wien 2006) 242–252
- 1 2 "A Journal of the Swedish Embassy in the Years 1653 and 1654, Vol II. by Whitlocke". Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via www.gutenberg.org.
- ↑ "Christina of Sweden". departments.kings.edu. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Tangran, Alexander “Women in World History-Christina of Sweden (1626-1689)” A Biographical Encyclopedia. Ed. Anne Commire. Vol.3. Detroit: Yorkin Publications, 2000. p. 722-729.
- 1 2 3 Lindsay, Ivan (2 June 2014). "The History of Loot and Stolen Art: from Antiquity until the Present Day". Andrews UK Limited. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ A. Tangran, “Women in World History” (Yorkin Publications 2000), p. 722-729 Script from Clark.edu by Anita L. Fisher
- ↑ Buckley, p. 250.
- 1 2 Script from Clark.edu by Anita L. Fisher
- 1 2 Hofmann, Paul (8 October 2002). "The Vatican's Women: Female Influence at the Holy See". St. Martin's Press. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Zimmermann, Christian von (10 July 2017). "Frauenbiographik: Lebensbeschreibungen und Porträts". Gunter Narr Verlag. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Zirpolo, Lilian H. (2005) Christina of Sweden's Patronage of Bernini: The Mirror of Truth Revealed by Time, Vol. 26, No. 1 pp. 38-43
- ↑ Aasen, Elisabeth Barokke damer, dronning Christinas europeiske reise (2005) ISBN 82-530-2817-2 (edited by Pax, Oslo. 2003, ISBN 82-530-2817-2)
- ↑ Jan Albertrandy (1846). Dzieje krolewstwa polskiego krotko lat porzadkiem opisane przez Jana Albertrandego. K. Jabloński. pp. 164–166. Retrieved 1 June 2011.
- ↑ Władysław Czapliński,Na Dworze Króla Władysława IV (At the Court of King Władysław IV) Ksiażka i wiedza, Warsaw, Poland, 1959 OCLC 577964149, p. 64-71
- ↑ "Expressions of power: Queen Christina of Sweden and patronage in Baroque Europe, p. 57 by Nathan A. Popp.". Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Christina Alexandra". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
- ↑ Peter Englund: Sølvmasken (s. 159), edited by Spartacus, Oslo 2009, ISBN 978-82-430-0466-5
- ↑ Stephan, Ruth. "Christina Queen of Sweden". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2015-12-07.
- ↑ "Who's Who in Queen Christina's Life by Tracy Marks". Windweaver.com. 2001-03-30. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
- ↑ Marie-Louise Rodén (Swedish): Drottning Christina (Queen Christina) (2008) page 62
- ↑ "Antique map of Scandinavia by Blaeu W. & J.". www.sanderusmaps.com. Retrieved 2015-12-07.
- ↑ "Codex Gigas – Kungliga biblioteket". National Library of Sweden. 2007-05-30. Archived from the original on 2007-10-12. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
- ↑ Trevor Roper, HR (1970) Plunder of the arts in the XVIIth century
- ↑ Goldsmith, Margaret (1935) Christina of Sweden: a psychological biography.Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc.
- ↑ Bodleian: The Correspondence of Isaac Vossius (currently 1,702 letters)
- ↑ Lockhart, Paul Douglas (13 February 2004). "Sweden in the Seventeenth Century". Palgrave Macmillan. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Böhme, Klaus-R (2001). "Die sicherheitspolitische Lage Schwedens nach dem Westfälischen Frieden". In Hacker, Hans-Joachim. Der Westfälische Frieden von 1648: Wende in der Geschichte des Ostseeraums (in German). Kovač. p. 35. ISBN 3-8300-0500-8.
- ↑ Andersson, Åsa. "War booty - Kungliga biblioteket". www.kb.se. Retrieved 2017-07-16.
- 1 2 Waithe, Mary Ellen (1991) Modern women philosophers, 1600–1900 (Springer)
- ↑ Peter Englund: Sølvmasken (p. 27)
- 1 2 3 4 5 Leif Jonsson, Ann-Marie Nilsson & Greger Andersson: Musiken i Sverige. Från forntiden till stormaktstidens slut 1720 (Enligsh: "Music in Sweden. From Antiquity to the end of the Great power era 1720") (in Swedish)
- 1 2 3 4 Lars Löfgren: Svensk teater (English: "Swedish Theatre") (in Swedish)
- ↑ Marker, Frederick J. & Marker, Lise-Lone (1996) A History of Scandinavian Theatre (Cambridge University Press)
- ↑ Watson, Richard (10 July 2017). "Cogito, Ergo Sum: The Life of René Descartes". David R. Godine Publisher. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ "René Descartes in Sweden".
- ↑ "Descartes' Bones".
- ↑ "Cogito, Ergo Sum".
- ↑ Il y a des preuves que René Descartes a été assassiné »
- ↑ "The History of Christina".
- ↑ "Was Descartes murdered in Stockholm?".
- ↑ "Theodor Ebert - Philosophy On The Mesa".
- ↑ Green, Ronald (26 August 2011). "Nothing Matters: a book about nothing". John Hunt Publishing. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Garstein, Oskar (10 July 1992). "Rome and the Counter-Reformation in Scandinavia: The Age of Gustavus Adolphus and Queen Christina of Sweden, 1622-1656". BRILL. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ A. Tangran, “Women in World History (Yorkin Publications 2000), p. 722-729 Script from Clark.edu
- ↑ Aldrich, Robert; Wotherspoon, Garry, eds. (2002). Who's who in Gay and Lesbian History: From Antiquity to World War II. Psychology Press. p. 292.
- 1 2 3 Crompton, Louis (2009). Homosexuality and Civilization. Harvard University Press. pp. 357–60.
- ↑ "Expressions of power: Queen Christina of Sweden and patronage in Baroque Europe by Nathan A. Popp, University of Iowa". Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ "Konsthistorisk tidskrift/Journal of Art History Volume 58, Issue 3, 1989". Konsthistorisk Tidskrift/Journal of Art History. 58: 95–108. 2008-09-01. doi:10.1080/00233608908604229. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
- ↑ Arne Danielsson (1989) Sébastien Bourdon‘s equestrian portrait of Queen Christina of Sweden –addressed to― His Catholic Majesty Philip IV. Konsthistorisk tidskrift, Vol. 58, no. 3, p. 95.
- ↑ Beneath the surface: the portraiture and visualrhetoric of Sweden's Queen ChristinaNathan Alan Popp
- ↑ "The Formula of Concord in the History of Swedish Lutheranism, p. 6 By Docent Seth Erlandsson, Uppsala" (PDF). Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ "Converts, Conversion, and the Confessionalization Thesis, Once Again". H-net.org. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
- ↑ Likely Goswin Nickel rather than Francesco Piccolomini who had died in June of that year.
- ↑ Garstein, O. (1992) Rome and the Counter-Reformation in Scandinavia: The age of Gustavus Adolphus and Queen Christina of Sweden (1662–1656). Studies in history of Christian thought. Leiden.
- ↑ Ranke, Leopold von (2009) History of the popes; their church and state (Volume III) (Wellesley College Library)
- ↑ Raymond, Jean-François de (10 July 1999). "Pierre Chanut, ami de Descartes: un diplomate philosophe". Editions Beauchesne. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ FABIOLA ZURLINI, UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI MACERATA The Correspondence between the Personal Physician of the Queen Christina of Sweden Cesare Macchiati and the Cardinal Decio Azzolino Junior in the Seventeenth Century
- ↑ "The physician Romolo Spezioli (1642 -1723) and his private library in the Public Library of Fermo" (PDF). Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Wärnhjelm, Vera Nigrisoli. "Romolo Spezioli, medico di Cristina di Svezia". Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Lanoye, D. (2001) Christina van Zweden : Koningin op het schaakbord Europa 1626–1689, p. 24.
- ↑ Quilliet, B. (1987) Christina van Zweden : een uitzonderlijke vorst, p. 79–80.
- ↑ "By subtle means Bourdelot undermined her principles". Freefictionbooks.org. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Buckley, Veronica (2004). Christina, Queen of Sweden: The Restless Life of a European Eccentric (HarperCollins, ISBN 9780060736187)
- ↑ «The case of Arnold Johan Messenius», In: Oskar Garstein, Rome and the Counter-Reformation in Scandinavia: the age of Gustavus Adolphus and Queen Christina of Sweden, 1622-1656, Leiden: Brill Editore, 1992, pp. 285-295, ISBN 90-04-09395-8, ISBN 9789004093959 (Google books)
- ↑ Henry Woodhead, Memoirs of Christina, Queen of Sweden, 2 vol., London: Hurst and Blackett, 1863, Vol. II, pp. 86-97 (Google books)
- ↑ Henry Woodhead, Memoirs of Christina, Queen of Sweden, 2 vol., London: Hurst and Blackett, 1863, Vol. II, pp. 89 (Google books)
- ↑ Memoirs of Christina, Queen of Sweden.
- ↑ Woodhead, Henry (10 July 1863). "Memoirs of Christina, Queen of Sweden: In 2 volumes. II". Hurst and Blackett. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- 1 2 Granlund 2004, p. 57.
- ↑ "The Diet also argued that Oxenstierna's policy of giving away crown lands, in the hope that they would yield more revenue when taxed than when farmed, benefited none but the aristocracy."
- ↑ Peter Englund: Sølvmasken (p. 61)
- ↑ Peter Englund: Sølvmasken (p. 64)
- ↑ Ragnar Sjöberg in Drottning Christina och hennes samtid, Lars Hökerbergs förlag, Stockholm, 1925, page 216
- ↑ Granlund 2004, p. 56-57.
- ↑ Granlund 2004, p. 58.
- ↑ "Antonio Pimentel De Prado y lo Bianco, Caballero De Santiago". Tercios.org. Archived from the original on 2012-03-20. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
- ↑ "HISTORY OF THE POPES.". Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ "Königin Christina von Schweden". www.koni.onlinehome.de. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Lanoye, D. (2001) Christina van Zweden : Koningin op het schaakbord Europa 1626 - 1689, p. 114.
- ↑ Garstein, Oskar (10 July 1992). "Rome and the Counter-Reformation in Scandinavia: The Age of Gustavus Adolphus and Queen Christina of Sweden, 1622-1656". BRILL. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Bernini, Domenico; Bernini, Gian Lorenzo; Mormando, Franco (10 July 2017). "The Life of Gian Lorenzo Bernini". Penn State Press. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ "Pope Alexander VII • Biographical Sketch by Montor". penelope.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Price, Curtis (9 November 1993). "The Early Baroque Era: From the late 16th century to the 1660s". Springer. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ "Exhibitions". Europeana Exhibitions. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Pope Alexander the Seventh and the College of Cardinals by John Bargrave, edited by James Craigie Robertson (reprint; 2009)
- ↑ D. Lanoye, p. 157.
- ↑ "Christina's letters". Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ D. Lanoye, p. 150.
- ↑ Memoirs of Mademoiselle de Montpensier. H. Colburn, 1848. Page 48.
- ↑ Scasciamacchia, S; Serrecchia, L; Giangrossi, L; Garofolo, G; Balestrucci, A; Sammartino, G; Fasanella, A. "Plague epidemic in the Kingdom of Naples, 1656-1658". Emerg Infect Dis. 18: 186–8. PMC 3310102 . PMID 22260781. doi:10.3201/eid1801.110597.
- ↑ Orr, Lyndon. "Famous Affinities of History: Queen Christina of Sweden and the Marquis Monaldeschi". Authorama. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
- ↑ "The Terrific Register: Or, Record of Crimes, Judgments, Providences, and Calamities ...". Sherwood, Jones, and Company. 10 July 2017. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ "Gribble, Francis (2013) The Court of Christina of Sweden, and the Later Adventures of the Queen in Exile, pp. 196-7.". Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Moffatt, John M. (10 July 2017). "Christina's revenge; or, The fate of Monaldeschi: with other poems". J.m.moffatt. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ "Gribble, Francis. (2013). pp. 196-7. The Court of Christina of Sweden, and the Later Adventures of the Queen in Exile.". Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Rabuck, by Mark W.; findingaids.feedback@yale.edu, File format: (1 December 1997). "Guide to the Italian Castle Archive". Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ "Christies - Page Not Found". www.christies.com. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ "Gribble, Francis. (2013). pp. 196-7. The Court of Christina of Sweden, and the Later Adventures of the Queen in Exile. London: Forgotten Books. (Original work published 1913)". Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Georgina Masson (1968) Queen Christina
- ↑ "DISPLAY AS IDENTITY: QUEEN CHRISTINA OF SWEDEN’S CONSTRUCTION OF A PUBLIC IMAGE THROUGH HER STANZA DEI QUADRI By KATHERINE AUNE (2012)" (PDF). Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ "TEIXEIRA - JewishEncyclopedia.com". www.jewishencyclopedia.com. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ "Archivum Historiae Pontificiae". Gregorian Biblical BookShop. 10 July 1992. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ "Cardinal Stories. Cardinal Decio Azzolino (the younger) – Popes and Papacy". popes-and-papacy.com. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ "The History of Christina: Queen of Sweden". G. Kearsly. 10 July 1766. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- 1 2 Elisabeth Aasen: Barokke damer
- ↑ "Queen Christina of Sweden (1626-1689), the Porta Magica and the Italian poets of the Golden- and Rosy Cross". www.levity.com. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Lewis, Brenda Ralph (1 December 2011). "Dark History of the Kings & Queens of Europe". Amber Books Ltd. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Gribble, Francis (1 June 2010). "The Court of Christina of Sweden, and the Later Adventures of the Queen in Exile". Wildside Press LLC. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Gribble, Francis (1 June 2010). "The Court of Christina of Sweden, and the Later Adventures of the Queen in Exile". Wildside Press LLC. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ "Nouvelles de la République Des Lettres". Prismi. 10 July 1992. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ F.F. Blok, C.S.M. Rademaker en J. de Vet, ‘Verdwaalde papieren van de familie Vossius uit de zeventiende eeuw’, in Lias 33 (2006), p. 50-107, de briefuitgave op p. 101-105.
- ↑ Queen Christina of Sweden as a Patron of Music in Rome in the Mid-Seventeenth Century by TESSA MURDOCH. In: The Music Room in Early Modern France and Italy. Published by British Academy, 2012.
- ↑ Spaces for Musical Performance in Seventeenth-Century Roman Residences by ARNALDO MORELLI, p. 315
- ↑ Early Music History: Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Music By Iain Fenlon
- ↑ "Note Storiche Sul Teatro Tordinona". Teatrotordinona.it. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
- ↑ "Antonio Vieira - Portuguese author and diplomat". Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Magill, Frank N. (13 September 2013). "The 17th and 18th Centuries: Dictionary of World Biography". Routledge. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Losleben, Katrin (2006) Music and gender: Kristina of Sweden (Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hamburg)
- ↑ Talbot, Michael (2009) Aspects of the secular cantata in late Baroque Italy (Ashgate Publishing, Ltd)
- ↑ "MuseData: Arcangelo Corelli". Wiki.ccarh.org. 2011-02-08. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
- ↑ Gordillo, Bernard (2011-03-07). "Queen Christina of Sweden". Indiana Public Media. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
- ↑ Winn, James Anderson (10 July 2017). "Queen Anne: Patroness of Arts". Oxford University Press. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Bianconi, Lorenzo (1987). Music in the seventeenth century. Cambridge: Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge. p. 87. ISBN 0-521-26290-9. Retrieved 2012-03-09.
- ↑ "Collection Highlight: Wright. Raggvaglio della Solenne... - RBSCP". www.lib.rochester.edu. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- 1 2 "Wasa, Kristina - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy". www.iep.utm.edu. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ "Kristina by August Strindberg". www.jsnyc.com. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Franckenstein, Christian Gottfried (10 July 1697). "Het leven en bedryf van Christina, koninginne van Sweeden, &c. sedert haar geboorte tot op des zelfs dood ...". by Boudewyn vander Aa. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- 1 2 "FRAGMENTS OF QUEEN KRISTINA’S BURIAL COSTUME,PRESERVATION AND DOCUMENTATION OF MATERIALS, TEXTILE TECHNIQUES AND DYESTUFFS." (PDF). Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Watson, 97
- ↑ Trevor-Roper, 112.
- ↑ Watson, 97-98
- ↑ Watson, 127-9
- ↑ Watson, 158. The other panels are now in London: two at the Dulwich Picture Gallery and the other National Gallery; National Gallery page on the division of the Raphael altarpiece.
- ↑ Penny, 255. It is clearly shown in one of the Tenier's views of Leopold's galleries. Leopold's collection is now part of the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
- ↑ Grate
- ↑ Watson, 160-161; not all these attributions would hold today.
- ↑ Watson, 120-121
- ↑ Grate; Watson, 110, 142, 152-162
- ↑ Watson,168-9; Odescalchi was the nephew of Pope Innocent XI, though in fact his money was inherited and his career greatly improved after his uncle's death.
- ↑ Watson, 170; Penny 463 has different numbers, saying Crozat initially saw over 400 paintings.
- ↑ Penny, 462-3, and Metropolitan
- ↑ Penny, 462
- ↑ Watson, 196-7
- ↑ Penny, 463
- ↑ "The Royal Drawings". The Oval Room 1784. Teylers Museum. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
- 1 2 Kandare, Camilla Eleonora (2009) Figuring a queen; Queen Christina of Sweden and the embodiment of sovereignty
- ↑ Quilliet, Bernard (4 June 2003). "Christine de Suède". Fayard. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ "Christina - queen of Sweden". Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Magill, Frank N. (13 September 2013). "The 17th and 18th Centuries: Dictionary of World Biography". Routledge. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Stolpe, Sven (1966) Christina of Sweden (Burns & Oates) p. 340
- ↑ Masson, Georgina (1968) Queen Christina (Secker & Warburg) p. 274
- ↑ Herman, Eleanor (2009) Mistress of the Vatican: The True Story of Olimpia Maidalchini: The Secret Female Pope (HarperCollins)
- ↑ Zimmermann, Christian von (10 July 2017). "Frauenbiographik: Lebensbeschreibungen und Porträts". Gunter Narr Verlag. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Quilliet, Bernard (4 June 2003). "Christine de Suède". Fayard. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Zapperi, Roberto (12 February 2013). "Alle Wege führen nach Rom: Die ewige Stadt und ihre Besucher". C.H.Beck. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Sarah Waters (1994) A Girton Girl on a Throne: Queen Christina and Versions of Lesbianism, 1906-1933 In: Feminist Review. No. 46, Sexualities: Challenge & Change (Spring, 1994), pp. 41-60
- ↑ Popp, Nathan Alan (2010) "Beneath the surface: the portraiture and visual rhetoric of Sweden's Queen Christina." - thesis, University of Iowa.
- ↑ Egherman, Mara (2009) Kristina of Sweden and the History of Reading in Europe: Crossing Religious and Other Borders(University of Iowa, Graduate School of Library and Information Science)
- ↑ "Review: Christina, Queen of Sweden by Veronica Buckley". the Guardian.
- ↑ Platen, Magnus von (1966). Queen Christina of Sweden: documents and studies. Nationalmuseum. p. 154.
- ↑ Garstein, Oskar (10 July 1992). "Rome and the Counter-Reformation in Scandinavia: The Age of Gustavus Adolphus and Queen Christina of Sweden, 1622-1656". BRILL. Retrieved 10 July 2017 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Hjortsjö, Carl-Herman (1966/7) "Queen Christina of Sweden: A Medical/Anthropological Investigation of Her Remains in Rome" p. 15-16
- ↑ González, Eduardo (2006). Cuba And the Tempest: Literature & Cinema in the Time of Diaspora. The University of North Carolina Press. p. 211. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
- ↑ Monte, Federico Del. "Garbo, Christina and Asperger". Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ↑ Cuhaj, George S., ed. (2009). Standard Catalog of World Gold Coins 1601–Present (6 ed.). Krause. pp. 490–491. ISBN 978-1-4402-0424-1.
- ↑ Friedberg, Arthur; Friedberg, Ira (2009). Gold Coins of the World: From Ancient Times to the Present (8 ed.). The Coin & Currency Institute. pp. 688–89. ISBN 978-0-87184-308-1.
- ↑ Kunker Rarities Auction, retrieved 1 March 2015
Bibliography
- Åkerman, S. (1991). Queen Christina of Sweden and her circle : the transformation of a seventeenth century philosophical libertine. New York: E.J. Brill. ISBN 90-04-09310-9.
- Buckley, Veronica (2004). Christina; Queen of Sweden. London: Harper Perennial. ISBN 1-84115-736-8.
- Clarke, Martin Lowther (1978) "The Making of a Queen: The Education of Christina of Sweden." In: History Today, Volume 28 Issue 4, April 1978
- Essen-Möller, E. (1937). Drottning Christina. En människostudieur läkaresynpunkt. Lund: C.W.K. Gleerup.
- Goldsmith, Margaret L. (1935). Christina of Sweden; a psychological biography. London: A. Barker Ltd.
- Granlund, Lis (2004). "Queen Hedwig Eleonora of Sweden: Dowager, Builder, and Collector". In Campbell Orr, Clarissa. Queenship in Europe 1660-1815: The Role of the Consort. Cambridge University Press. pp. 56–76. ISBN 0-521-81422-7.
- Grate, Pontus, "Vasa, House of. (5) Christina, Queen of Sweden" Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press, accessed July 22, 2017, subscription required
- Hjortsjö, Carl-Herman (1966). The Opening of Queen Christina's Sarcophagus in Rome. Stockholm: Norstedts.
- Hjortsjö, Carl-Herman (1966). Queen Christina of Sweden: A medical/anthropological investigation of her remains in Rome (Acta Universitatis Lundensis). Lund: C.W.K. Gleerup.
- Jonsson, L. Ann-Marie Nilsson & Greger Andersson (1994) Musiken i Sverige. Från forntiden till stormaktstidens slut 1720 ("Music in Sweden. From Antiquity to the end of the Great power era 1720") (in Swedish)
- Löfgren, Lars (2003) Svensk teater (Swedish Theatre) (in Swedish)
- Mender, Mona (1997). Extraordinary women in support of music. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. pp. 29–35. ISBN 0-8108-3278-X.
- Meyer, Carolyn (2003). Kristina, the Girl King: Sweden, 1638.
- Penny, Nicholas, National Gallery Catalogues (new series): The Sixteenth Century Italian Paintings, Volume II, Venice 1540-1600, 2008, National Gallery Publications Ltd, ISBN 1857099133
- Platen, Magnus von (1966). Christina of Sweden: Documents and Studies. Stockholm: National Museum.
- Stolpe, Sven (1996). Drottning Kristina. Stockholm: Aldus/Bonnier.
- Torrione, Margarita (2011), Alejandro, genio ardiente. El manuscrito de Cristina de Suecia sobre la vida y hechos de Alejandro Magno, Madrid, Editorial Antonio Machado (212 p., color ill.) ISBN 978-84-7774-257-9.
- Trevor-Roper, Hugh; Princes and Artists, Patronage and Ideology at Four Habsburg Courts 1517-1633, Thames & Hudson, London, 1976
- Turner, Nicholas, Federico Barocci, 2000, Vilo
- Watson, Peter; Wisdom and Strength, the Biography of a Renaissance Masterpiece, Hutchinson, 1990, ISBN 009174637X
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Christina of Sweden". Encyclopædia Britannica. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 291–292.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Christina of Sweden. |
Wikisource has the text of a 1905 New International Encyclopedia article about Christina, Queen of Sweden. |
- "Kristina Wasa". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- Project presentation Queen Christina of Sweden, the European
- Encyclopædia Britannica
- "Queen Christina of Sweden". About: Women's History. Retrieved 2007-01-20.
- Coins of Sweden by David Ruckser
- Queen Christina of Sweden Windweaver
- "Christina, queen of Sweden". The American Cyclopædia. 1879.
Christina Born: 8 December 1626 Died: 19 April 1689 | ||
Regnal titles | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Gustav II Adolf |
Queen of Sweden 1632–1654 |
Succeeded by Charles X Gustav |
New title | Duchess of Bremen and Verden 1648–1654 |