María Calderón

María Calderón
Born María Inés Calderón
1611
Madrid, Spain
Died 1646 (aged 3435)
Guadalajara, Spain
Other names La Calderona
Marizápalos
Occupation Actress
Partner(s) Philip IV of Spain
Children John of Austria the Younger

María Inés Calderón (1611, Madrid 1646, Guadalajara, Spain) also known as La Calderona and Marizápalos, was a Spanish actress. She is also known as a royal mistress and as the mother of Philip IV's only recognized natural son, John of Austria the Younger (in Spanish, Juan José de Austria).

Biography

María Calderón attracted the attention of the monarch upon her debut at the theatre de Corral de la Cruz in Madrid in 1627. She was at the time involved in a relationship with Ramiro Pérez de Guzmán, Duke of Medina de las Torres, widower of the daughter of Gaspar de Guzmán y Pimentel. The King forced her to quit her career and installed her in a palace in Madrid. Upon the birth of her son in 1629, she lost the custody of him despite her protests. Her relationship to the king ended the same year. There were rumors at the time that her son was fathered by Ramiro Pérez de Guzmán.

In March 1642, María Calderón was forced to become a nun against her will. She retired to the monastery of San Juan Bautista of Valfermoso of the Nuns, in the Province of Guadalajara in the Utande Valley. She became abbess in 1643.[1]

Legacy

The Sierra Calderona (Valencian: Serra Calderona) range at the Eastern end of the Iberian System was formerly known as Monts de Porta Coeli, after the Carthusian Monastery of Porta Coeli located in the mountains. The present-day name Calderona originated in the 17th century when María Calderón "La Calderona", hid from King Felipe IV in these mountains among the highwaymen.[2]

In music

The romanca "Marizapalos" by Gaspar Sanz, who taught the king’s illegitimate by Maria, tells the risque story of the niece of a priest who neglecting her studies picks flowers and accepts the love of a young man.

References

  1. Madame D'Aulnoy (1930). Travels Into Spain. Oxford: OxfordCurzon, reprint of 1691.
  2. Sierra Calderona Tourism
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