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Prince Januarius, Count of Caltagirone

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Name
  
Prince Count


House
  
House of Bourbon

Born
  
28 February 1857Caserta Palace, Caserta, Two Sicilies (
1857-02-28
)

Burial
  
Basilica of Santa Chiara, Naples

Mother
  
Maria Theresa of Austria

Died
  
August 13, 1867, Albano Laziale, Italy

Parents
  
Maria Theresa of Austria, Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies

Grandparents
  
Archduke Charles, Duke of Teschen

Great-grandparents
  
Charles IV of Spain, Maria Luisa of Parma

Similar People
  
Ferdinand II of the Two Sicili, Maria Theresa of Austria, Maria Cristina of Savoy, Prince Gaetan - Count of, Princess Maria Annuncia

Prince Januarius Maria Immaculata Louis of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, Count of Caltagirone (Full Italian name: Gennaro Maria Immacolata Luigi, Principe di Borbone delle Due Sicilie, Conte di Caltagirone) (28 February 1857 – 13 August 1867) was the twelfth and youngest child of Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies and his wife Maria Theresa of Austria. Januarius was a member of the House of Bourbon-Two Sicilies. The prince was named for Saint Januarius (Italian: San Gennaro), patron saint of Naples.

Life

Januarius was born in the Caserta Palace, two years before the death of his father, Ferdinand II, the penultimate King of the Two Sicilies. At the time of the prince's birth, Ferdinand was already ill and too weak to play with his youngest son as he had done with his previous eleven children. The young prince would never know of the carefree experience of growing up in the opulence of the Neapolitan court.

In 1860, the Royal Family of the Two Sicilies was driven from Naples and from the kingdom by Giuseppe Garibaldi and his Expedition of the Thousand. Garibaldi and his troops deprived Januarius and his family of their properties and wealth forcing the family and their descendants into a financially strained and nomadic existence. Pope Pius IX offered the family a residence at Quirinal Palace in Rome as gratitude for their loyalty.

In 1867, a cholera epidemic forced the population, or at least those who could, to leave the capital. Januarius's mother, Maria Theresa, took the children who still lived with her at Quirinal Palace and moved them over the Alban Hills to Albano Laziale. Despite his mother's efforts to spare her children from illness, the small Januarius contracted cholera. Januarius died almost immediately. Maria Theresa was also infected and died after atrocious suffering, having refused treatment from a doctor whom she considered to be "liberal."

References

Prince Januarius, Count of Caltagirone Wikipedia


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