Genoveva de Lima Mayer Ulrich (1886 – 1963), who used Veva de Lima (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈvɛvɐ ðɨ ˈlimɐ]) as her pen name, was a Portuguese writer, socialite and eccentric, who was known for hosting literary salons in the Portuguese capital, Lisbon.

Veva de Lima
Born
Genoveva de Lima Mayer

(1886-09-03)3 September 1886
Died8 July 1963(1963-07-08) (aged 76)
Lisbon, Portugal
CitizenshipPortuguese
Occupation(s)writer, socialite
Known forEccentric host of literary salons in Lisbon
SpouseRui Enes Ulrich
Children2 (including Maria Ulrich)
Parent(s)Carlos de Lima Mayer
Amélia da Veiga Araújo
Signature

Early life edit

Lima was born in Lapa in Lisbon on 3 September 1886. She was the daughter of Amélia da Veiga Araújo and Carlos de Lima Mayer, a member of Life's Vanquished (Vencidos da Vida), an informal group of intellectuals in Lisbon in the last three decades of the 19th century. She had one brother. Lima married Rui Enes Ulrich, an academic at the University of Coimbra, director of the Bank of Portugal and businessman who would become Portugal's ambassador to London on two occasions. They had one daughter, the educationalist Maria Ulrich, and a son who committed suicide. Rui Ulrich was a monarchist and, after the overthrow of the Portuguese monarchy in 1910, he decided to leave Portugal, taking his family to live in Biarritz in France. In 1923 – 24, the couple visited Mozambique, which she wrote about in her book D'Aquem & D'Alem-Mar.[1][2][3][4]

A socialite edit

 
Veva de Lima photographed in court dress in London, 1933

While they were away, the couple's home on Rua Silva de Carvalho in the Amoreiras area of Lisbon, which was formally known as the Ulrich Palace, was rented out. On their return it became better known as the Casa Veva de Lima (Veva de Lima House), as it was where she hosted her salons, receiving Lisbon's intellectual and social elite. Her evenings were noted for her excessive displays, some of which would now be considered totally unacceptable, such as her practice of smearing the servants' faces in black, dressing them in leopard loincloths, and forming a guard of honour holding torches for the arriving guests. On another occasion, she borrowed camels from a visiting circus.[1][3][4][5]

Lima was very eccentric. She kept a leopard that was allowed to roam freely around the house and garden and which she is said to have walked on a leash through the centre of Lisbon. At the same time, she was politically involved. She opposed fascism, announced on the radio that she was an anglophile at a time when Portugal was trying hard to be neutral, and took advantage of the position of her husband to tease Portugal's dictator, António de Oliveira Salazar, sending him an open invitation to visit the Ulrich house, which he declined. She organized events to raise funds for the underprivileged and supported the arts.[1][5][6]

During her time in London, she came to the notice of Princess Elizabeth, later Queen Elizabeth II. The Queen is said to have asked Salazar to extend Ulrich's second term as ambassador, so that the couple could represent Portugal at her coronation in June 1953.[1]

Publications edit

  • O único Vencido da Vida que também o foi da morte. Livraria Luso-Espanhola
  • D'Aquem & D'Alem-Mar - Chronicas de Viagem. 1928. Imprensa Libanio da Silva, Lisbon.
  • O último lampadário. Self published. c. 1917
  • Fantaisie de Printemps. Pièce en Deux Actes. 1916. Imprensa Libanio da Silva.

In popular literature edit

  • Veva is an historical novel by Joana Leitão de Barros.[7]

Death edit

Lima was said to have "aged prematurely" and she gradually withdrew from society. She died in Lisbon on 8 July 1963.[8]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "A casa excecional da bela escritora medíocre". Expresso. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  2. ^ "Genoveva de Lima Mayer". Geni. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Genoveva de Lima Mayer Ulrich, O último lampadário, Edição do autor, Lisboa, s/d [ca. 1917]". Livraria Trindade. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  4. ^ a b "Veva de Lima". Modernismo. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  5. ^ a b ""Veva", de Joana Leitão de Barros, conta a história da intelectual que desafiou Salazar e os costumes dos anos 20". Comunidade Cultura e Arte. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
  6. ^ "Veva". LIDER. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
  7. ^ Barros, Joana Leitão de (2022). Veva : a aristócrata intelectual e excêntrica que desafiou Salazar e os costumes da sua época (1 ed.). Lisbon: Oficina do Livro. ISBN 9789896614201.
  8. ^ "Veva de Lima I Uma Poetisa Esquecida". Moda e moda. Retrieved 4 September 2022.