Princess Joanna of Courland

Johanna Katharina von Biron, Princess of Courland and Duchess of Acerenza (24 June 1783 – 11 April 1876) was a German princess from the ruling family of Courland and Semigallia (today part of Latvia) and a Duchess of Acerenza as the third daughter of Peter von Biron and Dorothea von Medem and the wife of Prince Francis Pignatelli Belmonte, Duke of Acerenza, she was mainly known for a scandalous relationship with Arnoldi, a musician from Italy.

Joanna Biron
Duchess of Acerenza
Johanna of Courland by
Moritz Michael Daffinger, c. 1820
Born(1783-06-24)24 June 1783
Mitau, Duchy of Courland and Semigallia
Died11 April 1876(1876-04-11) (aged 92)
Löbichau, Thuringia, German Empire
Burial
Biron Mausoleum, Evangelical Church of Grace, Sagan, German Empire (modern-day Żagań, Poland)
Spouse
Prince Francis Pignatelli Belmonte, Duke of Acerenza
(m. 1801; sep. 1806)
IssueFrederick von Piattoli (illegitimate)
Names
Joanna Katharina
HouseBiron
FatherPeter von Biron
MotherDorothea von Medem

Life edit

Early life edit

Joanna was born to the last Duke of Courland and Semigallia, Peter von Biron and his wife Dorothea von Medem. She spent her childhood and youth in the palace in Żagań, which was the center of the Biron estate in Silesia, known as the Duchy of Żagań. Joanna and her three sisters: Wilhelmine, Pauline and Dorothea were raised without the participation of their parents, under the care of governesses and servants.[citation needed]

Scandalous relationship edit

At the age of 16, she fell in love with an Italian, Arnoldi, who was a musician performing in the prince's theater. According to popular opinion, the relationship between the musician and the duchess was a misalliance, so the young couple made an unsuccessful attempt to escape to America. After the "disgrace" committed by his daughter, her father, Peter Biron left for Prague, and at the end of his life (died in January 1800) disinherited her. Joanna was captured and, on her father's order, handed over to the care of Count Wratislaw, the chief of police in Prague. Arnoldi managed to escape, but the letters he sent to Joanna were intercepted by the count. Impersonating the young princess, he arranged a meeting with the Italian, during which he was captured and soon murdered.[1]

After Arnoldi's death, their son Frederick (Fritz) von Piattoli was born (19 September 1800, Prague – 6 April 1849, Gödöllő Palace, Hungary[2]), who was raised apart from his mother due to his father's origins. [3]

Marriage edit

After being disinherited, the princess found shelter with the Neapolitan Queen Maria Carolina, who on 18 March 1801 in Dresden married her to an Italian from Naples, Francis Pignatelli Belmonte d'Acerenza (13 February 1766 – 20 December 1827). This marriage did not stand the test of time and ended in separation in 1806.[4]

Later life edit

In 1806, Joanna received the Courland Palace in Dresden, and after her mother's death (1821), she inherited the Löbichau estate in the Duchy of Saxe-Altenburg.

She spent a lot her her later life living with her sister, Princess Pauline, Duchess of Sagan (who was also separated from her husband) lived together in Vienna. [5] Her closest friends were Alfred I of Windisch-Graetz, duke Wallmoden, Fürstin Schwarzenberg and Heinrich Laube. As was usual at that time, the duchess had a "Salon" every other day. [6] After her sister Pauline died, she moved to Löbichau to live in the estate she inherited off her mother.[citation needed]

She died at the age of 92 in Löbichau, and her body was finally laid to rest in the grave chapel of the Church of Grace in Żagań, in the Biron mausoleum where the remaining Protestant members of the Biron family, including her father Peter, were buried.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Drei Sommer in Löbichau. Emilie von Binzer. 1877. p. 96.
  2. ^ Drei Sommer in Löbichau. Emilie von Binzer. 1877. p. 97.
  3. ^ Drei Sommer in Löbichau. Emilie von Binzer. 1877. p. 97.
  4. ^ Drei Sommer in Löbichau. Emilie von Binzer. 1877. p. 42.
  5. ^ "www.talleyrand.org". talleyrand.org. Archived from the original on 14 April 2017..
  6. ^ Drei Sommer in Löbichau. Emilie von Binzer. 1877. p.60
  7. ^ Barbara Idzikowska (2014). "Pamiątkowy kufel Doroty Talleyrand-Perigord i kolekcja numizmatyczna żagańskich Bironów". Wiadomości Numizmatyczne. LVIII: 143-210.

Literature edit

  • Katarzyna Adamek, Marian Ryszard Świątek: Żagań known and unknown. Historical guide to the city and surrounding area, Żagań
  • Żagań portraits, Joanna Katarzyna Biron, Zbigniew Janicki, "Goniec Żagański", Żagań, March 1999
  • Hugo Weczerka (Hg.): Handbuch der historischen Stätten Schlesien, Stuttgart 1977