Juliane Giovane

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
portrait de Juliane Giovani di Girasole (1766-1805) duchesse née Baronne de Mudersbach

Juliane Giovane (21 December 1766, in

lady in waiting for Queen Maria Caroline of Naples
.

Life

She married Duke Nicola Giovene di Girasole on 18 April 1786 and they had two children. Their son Carlo was born on 30 April 1787, Queen Maria Caroline was his godmother, their daughter Elisabetta died in childhood.[1]

In 1787, she met

Star Cross Order. On 16 January 1794, Frederick William II of Prussia announced she was to be included in the Prussian Academy of Sciences, becoming the second female member. She was also an honorary member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
.

From 1800 to 1804 she lived in Vienna with

Brunszvik
family where she died in 1805.


References

  1. ^ de Angelis, Francesco (1833). Storia del Regno di Napoli sotto la dinastia Borbonica ... del cavalier ... Band VII, Neapel: G. Mosino. p. 150.
  2. ^ "Personal contacts: Selected members of the Berlin Academy of Sciences with whom Goethe had personal contact". Academy Library of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  3. ^ Johann Christian Friedrich Harless: Die Verdienste der Frauen um Naturwissenschaft: Gesundheits und Heilkunde ..., Van den Hoeck-Ruprecht, Göttingen 1830, S. 216
  4. ^ Benedetto Croce: La Duchessa Giovane. In: Rassegna Pugliese. 30. September 1887, S. 275f Rassegna Pugliese
  5. ^ Angabe bei Reitberger, S. 129