Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
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Phillipps, Evelyn March; Bolton, Arthur T. [Editor]
The gardens of Italy — London: Offices of Country Life Ltd., 1919

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.68272#0124
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THE GARDENS OF ITALY.

CHAPTER X.

VILLA PAMPHILJ DORIA, ROME.

IT makes one’s hair stand on end,” says Edmond About in his Rome Contemporaine, “ to
read the figures of the dowries with which the Jesuit decision, during the reign of
Innocent X, permitted the Pope to enrich the various members of his House.” It was
laid down as being his privilege that he might assure the future of his family by gifts of
his savings from the Holy See. According to this judgment, the pontiff, without being considered
over-lavish, might spend four hundred thousand francs a year, and might give a dowry of nine
hundred thousand francs to each of his nieces. The Pope, therefore, set about founding the
Pamphilj family, and in this laudable work he was ably assisted by his sister-in-law, Olimpia
Pamphilj, one of those strange personalities which stands out from the past in a vignette and
creates an impression fresh and still vivid even after the lapse of more than two hundred years.
Olimpia was born in 1594 at Viterbo ; her father, Andrea Maidalchini, was a man of no
particular importance, and his daughter was at first destined for a convent, but though taken
there as a child, she had the strength of mind to resist violently, and finding she could not make
an impression in any other way, she accused her confessors of making love to her, and thus early
acquired the character of a dangerous inmate of whom the nuns were only too thankful to be


116.—st. peter’s from the carriage drive.
 
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