(Redirected from Torlonia)The 'princes Torlonia' are a
Roman family, with origins in a huge fortune gained during the
18th and
19th centuries by its administration of the finances of the
Vatican.
The first influential member of the Torlonia family was
Marino Torlonia (Tourlonias) (
Augerolles 1725 – Rome
March 21,
1785), a very rich businessman and banker.
He was the father of
Giovanni Torlonia, who in return for his administration of the Vatican finances, with the blessing of
Pope Pius VI was created in
1794 duke of Bracciano and
count of Pisciarelli. in
1803 Pius VII made him
marques of Romavecchia e Turrita and the first
prince of Civitella Cesi (Princeps Romanus). He was made, among other titles, a
Roman Patrician in
1809, with confirmation from the Pope on
January 19 1813) and the
duke of Poli e Guadagnolo in
1820. He was the builder of the
Villa Torlonia in Rome, among other Torlonia villas.
In
1907, his great-grandson, Marino Torlonia succeeded to the title as 4th prínce of Civitella-Cesi, a title he inherited from his older brother, Augusto, in 1926. The title had been passed to Augusto from their paternal great-uncle, Alessandro, younger brother of Augusto's and Marino's grandfather, Giulio. Marino married the rich and stylish American blueblood Mary Elsie Moore (
New York October 22 1889 – Rome
December 21,
1941) and they were the parents of
Don Alessandro Torlonia, 5th Prince di Civitella-Cesi (Rome
February 7,
1911 – Rome
April 11 1986)— who married the
Infante Beatriz of
Spain, the daughter of
King Alfonso XIII— and also of
Princess Donna Marina Torlonia di Civitella-Cesi, wife of American tennis player
Francis Xavier Shields and grandmother of the well-known American actress
Brooke Shields.
In Rome, the outstanding Torlonia properties are Palazzo Torlonia in Via Condotti, near
Piazza di Spagna, Palazzo Torlonia in
Via della Conciliazione (
rione of
Borgo), and the beautiful gardens of the Villa Torlonia, now part of Rome's public park system.
The Torlonia family is one of the few Italian aristocratic families to have survived the reconstruction of the
Papal Court in 1969 by the
motu proprio ''
Pontificalis Domus''. Unlike most members of the Italian
aristocracy, the Torlonians were 18th-century converts from
Judaism.
Today the only hereditary honours still in use at the Vatican are that of hereditary
Prince Assistants to the Papal Throne. This honour is today held by
Don Alessandro Torlonia, 5th Prince di Civitella-Cessi, and Prince Don Marcantonio Colonna, Prince and Duke of Paliano. The
Torlonia family was appointed in
1958 (its title dates from
1854 also), in succession to the Prince
Orsini, who had been
Prince Assistant from circa
1735 to 1958.
Bibliography
★ : Henri Ponchon, ''l'Incroyable Saga des Torlonia : des monts du Forez aux palais romains''. –
Olliergues (Puy-de-Dôme) : les Éditions de la Montmarie,
2005. – 349 pages, 24 cm. – ISBN 2-915841-08-X.
External links
★
Torlonia genealogy
★
Almanach de la Cour - The Hereditary Officers of the Papal Court