HISTORY OF THE ROYAL
ILLUSTRIUOS ORDER OF ST. JANUARIUS
© Guy Stair Sainty
The founder of the Order of Saint Januarius,
Charles VII, King of the Two Sicilies (from 1734-1759,
died 1788), was the first reigning Monarch to reside
in this kingdom since 1502. Of unusual intelligence
and benevolent disposition, Charles embarked on a series
of reforms, to the considerable benefit of the people
of his new dominions, who no longer endured the rule
of a Viceroy representing a distant Sovereign. Since
the kingdoms were surrounded on three sides by the sea
and were bordered on the fourth by the Papal States,
considered by a loyal Catholic Monarch to be inviolable,
there was no room for further expansion. Hence, the
king was able to concentrate his energies on beautifying
his capital, paying off the National Debt (accomplished
in a particularly short time) and reducing taxation.
Charles's Habsburg predecessors had
used the resources of the Two Sicilies to subsidize
their armies. The young King, in contrast, put all his
energies into firmly establishing his authority, building
the Palace of Caserta (the largest in Europe after Versailles),
founding the Capodimonte porcelain factory (with the
assistance of specialists from Meissen brought to Naples
by his Queen) and sponsoring the excavations at Herculaneum
and Pompeii. The latter made Naples, already the largest
European city after Paris, with a population of between
four and five hundred thousand, the most popular tourist
attraction in Europe and brought considerable numbers
of free-spending foreign visitors. The Royal Palace
at Portici, constructed at the foot of Mount Vesuvius
and directly above Herculaneum, contained the first
public archaeological museum and the Royal Family were
frequent visitors to the excavations. The construction
of the San Carlo theater gave Naples one of the finest
opera houses in Europe, and the establishment of the
Reale Albergo dei Poveri, the first government-sponsored
home for the underprivileged.
Charles, as a young Monarch, was considerably
influenced by his father Philip V, King of Spain. Philip
had proved a highly capable ruler, not only bringing
peace to his Kingdom but in ultimately re-establishing
Spanish influence in Italy. The interchange between
the two Kingdoms remained a constant feature of international
relations and insured the passage of the three Family
Pacts of the eighteenth century between Spain, France
and the Two Sicilies in 1733, 1743 and 1761. It is hardly
surprising that the young King Charles VII of the Two
Sicilies looked to his father for advice in administering
the affairs of his Kingdom. Spanish forces had placed
him on the Neapolitan Throne and he was surrounded by
Spanish advisers, or men whose dislike of the Habsburg
Viceroys administering their state on behalf of an absentee
Sovereign, had led them to support the Spanish invasion
and the accession of Charles as their King.
Italian writers, however, have ignored
the influence of King Philip and Charles's extensive
correspondence with his father, and the names of those
knights of Saint Januarius whose nominations were made
at the instigation of King Philip. The late Don Achille
Di Lorenzo, author of a 1963 partial Roll of the Order,
not only omitted these names but in a subsequent publication
stated that he could not consider them legal since,
in his view, a foreign sovereign could not intervene
in the affairs of another Kingdom. The reality is, however,
that the correspondence between Charles and Philip survives
in the Spanish archives and demonstrates the contrary.
We learn from this that various nominations to the Order
were made at King Philip's instigation and they are
amply documented. Furthermore, King Philip himself invested
many of these knights with their collars personally,
at his court in Madrid, acting with the consent of his
son, King Charles.
Charles first proposed the idea of
founding a new Order of Chivalry to his father soon
after the successful invasion of Naples in 1735. In
a letter from Philip’s Minister, the Count of
Santisteban, of 15 June 1735, the new King was advised
to wait until after his formal investiture with the
Crown of the two Kingdoms. The following month Santisteban
informed King Philip (6 July 1735) that King Charles
intended to go ahead with the foundation of this new
Order; appropriately, it was to be named for the patron
Saint of his capital, the Bishop-Martyr Januarius.[1].
The older Monarch approved the idea but recommended
that his son send him the projected constitution and
statutes before publication. On 30 August 1735 Santisteban
wrote to King Philip again, informing him that King
Charles had decided it should have sixty knights and
suggesting the names of the first nineteen members.
His father proposed that he should wait for a suitable
occasion, in a reply of 29 October, but that occasion
did not arise for another three years.
Charles' plans were further advanced
by mid-1737 and on 21 June 1737 King Philip wrote to
him once again expressing approval of the idea. Charles
had already suggested the formation of a class of Magnates
of the Kingdom, paralleling the Spanish Grandeeship,
an idea that was supported by King Philip (letter of
23 December 1736), who later suggested the names of
candidates.[2]
This project was ultimately abandoned because of disagreements
among the Two Sicilies nobility, and the problems this
project seemed to foment encouraged Charles to return
to the concept of founding a new Order. In mid-1738
his marriage to Maria Amalia Walburga, eldest surviving
daughter of Friedrich August II, Elector of Saxony (August
III, King of Poland), proved to be the opportunity he
needed.[3]
Little is known of Saint Januarius
beyond the fact that he was Bishop of Benevento and
was martyred at Pozzuoli with six companions, circa
305. As a finger was cut off during the martyrdom a
phial of blood was obtained, which is preserved in the
Cathedral of Naples. This relic is exposed to the public
on various occasions during the year, when, after an
interval of time it liquefies; if it fails to do so
then it is considered a portent of ill-fortune for the
city. This phenomenon, which has been recorded for the
past five hundred years, has been carefully observed
and no satisfactory rational explanation has been produced
to discount the miraculous nature of the liquefaction.
Saint Januarius, who is often invoked against eruptions
of Vesuvius, is portrayed on the badge of the Order
holding a book with two phials of blood and the motto
"In Sanguine Foedus".
The comparatively late foundation date
of this institution makes it the last great dynastic
Order to be constituted as a Chivalric fraternity rather
than a National Merit Order. The Scottish Order of the
Thistle had been created from a mythical past by James
II in 1687 and its Sovereignty assumed by his successors,
while the Russian Emperor had founded his Order of Saint
Andrew just forty years earlier.[4]
In 1701 the King of Prussia had founded the Order of
the Black Eagle to mark his own elevation to Kingly
rank. With the decision to announce the formation of
the Order to coincide with his marriage, a firm date
was set for July 1738. King Charles's Ambassador, the
Count of Santisteban informed King Philip that the first
list of members included some forty-six names, of whom
thirty nine had already been approved by the Spanish
King in earlier correspondence.[5]
The Order's Statutes and foundation
both date to 3 July 1738 and the first promotions to
the Order were made three days later. These Statutes
were published in Italian and Spanish and limited membership
of the Order to sixty Roman Catholic noblemen, although
non-Catholics have been admitted by successive Grand
Masters in exceptional cases and the total complement
of the Order has exceeded sixty on several occasions.
As an Order of the Collar and the highest Order of the
Kingdom, it was intended to equal in rank that of the
Golden Fleece, awarded by his father in Spain, and that
of the Holy Spirit, given by his cousin in France. Indeed
it was the frequent practice for the Princes of each
branch of the House to receive all three Orders.
As they had discussed in their correspondence,
King Charles reserved for his father, Philip V, King
of Spain, the right to appoint up to six Knights, emphasizing
the unity of the House of Bourbon. Benedict XIV confirmed
the foundation of the Order by a Papal Bull of 30 May
1741, and second Bull of 27 July of the same year; the
Papal authority given to its foundation served to protect
it from the purported abolition by the government of
Victor Emmanuel II of Savoy in 1860.
In a letter of 26 July 1738, King Philip
wrote to his son nominating for election six noblemen,
the Duke of Mirandola, the Duke of Medinaceli, the Duke
of Gandia, the Count of Montijio, the Marquess de San
Juan de Piedras Albas, and Marquess Scotti. In a further
letter of 28 July he asked his son to accord the Collar
of Saint Januarius to the Duke of Bournonville, the
Prince of Masserano, the Marquess of Bedmar and the
Duke of Atrisco. Then, in a separate communication on
the same day he informed his son that he had accorded
the Spanish Knights of the Order the title of Excellency
since, although most of the Spanish Knights were already
so entitled as Grandees of the1st Class, the Marquess
of San Juan de Piedras Alta was not hitherto an “Excellency”.[6]
On the first promotion of the Order,
the King himself dispensed all his nominees from the
need to submit any formal proofs of nobility (although
all of them would have been able to make such proofs,
had it been required), and the statutes provided that
such dispensations could be given in the future.[7]
It has been alleged that an informal distinction (in
that such differentiation was not prescribed in the
Statutes and there was no difference in the badge or
regalia) existed between Knights of Justice who had
to prove four quarterings, and Knights of Grace, who
were only required to prove two paternal quarters, but
these differences were not consistently adhered to and
the award of the Order in any case conferred hereditary
nobility.[8]
The title of "Royal" was accorded the Order
in its first statutes but the style of "Illustrious"
(Insigne) was never formally attributed to it, appearing
for the first time in the Gaceta de Madrid of October
6th 1749 and thenceforth accompanying the designation
Royal in official acts with increasing regularity.
These privileges reciprocated those
extended to knights of the Golden Fleece in the Two
Sicilies and, just as King Charles was delegated by
his father to invest any Neapolitan or Sicilian Knights
with the Collar of the Spanish Order, so Charles commissioned
his father to invest the Spanish Knights of Saint Januarius
on his behalf (letter from King Charles 20 August 1738).
When the King was unavailable, investiture could be
made by some other person so authorized as happened
with the Viceroy of Mexico the Duke of La Conquista
(invested by a Bishop, not identified, in 1739). A further
nomination of a Spanish Knight by Philip followed a
request for the Order from the Marquess of Bay, on the
grounds of his services in Italy (24 August 1738) but
this nomination was held over by King Charles for a
later occasion (letter from His Sicilian Majesty, 21
October 1738).[9]
The special status of this Order as
a quasi-religious military institution was emphasized
by the division of the Knights, in a Royal Decree of
September 21st 1738, into novice and professed Knights;
although this distinction was later dispensed with there
were differences in the form of reception and the costumes
of these two categories. The professed Knights were
required to make certain promises in addition to proving
their lineage, including a profession of the Catholic
faith, a promise of loyalty to the Grand Master, an
undertaking to keep the peace between their confreres
and a promise to attend Mass on certain days. There
were also special provisions regarding the reception
and investiture of ecclesiastical members laid out in
a supplement to the Statutes.[10]
[5]
Other Spanish nominees proposed by
King Philip were Don Sebastian de la Quadra (1738),[11]
the Duke of Solferino (1739),[12]
while the Marques de Salas di Rivera,[13]
don José Miranda[14]
and don José de Diesbach y Cartellas (all Spaniards)
were nominated directly by King Charles.[15]
Spanish records disclose further solicitations to King
Philip for his support for nominations to Saint Januarius,
but these were not necessarily successful, some candidates
making several requests without ever being nominated.
The records include requests from the following: Brigadier
don Pedro Gasca (Colonel of the Farnese Regiment, requested
the Collar from Gaeta where he was stationed 1 November
1738),[16]
the Marquess of Santa Cruz de Mudela (20 October and
2 December 1738),[17]
the Count of Puertollano (1739),[18]
the Marquess of Valdecarzana (1739 and 1746),[19]
the Duke of Veragua and Berwick (1739),[20]
the Count of Mahony (1740),[21]
the Marquess of Guadalcázar (1740 and 1745),[22]
the Count of Jauche (asking for the place of the deceased
Marques de Bay, 30 September 1741),[23]
the Count of Valhermoso (1746),[24]
Don Fadrique de Bernuy, Marquess of Benameji, and the
Marshal of Alcalá del Valle (no date).[25]
These solicitations demonstrate the ongoing practice
of the Spanish King nominating members, or being perceived
by Spanish nobles as the person to whom requests for
nomination should be addressed, even into the reign
of Ferdinand VI.
King Charles VII inherited the Spanish
Crown as King Charles III on August 10th 1759. By article
II of the Treaty of Naples of October 3rd of that year,
he was required to establish the Infante Don Ferdinand,
his second son (third-born since the exclusion of the
eldest who was severely retarded) as King of the Two
Sicilies. The new Sovereign received the Two Sicilies
Crown, as Ferdinand IV of Naples and III of Sicily,
by the Pragmatic Decree of October 6, 1759. This ordained
that the succession should pass by male primogeniture
among the descendants of King Ferdinand, and failing
them of his younger brothers, unless the Crown of Spain
was united with the Sovereignty of the Two Sicilies,
in which case the latter had to be ceded to a son, grandson
or great-grandson of the prince who so combined both
successions. [2-6]
In the event of the male heirs of King Charles III becoming
extinct, the Two Sicilies Crown would pass to the nearest
female heiress of the last King.
The first Almanach of the Kingdom following
Charles' departure named Ferdinand as the Grand Master
of Saint Januarius but the dowager Queen of Spain (Elisabeth
Farnese) immediately wrote to Tanucci pointing out that
this was an error. This letter was followed by one from
the King, dated September 30th 1760, in which he wrote
to his former Minister that "....concerning the
Order of Saint Januarius, I did not believe it opportune
to renounce this Order in favor of my son the King when
I left and I have reserved it for me as Founder, and
such renunciation will be made when he has attained
his majority". [2-7]
The Marquess of Villarreal de Alava
has also located a document in the same archives, demonstrating
that King Charles continued to make appointments after
leaving Naples. The following letter, dated December
17th 1765 and directed to Marchese Tanucci, stated:
"Among the honors that the King Our Lord will deign
to concede on the occasion of the marriage of the Prince
our Lord, will figure the Cordons of the Royal Order
of Saint Januarius to the Cardinal Archbishop of Seville,
to the Prince of Butera, to the Duke of Bournonville,
Grandee of Spain, Lieutenant- General of the Royal Armies,
Captain of the Flemish Company of the Bodyguard; to
the Prince of Belmonte Pignatelli, to the Prince of
Campofranco, to the Count of Fuenclara, Grandee of Spain,
Lieutenant-General of the Army, Maggiordomo Maggiore
of the Infante Don Luis; to the Marquess of Squillace,
[and] to the Duke of Granada de Ega, Grandee of Spain,
Lieutenant-General of the Royal Armies. For the presentation
of the Collars of the Knights that are living in Naples,
H.M. delegates the King, His beloved Son, and for those
who are living in Sicily, the King delegates the Viceroy
of Sicily...". [2-8]
In a letter from Marchese Tanucci to
King Charles III, dated August 12th 1766, the Prime
Minister of the Two Sicilies wrote to his former master
to request that he make some disposition concerning
the Grand Magistery of the Order of Saint Januarius.
He suggested that if the King of Spain wished to retain
the Grand Magistery, as founder of the Order, during
his lifetime, then he should concede the title of Grand
Master Governor of the Order to his son, the King of
the Two Sicilies, since the majority of knights were
Neapolitans and Sicilians. [2-9]
Until recently no document was thought to have survived
showing when the King actually made this resignation,
causing some historians speculatively to date it to
1764; however, it seems that Tanucci's 1765 letter decided
King Charles to resign the Grand Magistery, which he
did on December 9th 1766. [2-10]
King Ferdinand, who was listed in the Royal Calendar
of 1766 as a Knight of the Order with his father as
Grand Master, is not listed as the latter until 1768
and did not appoint any Knights until May 13th 1768
when he made several admissions to celebrate his marriage
to the Archduchess Maria-Carolina.
The first promotion of the Order, made
on July 6th 1738, including those added by the King
of Spain, totaled fifty-five in number; to these should
be added the names of five other Spanish Knights admitted
by King Charles between October 20th 1738 and January
25th 1739, completing the membership to the sixty Knights
specified in the Statutes. The most comprehensive list
of members of the Order since its foundation was published
in Naples in 1963; [2-11]
but this contained several errors and omissions which
were discovered by the Marquess of Villarreal de Alava,
who has shown that there were thirty Italians, nineteen
Spanish, two French, two Belgians, one Pole and one
German. [2-12]
 |
| King Francis
I wearing the Collars of the Golden Fleece &
Saint Januarius |
The fall of the Neapolitan Monarchy
to the French invader in 1798 led to the Order being
awarded more often to non-Italians and foreign Sovereigns.
The first of the latter to receive the Order was Czar
Alexander I, while two Russian noblemen, Admiral Feodor
Ouchakov and Count Vassili Vassilievitch Levachov, were
exempted from the limitation to Roman Catholics. During
the period of the Napoleonic wars the Order was given
to more foreigners than at any time in its history,
including Landgraf and Prince Ludwig of Hesse-Phillipsthal
(nominated in 1802), Prince Regent George (later King
George IV) of Great Britain, King Carlo Felice of Sardinia,
Prince Clement von Metternich-Winneburg and Prince Charles-Maurice
de Talleyrand-Perigord, Duke of Dino, all nominated
in 1816 and a number of British officers, the most notable
of whom was Field Marshal the Duke of Wellington (nominated
in 1816). [2-13]
Originally the Order had four principal
officers whose duties were to administer its affairs,
a Chancellor, Master of Ceremonies, Treasurer and Secretary,
all of whom wore a slightly different breast star to
the ordinary Knights. These duties were limited by a
reform of August 17th 1827, to certain ceremonial roles
at the installation of Knights (no successors were appointed
to the then holders of these offices), [2-14]
and the administration was confided to the Secretary,
who, since 1860 has always been a Knight of the Order.
he first officers of the Order were the Most Rev. Don
Mondillo Orsini, Archbishop of Capua and nephew of Pope
Benedict XIII (as Chancellor) who was also appointed
a Knight in the first promotion, Don Giovanni Brancaccio,
another Minister (as Treasurer) who could not make the
full noble proofs and was never appointed a Knight and
Don Gaetano Brancone (as Secretary), who was likewise
never made a Knight; all three were nominated to their
posts on the same day as the publication of the Statutes
(July 3rd 1738). Marchese Bernardo Tanucci, the Secretary
of State, was appointed Master of Ceremonies two months
later on September 13th and was admitted as a Knight
in 1764, In practice, as the principal Secretary of
State, Tanucci controlled the Order and, after King
Charles went to Spain, the affairs of the Kingdom, until
King Ferdinand attained his majority.
 |
Detail of
the Collar of Saint Januarius from the Portrait
of Francis I |
The Order was rarely at its full complement
of sixty Knights, although in the last two years of
the Monarchy there were sixty-five appointments, extending
its membership considerably, of whom twenty-seven were
non-Neapolitans, mainly foreign diplomats. 1861, the
year in which the King was forced into permanent exile,
saw a further extension of its membership as thirty-four
new Knights were admitted, most of whom were Neapolitan
and Sicilian noblemen who had remained loyal to the
King. Many of the other Knights had immediately accepted
office under the Savoy Kings and may be presumed to
have forfeited membership by breaking their oath of
loyalty to the Grand Master. Certain Sovereigns continued
to maintain diplomatic relations with the exiled Court,
including the Emperor of Austria, the Kings of Bavaria,
Wurtemberg and Hanover, the Queen of Spain, the Czar
of Russia, and the Pope, all of whose Ambassadors received
the Order between 1862 and 1870. From 1870 until the
death of King Francis II, the Order was only rarely
awarded, to a few former subjects who had remained loyal,
the elder sons of the Count of Caserta, the former reigning
Duke of Parma and his brother the Count of Bardi (both
nominated in 1883), the reigning Prince of Monaco and
Ferdinand, Prince and later Czar of the Bulgarians (nominated
in 1891).
The succession of the Count of Caserta
marked a substantial increase in importance of the Constantinian
Order, while the Order of Saint Januarius continued
to be given only rarely. Between the death of King Francis
on December 27th 1894 and the death of the Count of
Caserta on May 26th 1934, only thirty-one appointments
were made, of whom the first four (and a further two)
were Cardinals and including those of his sons who had
not been nominated by Francis II, other than Prince
Don Gabriele (who was appointed by Prince Don Ferdinand-Pius).
The next Grand Master, Ferdinand-Pius, who died in 1960,
only made two appointments to the Order, Prince Don
Gabriele and Don Filippo Lancellotti, Prince of Lauro
(who died in 1970). [2-15]
Ferdinando-Pio's next brother, Prince Don Carlo, had
been appointed a knight of Saint Januarius by his father
the Count of Caserta, but Prince Don Carlo's only surviving
son, the Infante Don Alfonso had never received the
Order. Nonetheless, with the death of his uncle Ferdinando-Pio,
the Infante Don Alfonso succeeded to the Headship of
the Royal House of the Two Sicilies and Grand Magistery
of Saint Januarius by virtue of the laws of succession
of the Kingdom and the Pragmatic Decree of Charles III
of October 6th, 1759. [2-16]
Since 1960 the Order has been awarded
sparingly and total membership (including Royal Princes)
has not exceeded eighty, most of the knights being members
of Royal Houses, senior officers of the Constantinian
Order or Italian grandees. The Infante Don Carlos, Duke
of Calabria and his late father, both followed the example
of the nineteenth century Sovereigns of the Two Sicilies
in awarding the Order not only to the heads of other
Royal Houses (or reigning Sovereigns), but also to their
closest advisers, several of whom also hold high office
in the Constantinian Order. [2-31]
Footnotes
[1]"
aveva (il Re Carlo) con alcune regole e capitoli, a
gloria dell'Onnipotente Iddio, per difesa e propagazione
della Cattolica Religione, e per aumento della Cristiana
pieta, istituita gia una lodevole Compagnia, o sia un
Ordine di Nobili Cavalieri, a somiglianza dell'altro
celebre Ordine denominato del Tosone d'Oro, sotto il
titolo, invocazione, e patrocinio di San Gennaro, Vescovo
e Martire...., del quale Capo e Primate il Re medesimo,e
chiunque legittimamente gli succederebbe.... in virtu
della presente, coll'Apostolica Autorita, approviamo
e confermiamo la prenominata Compagnia ed Ordine, sotto
il patrocinio ed invocazione di San Gennaro, aggiungendo
all sua fondazione il vigore di una perpetua ed inviolabile
fermezza".
[2]
The first names proposed by King Philip as candidates
for the dignity of Magnate and included in a letter
dated 4 February 1738 were:
[3]
By proxy on May 9th and in person on June 19th 1738.
[4]
While the Bavarian Order of Saint Hubert was not given
its present form until 1800, it had been reformed from
the Order founded by the Duke of Cleves and Julich in
1444 and was awarded by the Wittelsbach Electors throughout
the 18th century.
[5]
Those Charles appointed without consulting his father
were the Prince of Santobuono, the Prince of Montemileto,
Marquess Giuseppe Spinelli di Fuscaldo, Constable of
the Kingdom Colonna, the Duke of Atri, the Count of
Fuenclara, and the Count of Wackerbarth (letter of 8
July 1738).
[6]
Piedras Alta was created a Grandee of the 1st Class
15 December 1739.
[7]
Later admissions included a number of distinguished
persons who could not prove the necessary four quarters
and several gentlemen not of noble birth were admitted
by special concession of the Grand Master during the
19th century, including: François-Pierre-Guillaume
Guizot (1846), sometime Prime Minister of Louis-Philippe,
King of the French; M. Jules Malon and M. Adolphe Deschamps
(1847), both Belgian Ministers; the French General Antoine
Gemeau (1851); Adolphe Barrot (1852), French Minister;
Edouard Drouin de Lhuys (1852), French Foreign Secretary;
Senator Count Rognet (1859), Aide-de-Camp to Napoleon
III; Baron Alexandre Brenier (1859), French Ambassador
in Naples; Ferdinando Troia (1856), sometime Prime Minister
of Naples; and Lt-Gen Massimo Selvaggi (1849).
[8]
Giovanni Maresca (Duke della Salandra), whose conclusions
are disputed by this author, has stated that this distinction
was made on the basis that the Knights of Justice had
to be the primogeniture heirs of the heads of feudal,
titled families and that such gentlemen could not be
admitted to that category unless they already held the
charge of Gentiluomo di Camera. He also wrote that provided
the candidate had the necessary qualities of high morals
and loyalty to the Sovereign, the honor of Knight of
Saint Januarius could be demanded by right, thus becoming
quasi-hereditary. At the death of Ferdinand II, by the
Duke della Salandra's calculations, there were thirty-four
knights of Justice and thirteen knights of Grace. See
Giovanni Maresca,"Precisazione...", in Rivista
Araldica, 1965, p.122. See also Luigi Buccino Grimaldi
in The Golden Age of Naples - Art and Civilization Under
the Bourbons 1734-1805, Exhibition Catalogue, Vol II,
Detroit Institute of Arts, 1981, p. 448.
[9]
He was nominated on 6 September 1740, although this
nomination does not appear in the Rolls published in
1748 and 1764, nor in the works of Serra, Litta, Candida
Gonzaga, Bonazzi or Di Lorenzo.
[10]
"ROYAL DECREE OF NOVEMBER 23 1738 - So that it
may be determined in which manner the Clergymen who
shall be elevated by Us as Knights of the Royal Order
of Saint Januarius shall receive the Cross from our
hands and the manner in which they shall wear it in
daily and state functions, We declare that Cardinals,
Archbishops and Bishops, in order to be admitted to
the Order, shall receive the Cross from Us, and for
such purpose, shall appear in the Royal Chapel. The
Cardinals shall appear for the first time only in their
Cardinal's robes, and the Archbishops and Bishops in
their own prelates robes, and having taken the usual
oath, the Cross shall be presented to them by Us with
the red, moire ribbon that they must always wear around
their neck. / At subsequent public and state functions
of the Order, the Cardinals shall be presented with
their Cardinals robes and the Archbishops and Bishops
in their prelates robes, wearing the aforesaid Cross
around their necks. / When they dress informally. besides
the aforesaid Cross around their necks, they shall also
wear on their breast, on the left side of their plain
coat and at the same time on the left side of their
mantle, the embroidered Cross with the motto: "In
Sanguine Foedus", the same as the lay Knights of
the Order. / Naples, 23 November 1738 / CHARLES G.M."
[11]
Nominated 25 January 1739.
[12]
Prince Francesco Gonzaga Pico della Mirandola e Este,
Prince of Mantua, Duke of Solferino, nominated 6 September
1740.
[13]
Later 1st Duke of Montealegre (8 June 1740), nominated
20 October 1738.
[14]
1st Duke of Losada & Grandee of the 1st Class, nominated
20 October 1738.
[15]
Letter from the Marques de Salas to King Philip, 21
October 1738.
[16]
Nominated 6 September 1740, but not included in the
Rolls (see note 6 above).
[17]
Nominated 6 September 1740 and likewise excluded from
the Rolls (see note 6).
[18]
Never nominated.
[19]
Never nominated.
[20]
Nominated 6 September 1740.
[21]
Nominated 15 June 1747.
[22]
Never nominated.
[23]
Never nominated.
[24]
Never nominated.
[25]
Neither of these were nominated. These records, located
by the Marques de Floresta, are located in AHN, ESTADO,
leg. 6349, Carpetas 1, 2,3,5,& 6.
[2-1]"
aveva (il Re Carlo) con alcune regole e capitoli, a
gloria dell'Onnipotente Iddio, per difesa e propagazione
della Cattolica Religione, e per aumento della Cristiana
pieta, istituita gia una lodevole Compagnia, o sia un
Ordine di Nobili Cavalieri, a somiglianza dell'altro
celebre Ordine denominato del Tosone d'Oro, sotto il
titolo, invocazione, e patrocinio di San Gennaro, Vescovo
e Martire...., del quale Capo e Primate il Re medesimo,e
chiunque legittimamente gli succederebbe.... in virtu
della presente, coll'Apostolica Autorita, approviamo
e confermiamo la prenominata Compagnia ed Ordine, sotto
il patrocinio ed invocazione di San Gennaro, aggiungendo
all sua fondazione il vigore di una perpetua ed inviolabile
fermezza".
[2-2]
By proxy on May 9th and in person on June 19th 1738.
[2-3]
Later admissions included a number of distinguished
persons who could not prove the necessary four quarters
and several gentlemen not of noble birth were admitted
by special concession of the Grand Master during the
19th century, including: François-Pierre-Guillaume
Guizot (1846), sometime Prime Minister of Louis-Philippe,
King of the French; M. Jules Malon and M. Adolphe Deschamps
(1847), both Belgian Ministers; the French General Antoine
Gemeau (1851); Adolphe Barrot (1852), French Minister;
Edouard Drouin de Lhuys (1852), French Foreign Secretary;
Senator Count Rognet (1859), Aide-de-Camp to Napoleon
III; Baron Alexandre Brenier (1859), French Ambassador
in Naples; Ferdinando Troia (1856), sometime Prime Minister
of Naples; and Lt-Gen Massimo Selvaggi (1849).
[2-4]
Giovanni Maresca (Duke della Salandra), whose conclusions
are disputed by this author, has stated that this distinction
was made on the basis that the Knights of Justice had
to be the primogeniture heirs of the heads of feudal,
titled families and that such gentlemen could not be
admitted to that category unless they already held the
charge of Gentiluomo di Camera. He also wrote that provided
the candidate had the necessary qualities of high morals
and loyalty to the Sovereign, the honor of Knight of
Saint Januarius could be demanded by right, thus becoming
quasi-hereditary. At the death of Ferdinand II, by the
Duke della Salandra's calculations, there were thirty-four
knights of Justice and thirteen knights of Grace. See
Giovanni Maresca,"Precisazione...", in Rivista
Araldica, 1965, p.122. See also Luigi Buccino Grimaldi
in The Golden Age of Naples - Art and Civilization Under
the Bourbons 1734-1805, Exhibition Catalogue, Vol II,
Detroit Institute of Arts, 1981, p. 448.
[2-5]
"ROYAL DECREE OF NOVEMBER 23 1738 - So that it
may be determined in which manner the Clergymen who
shall be elevated by Us as Knights of the Royal Order
of Saint Januarius shall receive the Cross from our
hands and the manner in which they shall wear it in
daily and state functions, We declare that Cardinals,
Archbishops and Bishops, in order to be admitted to
the Order, shall receive the Cross from Us, and for
such purpose, shall appear in the Royal Chapel. The
Cardinals shall appear for the first time only in their
Cardinal's robes, and the Archbishops and Bishops in
their own prelates robes, and having taken the usual
oath, the Cross shall be presented to them by Us with
the red, moire ribbon that they must always wear around
their neck. / At subsequent public and state functions
of the Order, the Cardinals shall be presented with
their Cardinals robes and the Archbishops and Bishops
in their prelates robes, wearing the aforesaid Cross
around their necks. / When they dress informally. besides
the aforesaid Cross around their necks, they shall also
wear on their breast, on the left side of their plain
coat and at the same time on the left side of their
mantle, the embroidered Cross with the motto: "In
Sanguine Foedus", the same as the lay Knights of
the Order. / Naples, 23 November 1738 / CHARLES G.M."
[2-6]
The first-born son being retarded, the king's second-born
son, Charles, became Prince of the Asturias and, in
1788, Charles IV of Spain - he was the ancestor of the
present Spanish king.
[2-7]
"In quanto a cio che mi domandi relativamente alle
notizie sull'Ordine di San Gennaro, ti diro' che io
non ho creduto conveniente rinunziare a quest'Ordine
a favore di Mio figlio il Re quando sono partito, e
me lo sono riservato come fondatore, e tale rinunzia
faro' quando Egli sia diventato maggiorenne, di modo
che puoi agire in base a queste disposizioni. Buon Ritiro,
30 settembre 1760. CARLO (rubricato) ." General
Archives of Simancas, Secretariat of State, Kingdom
of the Two Sicilies, 18th century, series 3, folio 136,
right, line 11 ff.
[2-8]
Translation from the original Italian; Archives of Simancas,
n. 5.878, folio 139
[2-9]
This letter, found in the National Historical Archives
in Madrid, Section of State, file number 3.795, is reproduced
in La Maison Royale des Deux Siciles, L'Ordre Constantinien
de Saint Georges et L'Ordre de Saint Janvier, by the
Marquess of Villarreal de Alava, Madrid 1964, pp. 692-697.
[2-10]
Prof. Giacomo Carlo Bascape in his history of the Order
published on behalf of Prince Ranieri, has stated that
the resignation was made in 1764. The Marquess of Villarreal
de Alava, Op. cit. 1964, pp.472-473 and 554-562, has
shown conclusively that the transfer was made formally
on December 9th 1766: "My dear and much beloved
son./ When the All Powerful summoned me to the Throne
of Spain following the death of King Ferdinand VI, my
very dear and much beloved Brother, conforming to the
spirit of the Treaties of this century I established,
by a solemn act and law promulgated on the 6 October
1759, the succession to the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
in the person of Your Majesty ......... Finding that
Your Majesty has almost attained Your majority, I believe
that it is necessary that I should explain something
which I have had in mind and declare that the Sovereignty
and the Grand Magistery of the Order of Saint Januarius
pertains to Your Majesty and Your successors as Kings
of the Two Sicilies, fully and absolutely, as it pertained
to me as Founder.// And in order that immediately Your
Majesty is placed in full possession of Your authority
that You shall be Head, Sovereign and Grand Master of
the aforesaid Order, I ordain this in the form of a
most solemn and express declaration by this my decree
signed by My hand and witnessed by the undersigned Councilor
and First Secretary of State and Dispatch. May Our Lord
protect Y.M. my very dear and much beloved son, for
as many years as He may grant you. San Lorenzo 9 december
1766. // I THE KING // Geronimo de Grimaldi."
[2-11]
This corrected many of the mistakes and omissions in
the Roll published at Naples in 1885 by Francesco Bonazzi.
[2-12]
See Villarreal de Alava, Op.cit., pp.489-553, in which
the first members of the Order, listed in the Roll only
by their titles of nobility, are each correctly identified.
Three Royal Princes were included, the Infantes Don
Filippo (Duke of Parma) and Don Luis, and the King's
brother-in-law the Electoral Prince Friedrich Christian
of Saxony, Prince of Poland, and two Cardinals, Lodovico
Belluga and Troiano Acquaviva d'Aragona. Recent research
by the present author has indicated that the Rolls published
in Naples also omitted the names of some 19th century
members of the Order - for example, the Grand Chancellor
of the Legion of Honor on 14 December 1830 granted permission
to the Marquis de Dreux-Brezé, formerly hereditary
Grand Master of Cermonies of the French Court, who had
been nominated on 27 July 1830, to accept the Order,
although his name is not listed in any of the published
Rolls. The family names of many of the first Knights
can be found on the recent Rolls of the Order of Saint
Januarius and the Constantinian Order, including Moncada,
Caracciolo, Colonna, de Córdoba, and di Sangro.
Over the next sixty years, other families of which members
are or have been recent supporters of the present Grand
Master include the names Gonzaga, Fitzjames Stuart,
Osorio de Moscoso, Alliata, and Pignatelli.
[2-13]The
first British knight was John Joseph (sometimes called
James) O'Mahony, 2nd Count of Mahony, a Lieutenant-General
in the Neapolitan Army and son of a leading Jacobite,
Daniel O'Mahony, created a Count by Philip V of Spain
(9 Nov 1706), by Lady Ann Clifford, daughter of the
Hon. Thomas Clifford and Charlotte, suo jure 3rd Countess
of Newburgh. He was nominated on June 15th 1747 and
is the ancestor of the present Earl of Newburgh. The
next British knights were Admiral of the Fleet Sir George
Martin (nominated in 1810), Lt-Gen Thomas (Mahon), 2nd
Baron Hartland (nominated in 1816), Lt-Gen Sir John
Du Platt (nominated in 1816), Lt-Gen Sir William Phillips
(nominated in 1816), Lt-Gen Sir John Murray, 8th Baronet
(nominated in 1817), Rear-Admiral Sir David Milne (nominated
in 1818), General John (Fane), Lord Burghersh, later
11th Earl of Westmoreland, GCB, GCH, Minister Plenipotentiary
of His Britannic Majesty (nominated in 1825), General
James Ochoncar (Forbes), 17th Lord Forbes (nominated
in 1829), the Rt Hon (and Hon.) Sir Henry Elliot, PC,
GCB, Envoy and Minister Plenipotentiary at Naples in
1859, who died in 1907 at the age of eighty-nine (nominated
in 1859), and His Eminence the Most Rev. Nicholas, Cardinal
Wiseman, Archbishop of Westminster (nominated in 1859),
most of whom did not fulfill the statutory requirement
of being Roman Catholics.
[2-14]
"Francis I, King of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies,
of Jerusalem, etc, Duke of Parma, Piacenza, Castro,
etc, Hereditary Grand Prince of Tuscany, etc. // Having
reviewed Chapter VIII of the Statutes of Our Illustrious
Royal Order of Saint Januarius, by which Our glorious
ancestor, Charles III, established four Officers of
the aforesaid Order; that is, the Chancellor with the
assignment of dubbing the Knights; the Master of Ceremonies,
with the task of regulating the ceremonial functions;
the Treasurer with the duty of preserving the style
of dress and the Cross, the Royal Collars not yet bestowed,
the processes of the proofs of nobility, and the Book
of Statutes; and finally, the Secretary, with the responsibility
of sending dispatches, letters, diplomas and anything
else pertaining to the administration of the Order and
the promotion of Knights. / Taking into consideration
that presently the affairs of the this and all other
Royal Orders are exclusively under the Royal Secretariat
and the Ministry of State for the Royal Household: /
On the proposition of Our Councilor Minister of State,
the Minister Secretary of State for the Royal Household
and of Orders of Knighthood, we have resolved to decree
and decree as follows: / Art.I We repeal in part the
Statutes of the Illustrious Royal Order of Saint Januarius
only in that section pertaining to the assignments given
to the four Officers of this Royal Order. / Art.II All
affairs concerning the Royal Order of Saint Januarius
shall continue to be handled, as they are presently,
by the Royal Secretariat and the Ministry of State of
the Royal Household and of the Orders of Knighthood.
/ Art.III We desire that the aforesaid four Officers
of the Order shall retain only those functions that
need to be exercised in the maintenance of the Royal
Chapels of the aforesaid Order, following what was prescribed
for the established rituals as ordained at its institution
by His Majesty King Charles III, of glorious memory.
/ Art.IV The four Officers of the Royal Order of Saint
Januarius having been nominated by Us, they shall take
the oath and shall wear the decorations in the manner
prescribed in the aforesaid statutes. / Art.V Our Councilor
Minister of State, the Minister Secretary of the Royal
Household and of the Orders of Knighthood is charged
with the execution of the present decree. / Naples 28
July 1827. / FRANCESCO G.M."
[2-15]At
the time of the death of Ferdinando Pio, Duke of Calabria,
in 1960, the only surviving members of the Order were
Princes Don Ranieri and Don Gabriele of the Two Sicilies
(Prince Don Charles having died in 1949), and the Prince
of Lauro.
[2-16]
He also succeeded as Xth Grand Master of the Sacred
Military Constantinian Order of Saint George.
[2-31]
The Dukes of Castro, in contrast, have preferred to
accord the Order to the representatives of great Italian
families and members of the Two Sicilies dynasty, the
only exceptions being the present and preceding Grand
Masters of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, the
late King Umberto II of Italy, one Cardinal and three
non Italian members of their Constantinian Deputation.
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