Valentine's Day has come and gone for
another year, but fortunately romance never goes away. I came across a list referred to as History's Romantics and, in honor of the
day of romance we just celebrated, I'd like to share it with you.
However…I do have to take exception to some
of these choices as being considered truly romantic. But I leave that decision to you.
Sappho
Much uncertainty surrounds the life story
of the celebrated Greek lyric poet Sappho, a woman Plato called the tenth Muse. Born around 610 B.C. on the island of Lesbos,
now part of Greece, she was said to have been married to Cercylas, a wealthy
man. Many legends have long existed about
Sappho's life, including a prevalent one—now believed to be untrue—that she
leaped into the sea to her death because of her unrequited love for a younger
man. It is not known how much work she
published during her lifetime, but by the 8th or 9th century Sappho's known
work was limited to quotations made by other authors. In the majority of her poems, Sappho wrote
about love—and the accompanying emotions of hatred, anger and jealousy—among
the members of her largely young and female circle. Sappho gave her female acolytes educational
and religious instruction as part of the preparation for marriage. The group was dedicated to and inspired by
Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love and beauty.
Vatsyayana, author of the Kama Sutra
This ascetic, probably celibate scholar who
lived in classical India around the 5th century A.D. is an unlikely candidate
to have written history's best known book on erotic love. Little is known about Vatsyayana's life, but
in his famous book—actually a collection of notes on hundreds of years of
spiritual wisdom passed down by the ancient sages—he wrote that he intended the
Kama Sutra as the ultimate love manual and a tribute to Kama, the Indian god of
love. Though it has become famous for
its sections on sexual instruction, the book actually deals much more with the
pursuit of fulfilling relationships, and provided a blueprint for courtship and
marriage in upper-class Indian society at the time. The Kama Sutra has been translated into
hundreds of languages and has won millions of devotees around the world.
Shah Jahan
Emperor of India from 1628 to 1658, Shah
Jahan has gone down in history for commissioning one of history's most
spectacular buildings, the Taj Mahal (pictured above), in honor of his much beloved wife. Born Prince Khurram, the fifth son of the
Emperor Jahangir of India, he became his father's favored son after leading
several successful military campaigns to consolidate his family's empire. As a special honor, Jahangir gave him the
title of Shah Jahan, or King of the World.
After his father's death in 1627, Shah
Jahan won power after a struggle with his brothers, crowning himself emperor at
Agra in 1628. At his side was Mumtaz
Mahal, or Chosen One of the Palace,
Shah Jahan's wife since 1612 and the favorite of his three queens. In 1631, Mumtaz died after giving birth to the
couple's 14th child. Legend has it that with her dying breaths, she asked her
husband to promise to build the world's most beautiful mausoleum for her. Six months after her death, the deeply
grieving emperor ordered construction to begin. Set across the Jamuna River from the royal
palace in Agra, the white marble of the Taj Mahal reflects differing hues of
light throughout the day, glowing pink at sunrise and pearly white in the
moonlight. At its center, surrounded by
delicate screens filtering light, lies the cenotaph, or coffin, containing the
remains of the Shah's beloved queen.
Giacomo Casanova
The name Casanova has long since come to conjure up the romantic image of
the prototypical libertine and seducer, thanks to the success of Giacomo
Casanova's posthumously published 12-volume autobiography, Histoire de ma vie, which chronicled with vivid detail—as well as
some exaggeration—his many sexual and romantic exploits in 18th-century Europe.
Born in Venice in 1725 to actor parents,
Casanova was expelled from a seminary for scandalous conduct. He embarked on a varied career including a
stint working for a cardinal in Rome, a violinist, and a magician, while
traveling all around the continent. Fleeing from creditors, he changed his name to
Chevalier de Seingalt, under which he published a number of literary works,
most importantly his autobiography. Casanova's
celebration of pleasure seeking and much-professed love of women—he maintained
that a woman's conversation was at least as captivating as her body—made him
the leading champion of a movement towards sexual freedom, and the model for
the famous Don Juan of literature. After
working as a diplomat in Berlin, Russia, and Poland and a spy for the Venetian
inquisitors, Casanova spent the final years of his life working on his
autobiography in the library of a Bohemian count. He died in 1798.
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
The only child of the famous feminist Mary
Wollstonecraft and the philosopher and novelist William Godwin, both
influential voices in Romantic-Era England, Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin fell in
love with the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley when she was only 16. He was 21 and unhappily married. In the summer of 1816, the couple was living
with Shelley's friend and fellow poet, the dashing and scandalous Lord Byron,
in Byron's villa in Switzerland when Mary came up with the idea for what would
become her masterpiece—and one of the most famous novels in history—Frankenstein (1818). After Shelley's wife committed suicide, he and
Mary were married, but public hostility to the match forced them to move to
Italy. When Mary was only 24, Percy
Shelley was caught in a storm while at sea and drowned, leaving her alone with
a two-year-old son (three previous children had died young). Alongside her husband, Byron, and John Keats,
Mary was one of the principal members of the second generation of Romanticism;
unlike the three poets, who all died during the 1820s, she lived long enough to
see the dawn of a new era, the Victorian Age. Still somewhat of a social outcast for her
liaison with Shelley, she worked as a writer to support her father and son, and
maintained connections to the artistic, literary and political circles of
London until her death in 1851.
Richard Wagner
One of history's most revered composers,
Richard Wagner set his work on the famous Ring cycle aside in 1858 to work on
his most romantic opera, Tristan and
Isolde. He was inspired to do so
partially because of his thwarted passion for Mathilde Wesendonck, the wife of
a wealthy silk merchant and patron of Wagner's. While at work on the opera, the unhappily
married Wagner met Cosima von Bulow, daughter of the celebrated pianist and
composer Franz Liszt and wife of Hans von Bulow, one of Liszt's disciples. They later became lovers, and their
relationship was an open secret in the music world for several years. Wagner's wife died in 1866, but Cosima was
still married and the mother of two children with von Bulow, who knew of the
relationship and worshiped Wagner's music (he even conducted the premiere of Tristan and Isolde). After having two daughters, Isolde and Eva, by
Wagner, Cosima finally left her husband; she and Wagner married and settled
into an idyllic villa in Switzerland, near Lucerne. On Cosima's 33rd birthday, Christmas Day 1870,
Wagner brought an orchestra in to play a symphony he had written for her, named
the Triebschen Idyll after their
villa. Though the music was later
renamed the Siegfried Idyll after the
couple's son, the supremely romantic gesture was a powerful symbol of the
strength of Wagner and Cosima's marriage, which lasted until the composer's
death in 1883.
King Edward VIII
Edward, then Prince of Wales, was
introduced to Wallis Simpson in 1931, when she was married to her second
husband; they soon began a relationship that would rock Britain's most
prominent institutions—Parliament, the monarchy and the Church of England—to their
cores. Edward called Simpson, whom others criticized as a financially unstable
social climber, the perfect woman. Just months after being crowned king in
January 1936, after the death of his father, George V, Edward proposed to
Simpson, precipitating a huge scandal and prompting Britain's prime minister,
Stanley Baldwin, to say he would resign if the marriage went ahead. Not wanting to push his country into an
electoral crisis, but unwilling to give Simpson up, Edward made the decision to
abdicate the throne. In a public radio
address, he told the world of his love for Simpson, saying that "I have
found it impossible to carry the heavy burden of responsibility and to
discharge my duties as King as I would wish to do without the help and support
of the woman I love." Married and
given the titles of Duke and Duchess of Windsor, the couple lived in exile in
France, where they became fixtures of cafe society.
Edith Piaf
Though her life was marked by sickness,
tragedy and other hardships from beginning to end, the famous French chanteuse
with the throaty voice became the epitome of classic Parisian-style romance for
her legions of fans. Born Edith Giovanna
Gassion in 1915, she was abandoned by her mother and reared by her grandmother;
while traveling with her father, a circus acrobat, she began singing for
pennies on the street. Discovered by a
cabaret promoter who renamed her Piaf, or sparrow,
(and was later brutally murdered), Edith enjoyed a meteoric rise to stardom and
by 1935 was singing in the grandest concert halls in Paris. Piaf was married twice, but her great love was
the boxer Marcel Cerdan, a world middleweight champion who was killed in a
plane crash en route from Europe to New York in 1949. It was for Cerdan that Piaf sang the achingly
romantic Hymne a l'amour, celebrated
all over the world as one of her best loved ballads. After a near lifelong struggle with drug and
alcohol addictions, Piaf died of liver cancer on the French Riviera in 1963. Her grave is one of the most visited in Paris's
world famous Pere Lachaise cemetery.
Kathleen Woodiwiss
Born in 1939 in Alexandria, Louisiana,
Kathleen Woodiwiss was a young wife and mother when she began writing romantic
fiction as a response to her dissatisfaction with the existing women's fiction
of the time. In 1972, she published her
first novel, The Flame and the Flower,
set on a Southern plantation in the late 18th century. Its historical setting and theme, florid prose
style, and steamy sex scenes inspired a legion of imitators and its smashing
commercial success sparked a new boom in romance fiction. Woodiwiss was given credit for inventing the
modern romance novel in its current form: thick period melodramas packed with an array
of dashing and dangerous men and bosomy women in low-cut dresses. She herself wrote 13 of these so-called bodice-rippers, including Shanna (1977), A Rose in Winter (1982), Come
Love a Stranger (1984) and The
Reluctant Suitor (2003). In an
interview with Publisher's Weekly,
Woodiwiss firmly denied the characterization of her books as erotic,
maintaining that she wrote only "love stories—with a little spice." By the time of her death in 2006, Woodiwiss's
spicy love stories had sold more than 36 million copies in 13 countries.
Elizabeth Taylor
An actress since early childhood, the dark
haired, violet-eyed Elizabeth Taylor has won two Best Actress Oscars (for Butterfield 8 in 1960 and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? in 1966)
but is perhaps best known for her rare beauty—and her epic love life. She has been married a total of eight
times—twice to the same man, the actor Richard Burton, whom she has called
"one of the two great loves of my life." The first was the film producer Mike Todd, who
died in a plane crash in 1958. Taylor
and Burton met on the set of Cleopatra,
when both were married to other people; their affair soon made headlines around
the world and earned a public rebuke from no lesser authority than the Vatican.
Their own married life together was a
study in extremes, soaked in alcohol and characterized by a passion that was no
less intense when they were fighting than when they were getting along. After divorcing in 1973, they found it
impossible to stay apart and remarried in 1975, only to break up four months
later. Barred from Burton's funeral in
1984 by his last wife, Taylor still received legions of condolences, honoring
her and Burton's place in the pantheon of history's most celebrated love
stories.
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