1st Edition
Elite Women in Early Modern Catholic Europe
Introduction
Cinzia Recca and Francisco Precioso Izquierdo
1. Naples 1536, or Rather of Nobility, Politics and Noblewomen
Lina Scalisi
2. Building memory: Margherita of Austria and Her Dynastic History ‘en femenino’
Silvia D’Agata
3. Chocolate, Masses and Spiritual Heritage: Female Networks in Early Modern Turin around the Compagnia dell’ Umiltà (Company of Humility): 17th-18th Centuries
Blythe Alice Raviola
4. “In the distressing circumstances”: Female Resolve and Resistance of Rank. Marguerite-Louise d’Orléans and Anna Maria Franziska of Saxe-Lauenburg in Diplomatic Records
Vincenzo Lagioia
5. Women in the Family and Political Strategies of the High Aristocracy in the Late 17th Century
Maria Luz González Mezquita
6. Educating a Future Queen of France. The case of Princess Marie Adelaide of Savoy and Madame de Maintenon, Royal Educator
Elena Riva
7. Noblewomen and the Management of Family Wealth in Sicily at the End of the 18th century: the Case of Anna Morso, Princess of Biscari
Cinzia Recca
8. Family and Female Power: The Wills of Aristocratic Women in Spain at the End of the Ancien Régime
Francisco Precioso Izquierdo
9. A Place for Sentiments and Feelings Among Spanish Aristocratic Women (1760-1820)
Antonio Irigoyen López and Juan Hernández Franco
10. “Considering the merits of your late husband…”. How Women Received a Title in Early Nineteenth-century Spain (1808-1854)
Arnaud Pierre
Biography
Cinzia Recca is reader in Early Modern History in the Department of Education at the University of Catania, Italy. Her main field of research includes the European Enlightenment, especially court studies and women's roles. In recent years, she has initiated a demanding research activity focused on the figure of Queen Maria Carolina of Naples through the analysis of unpublished sources (diary and correspondence). She is the author of The Diary of Maria Carolina of Naples, 1781–1785: New evidence of Queenship at Court (2017).
Francisco Precioso Izquierdo is reader in Modern History at the University of Murcia, Spain. His field of research integrates the analysis of the noble elites of the Hispanic world at the end of the seventeenth century from a family, political, and cultural perspective. In recent years, his research has been oriented toward the study of the idea of nobility in Spanish society in the eighteenth century. He is the author of Melchor Macanaz. La derrota de un “héroe”. Poder político y movilidad familiar en la España Moderna (2017).
This collection comprises 10 chapters by scholars outside the Anglophone world, focusing on the actions of elite women in the transformation and preservation of social structures in Catholic Western Europe, including Spain, Italy, and France, from the mid-16th to the mid-19th century. Princesses, queens and future queens, wealthy aristocrats, and other high-ranking women arranged matrimonial alliances, created new lineages and then wrote about them, established charitable associations that also funded luxuries for themselves, established familial and friendship networks that stretched across political boundaries, wrote wills that determined the destiny of family assets and letters that sought to determine this, and trained their daughters and other younger family members to continue in their footsteps. These were women born into power and wealth, so it is unsurprising that, as the editors note, “women’s action in the social, political, or religious world is usually aimed at maintaining the status quo” (p. 7). Still, the range of their actions is surprising, particularly for those who might still think of Catholic Europe as offering fewer opportunities for women’s agency, influence, and power than Protestant areas. Recommended. Graduate students and faculty.
M. E. Wiesner-Hanks, emerita, University of Wisconsin--Milwaukee CHOICE November 2025 Vol. 63 No. 3.






