Lady Virginia Courtauld (Known name of Virginia Peirano; formerly Spinola Peirano) was a Romanian-born philanthropist and member of the Courtauld Family, known for the Art Deco renovation of Eltham Palace and co-owning the La Rochelle country estate.
Virginia Peirano was born Vergilia Rosa Vesterα on 7 January 1885 in Brăila, to a Hungarian mother, Rosa Balint Peirano (1860–1940), and an Italian father, Riccardo Peirano (1854–1930).[1][2][3][4][5] Peirano's father was a shipping merchant, whose family left Genoa in the late nineteenth century and established a grain-exporting business in the Romanian port city of Brăila.[6][4]
Peirano had two older brothers, Riccardo Jr. "Richard" Peirano (1880–c.1918–c.1923) and Enrico "Henry" Peirano (1881–).[5][7][8] Peirano's parents married on the 30 November 1886.[5]
In December 1908, Riccardo Peirano dissolved his partnership in the family business "Peirano & Co.," leaving control of the company to his eldest son Richard Peirano and to George Nicholas Gologan of the Romanian Consulate.[10][11] In either late 1909 or early 1910, Peirano relocated with her parents to Santa Margherita, Liguria .[12][13] In May 1910, the Peirano family rented a villa within the private park of the then Villa Spinola, owned by the Marquis Ugo Spinola (1853–1925) and Solferina Serra Spinola (1859–1944).[12][13]
In 1910, Peirano met the Marchese Paolo Spinola (1880–1969), the Spinola's third and youngest son and a member of the Luccoli branch of the House of Spinola.[12][14][13] Within months of knowing each other, Peirano and Spinola broke with social convention and traveled together to Paris and London.[12] On the 24 November 1910, Peirano and Spinola were married at the Cathedral of Saint Lawrence in Genoa.[12][4]Honeymooning in the Khedivate of Egypt, the couple continued to travel extensively throughout their marriage.[12]
Villa del Trattato, built for Paolo Spinola and Virginia Peirano
Peirano and Spinola lived between London and the "villino Pagana n.8" on the Villa Spinola estate.[13] In 1913, Ugo and Solferina Spinola commissioned the "neova villa" (Later known as the Villa del Trattato[it]) to be built for the couple on the Villa Spinola Estate.[15][13] Styled after the Villa Serra di Comago, the Villa del Trattato was completed in 1915 however, Peirano and Spinola never lived in the property. [15][13] Initially passionate, Peirano's and Spinola's marriage was strained by class and cultural differences which saw Peirano struggle to fit in with the conservative Spinola family.[16][17] In 1919, Peirano met Stephen Courtauld in Courmayeur whilst on a skiing holiday with Spinola, and formed a romantic relationship.[4][13]
Peirano and Luccoli separated in either the spring or summer of 1920, and finalised their divorce in Fiume (present-day Rijeka, Croatia) in 1923.[9][4][14][13] Peirano married Stephen Courtauld in Fiume soon after, whilst Spinola formed a long term relationship with the actress Hydée Urbani.[9][18][14][15]
As a wedding present, Stephen Courtauld gifted Peirano a pet ring-tailed lemur named Mah-Jongg, who lived and traveled with the couple for the next 15 years.[4]
In 1933, the couple acquired a 99-year-lease on Eltham Palace, and completed an Art Deco renovation.[19] Following a bombing on Eltham Palace in 1944, the Courtauld's gave up their lease and moved to Scotland.[20]
In 1951, the Courtauld's moved to Southern Rhodesia (present-day Zimbabwe), and commissioned the building of the La Rochelle country estate.[21] The Courtaulds supported non-racialism, were personal friends of Hastings Banda and advocated for Rhodesian black rule.[22][23] Following Stephen Courtauld death in 1967, Peirano reportedly began financially supporting members of the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army crossing the Mozambique–Zimbabwe border.[22][23]
The 2017 book Virginia, un mondo perduto. Scene da un matrimonio Belle Epoque di casa Spinola (English: Virginia, a Lost World. Scenes from a Belle Epoque Marriage at Casa Spinola) was edited by Galleria nazionale di palazzo Spinola[it].[17][25] In 2018, Peirano was honoured at the Rose Festival in Busalla (Italian: Festa delle Rose di Busalla).[26]
The 2019 historical fiction book The Dragon Lady is based on Peirano's life.[27]
↑"Peirano, Rosa Balint". England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858–1995: 261. 1940.
↑"Virginia Coustauld [Virginia Courtauld]". 1939 England and Wales Register (RG 101/661J). Kew, London: The National Archives. 1939.
↑"Virginia Courtauld". Manifests of Alien Arrivals in the Seattle, Washington District (Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1781–2004, Record Group Number: 85, Series Number: A4107, Roll Number 009). Washington, D.C.: The National Archives. 1929.
1234567Gerstein, Alexandra (2019). "Courtauld Philanthropy: A Family Affair". In Serres, Karen (ed.). Courtauld Collection: A Vision for Impressionism. Paris, London: Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paul Holberton Publishing. pp.331–336. ISBN978-1-911300-58-8.
123Moretti, Matteo (2017). "Albero Genealogico Delle Famiglie Spinola E Peirano". Virginia, Un mondo perduto. Scene da un matrimonio Belle Epoque di casa Spinola (in Italian). Genoa: Sagep Editori. ISBN978-88-6373-486-7.
↑"Peirano, Riccardo". England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858–1995: 669. 1931.
↑"Richard Peirano (the younger)". UK, Naturalisation Certificates and Declarations, 1870–1916. Kew, Surrey: The National Archives. 1909.
↑"Henry Peirano". UK, Naturalisation Certificates and Declarations, 1870–1916. Kew, Surrey: The National Archives. 1906.
12345678Olcese Spingardi, Caterina (2017). "Paolo, L'età dell'innocenza". Virginia, Un mondo perduto. Scene da un matrimonio Belle Epoque di casa Spinola (in Italian). Genoa: Sagep Editori. ISBN978-88-6373-486-7.
123"I Proprietari: 1958 Paolo Spinola". Musei Nazionali di Genova Palazzo Spinola (in Italian). Genova: Palazzo Spinola e Galleria Nazionale della Liguria. 2022.
↑"Plants to which awards have been made in 1942". Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society. LXVII (January): 309–312. 1942.
↑Ciliento, Bruno (2017). "Virginia, Il Monso Perduto". Virginia, Un mondo perduto. Scene da un matrimonio Belle Epoque di casa Spinola (in Italian). Genoa: Sagep Editori. ISBN978-88-6373-486-7.
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