Maria Celeste | |
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Painting believed to be an image of Maria Celeste
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Born |
Padua |
16 August 1600
Died | 2 April 1634 Florence |
(aged 33)
Nationality | Italian |
Other names | Virginia Galilei |
Occupation | Roman Catholic Nun |
Relatives |
Galileo Galilei (father) |
Galileo Galilei (father)
Sister Maria Celeste (16 August 1600 – 2 April 1634), born Virginia Galilei, was the daughter of the Italian scientist Galileo Galilei and Marina Gamba.
Virginia was the eldest of three siblings, with a sister Livia and a brother Vincenzio. All three were born out of wedlock, and the two daughters were considered unworthy for marriage. Troubled by monetary problems, Galileo placed them in the San Matteo convent shortly after Virginia's thirteenth birthday. When she took the veil in 1616 Virginia chose her religious name, Maria Celeste, in honor of the Virgin Mary, and her father's love of astronomy.
From her cloister Maria Celeste was a source of support not only for her Poor Clares sisters, but also for her father. Maria Celeste served as San Matteo's apothecary (herself being of frail health). She sent her father herbal treatments for his various maladies while additionally seeing to the convent's finances and sometimes staging plays inside the convent's walls. There is evidence she prepared the manuscripts for some of Galileo's books.
Maria Celeste frequently asked her father for help, and kept the convent afloat through his influence. Galileo helped repair windows and made sure the convent clock was in order. Maria Celeste was a mediator between her father and her brother.
The Inquisition tried Galileo for being vehemently suspected of heresy in 1633. He was forced to recant his views on heliocentrism, and he was sentenced to house arrest for the remainder of his life. Soon after Galileo returned to Arcetri in disgrace, Maria Celeste contracted dysentery; she died on 2 April 1634, aged 33.
Galileo described Maria Celeste as "a woman of exquisite mind, singular goodness, and most tenderly attached to me".
After Galileo's death, 124 letters from Maria Celeste written between 1623 and 1633 were discovered among his papers. Galileo's responses to Maria Celeste—possibly describing what kind of help she brought to his work and describing his state of mind during the Roman trial—seem to have been lost. Maria Celeste's letters have been published: