Don Gurlino was a 19th-century Carmelite priest, active in Turin, who was scandalously convicted in 1860 of having seduced and had sexual relations with a number of girls to whom he acted as confessor; he was sentenced to seven years solitary confinement.[1]
Gurlino | |
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Religion | Roman Catholic |
Case
editIn 1860, Gurlino was condemned by the Criminal Court of Turin to seven years solitary confinement for having had sexual relations with a number of virgins.[1] 33 girls gave evidence against him.[1] The relations of a young girl had found in her possession an obscene print, and insisted on her telling them from whom she had procured it.[1] The girl refused for some time, but eventually named her confessor.[1] She added that several of her friends had also received from Don Gurlino immoral books and prints and had been seduced by him.[1]
Legacy
editThe case was exploited by anti-Catholic elements of the British press and the lurid coverage was indicative of wider religious and sexual anxieties in Victorian Britain, especially concern for female virginity and distrust of the confessional.[2]
See also
editReferences
editSources
edit- Peschier, Diana (2009). "8. Religious Sexual Perversion in Nineteenth-Century Anti-Catholic Literature". In Peakman, Julie (ed.). Sexual Perversions, 1670–1890. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 216–18. doi:10.1057/9780230244689_8. ISBN 978-1-349-36397-1.
- "The Confessional". The Times. 16 May 1860. p. 10.
Further reading
edit- Ashbee, Henry Spencer [Pisanus Fraxi] (1879). Centuria Librorum Absconditorum. London: privately printed. pp. 211–12.
- Forbes, Charles Stuart (1861). Campaign of Garibaldi in the Two Sicilies: A Personal Narrative. Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood and Sons. p. 9.
- "A Condordat Wanted At Piedmont". Punch, or The London Charivari. 26 May 1860. p. 215.
- "Miscellaneous. Don Gurlino". The Spectator. 19 May 1860. p. 470.