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Leonarda Cianciulli : ウィキペディア英語版 | Leonarda Cianciulli
Leonarda Cianciulli (April 14, 1894 – October 15, 1970) was an Italian serial killer. Better known as the "Soap-Maker of Correggio" (Italian: ''la Saponificatrice di Correggio''), she murdered three women in Correggio between 1939 and 1940, and turned their bodies into soap and teacakes. ==Early life== Cianciulli was born in Montella. While still a young girl, Leonarda attempted suicide twice. In 1917 she married a registry office clerk, Raffaele Pansardi: her parents didn't approve of the marriage, as they had planned to marry her to another man. Leonarda claimed that on this occasion her mother cursed them. The couple moved to the man's town, Lauria, in 1921 where Cianciulli was sentenced for fraud and imprisoned in 1927; once released the couple moved to Lacedonia. Their home was destroyed by an earthquake in 1930, and they moved once more, this time to Correggio, where Leonarda opened a small shop and became very popular as a nice, gentle woman, a doting mother and a nice neighbour.〔 Cianciulli had seventeen pregnancies during her marriage, but lost three of the children to miscarriage; ten more died in their youth. Consequently, she was heavily protective of the four surviving children. Her fears were fuelled by a warning she had received some time earlier from a fortune teller, who said that she would marry and have children, but that all of the children would die. Reportedly, Cianciulli also visited another Romani who practiced palm reading, and who told her, "In your right hand I see prison, in your left a criminal asylum."〔 Exhibit at Rome's Criminological Museum.〕 Cianciulli was a superstitious woman, and seems to have taken these warnings very much to heart.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Leonarda Cianciulli」の詳細全文を読む
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