Rufina Cambaceres (also spelled Cambacérès) (31 May 1883 – 31 May 1902) was the sole heiress to a large fortune derived from cattle ranching in Argentina. In 1902, at the age of 19, she was found apparently lifeless, and buried in the family vault in Buenos Aires. After her interment, noises were heard from the tomb, and she was subsequently discovered to have been buried alive. Since her premature burial, she is popularly known as "the girl who died twice",[1] and her tomb is one of the most famous in La Recoleta Cemetery.
Life and death
editRufina Cambaceres was born in Paris, into a wealthy family. Her father was the Argentine writer and politician Eugenio Cambaceres and her mother was the Italian dancer es:Luisa Bacichi, who married in Paris in 1887. Her father died of tuberculosis when she was four years old. Rufina received a good education, excelling in her studies and speaking five languages. She grew up to be a beautiful and wealthy young woman and a Buenos Aires socialite.[2][3]
On the evening of her nineteenth birthday, while changing for the opera, Rufina collapsed and was found on the floor of her boudoir with no vital signs. Three doctors declared her dead due to a stroke or heart attack.[3]
She was buried by her mother the next day, wearing her favourite jewels, in the family mausoleum in La Recoleta cemetery. The same night, the caretaker heard deep, loud noises coming from her vault. Fearing that thieves were ransacking the body, he went to the vault and found that the coffin had moved and the lid was broken in places. Upon closer inspection, he found scratch marks on the inside of the lid and on the young woman's face, indicating Rufina had been buried alive.[3][4]
Possible reasons for Rufina's collapse and death
editRufina's original collapse is generally attributed to catalepsy, the reason for which has never been fully clarified.
It is presumed that, after her premature burial, she died of suffocation, exhaustion or shock after waking up in a coffin. However, in a possible case of urban legend, it has also been claimed that her body was found next to the door, and that she had managed to get out of her coffin and, upon realising she was trapped in a mausoleum in the middle of the night, she suffered a heart attack.[3]
The incident changed funerary practices in Buenos Aires, and afterwards bell chimes were installed in coffins, in case the dead woke up.[5][6]
La Recoleta tomb
editRufina's tomb is an Art Nouveau masterpiece, constructed of Carrara marble, featuring a full-sized statue of her holding the door to her own mausoleum, possibly leaving it. It is said to have been built by her mother as a tribute to what happened to her. On the top is a carved rose, and next to it a carved bed for her mother to sleep in to keep her company.[5] It is one of the most visited tombs in the cemetery.[7]
Another urban legend is that her ghost haunts the cemetery.[8]
In popular culture
edit- In 2006, a documentary was filmed based on the story of Rufina Cambaceres: No hay más sombras: Rufina Cambaceres. The film explores the meaning of urban myths, legends, funeral rites and popular imagination. It stars Eugenia Rosales in the role of Rufina and was directed and written by Pablo Tesoriere, with poems by Gonzalo Silva.[9]
- The Chilean amateur composer Luis Lastra Cid composed a song dedicated to Rufina Cambaceres called "Rufina" on his album Book of Shadows.
- In 2012, the Uruguayan programme es:Voces anunciadas aired an episode that tells of her tragic death.
References
edit- ^ Stewart, Alison (19 August 2017). "The girl who died twice and other secrets of Argentina's La Recoleta cemetery". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 5 October 2024.
- ^ "Necrologia: Señorita Rufina Cambaceres". Caras y Carets (in Spanish). 7 June 1902.
- ^ a b c d "The Tomb of Rufina Cambacérès". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 4 October 2024.
- ^ Zappaterra, Yolanda (6 September 2022). Cities of the Dead The World's Most Beautiful Cemeteries. Frances Lincoln. p. 14. ISBN 9780711265790.
- ^ a b Dujovne, Beatriz (16 October 2020). "Don't Be Sad When I'm Gone" A Memoir of Loss and Healing in Buenos Aires. McFarland, Incorporated. pp. 115–116. ISBN 9781476684284.
- ^ Dujovne, Beatriz (23 August 2011). In Strangers' Arms The Magic of the Tango. McFarland, Incorporated. p. 55. ISBN 9780786486793.
- ^ "Cementerio de la Recoleta" [La Recoleta Cemetery] (in Spanish). Buenos Aires City Government. Archived from the original on 23 March 2012. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
Las bóvedas más visitadas son las de Evita, Domingo F. Sarmiento, Juan M. de Rosas, Remedios Escalada de San Martín, Mariquita Sánchez, Rufina de Cambaceres, entre muchas otras.
- ^ Wood, Alix (15 December 2016). Creepy Cemeteries. Gareth Stevens Publishing Lllp. p. 9. ISBN 9781482459036.
- ^ "No hay más sombras: Rufina Cambaceres". Cine Nacional (in Spanish). 4 January 2023. Retrieved 4 October 2024.