On 28 June a group of republicans including Fonseca Pimentel boarded ships bound for France at the fall of the
Neapolitan Republic. However, before the ships could leave port, she was taken into custody. She was arrested and later sentenced to death, by hanging, on 20 August 1799. This was because of her revolutionary activities and writings against the monarchy, the worst of which was a poem written for the birth of Queen Carolina's second child, in which she refers to the queen as an “impure
lesbian” and an “unfaithful imbecile tyrant.” Fonseca Pimentel asked to be beheaded, as was customary aristocrats sentenced to death; however her request was denied. The
Kingdom of Naples only recognized her father's nobility, and additionally as a
Jacobin she was no longer publicly viewed as nobility. She was thusly killed by hanging, in August 1799. As a woman once viewed as noble, who had however spoken out against the monarchy, she was made an example of through her public hanging. And of eight other patriots sentenced, she was the last to be hanged. On the day of her hanging in
Piazza Mercato, her last wish was only for a cup of coffee. She was calm as she went to the gallows, as the monarch's loyalists shouted: "Long Live Carolina, Death to the Jacobina." Her last words were in Latin, a quote from Virgil's
The Aeneid: "Forsan et haec olim meninisse juvabit," which translates to "perhaps it will please (people) one day to remember these things." == Notable works ==