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2. La santa di Casa: Benedetto XIV e la beata Imelda Lambertini.
- Author
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Fattori, Maria Teresa
- Subjects
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BEATIFICATION , *VENERATION of Christian saints , *SAINTS , *HAGIOGRAPHY ,CATHOLIC Church history - Abstract
Pope Benedict XIV did not start a beatification procedures to sanctify Imelda Lambertini, though he had honoured this young nun (who died in 1333) when he was prelate. Within an event where the gaps are more numerous than the surviving documentation, 18th-century erudition inspired by Muratori represents a time of impasse in the cult of the blessed Imelda. This paper reconstructs the history of the failure to support the cult of a member of his family on the part of Benedict XIV (1675-1758), and is divided into three parts. First, we outline the events and documents allowing us to reconstruct the information that Benedict XIV attempted to collect about his family blessed; second, we trace the 17th and 18th century development of the cult of Imelda to identify the salient features of an image of potential sainthood and to contextualize the issue of devotion to the Eucharist, linked to the life of the blessed Imelda, within the debate over the Eucharist. The final section attempts to define the reasons for the doubts entertained by 18th-century culture over this hagiographic event to explain the motivations that may have induced Benedict XIV to abandon this possibility, in light of the close but also profoundly critical ties between the Bolognese Pope and his family and native city. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Il valore della memoria: Terremoti e ricostruzioni in Italia nel lungo periodo.
- Author
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Guidoboni, Emanuela
- Subjects
- *
EARTHQUAKES , *BUILDING repair , *SOCIAL history , *ECONOMIC history , *BUREAUCRACY , *RECONSTRUCTION of castles , *HISTORY - Abstract
The paper presents some reflections on the impact of reconstruction work on the economic and social history of Italy. This problem dates far back in time and is largely under-appreciated: from the 11th century to the year 2000 over 4,800 sites (villages and towns) suffered serious destruction followed by massive and extensive reconstruction work. Few cases have attracted the attention of historians, with the exception of rebuilding work after the 1693, 1783, 1908 and 1915 earthquakes. Yet the interest of such studies lies less in the history of local town planning, and more in that of the surrounding territories and how these were managed administratively, politically and by government in general. What happens at the various stages of reconstruction work provides an accelerated glimpse of power and decision-making dynamics at work, conditioned by in-fighting, class conflict, or the slowness and instability of solutions dogged by bureaucratic squabbling within government. Such features of the governance process often escape historical analysis. The quality of reconstruction work significantly affects the impact of subsequent earthquakes. For this reason, and given the frequency of seismic events in Italy, we find „chains“ of destruction and reconstruction (L’Aquila, for example, is preparing for its sixth rebuilding, between the 14th century and today). Destruction and reconstruction map out a history spanning natural features and the features of the built environment. We must rise above set disciplinary patterns and topics if this history is to be explored, understood and more widely disseminated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Il costo di una carica: Strategie familiari e politiche finanziarie tra Auditor Camerae e famiglia Borghese in alcuni documenti vaticani (1590-1591).
- Author
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Cicerchia, Andrea
- Subjects
- *
CHURCH & state , *PAPAL courts , *POLITICAL patronage , *SIXTEENTH century , *HOLY Roman Empire , *HISTORY ,ROME (Italy) politics & government, 1420-1798 - Abstract
This paper addresses the problem of the relationship between the career dynamics implemented within the Roman Curia, and the perception of the value of offices and their evolution in the early modern period. Specifically, it offers an analysis of the specific and unscrupulous economic strategy adopted by the Borghese family in the late sixteenth century, within the financial and judicial context of the Roman Curia. This article not only focuses on the economic manoeuvres of the Borghese brothers, already studied by Wolfgang Reinhard, but also offers some reflections, emerging from this correspondence, on the need to obtain ownership of certain offices, such as that of the Auditor Camerae. Since the second half of the fifteenth century the office was in the possession of a tribunal independent of the Apostolic Chamber and, while retaining precise functions linked to the tax authorities, had been granted some specific jurisdiction in civilibus and in criminalibus in papal bulls. After the end of the Council of Trent and in the last decades of the sixteenth century, the office, with its tribunal, acquired increasing importance in the balance between traditional curial functions and the new congregations of Sixtus V. The reconstruction of family relationships and patronage networks – using the Borghese as an example – is therefore placed in an historical context aimed at highlighting the role played by this tribunal in the context of Roman Justice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. I conti di Galeria (secoli XI-XIII).
- Author
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Berardozzi, Antonio
- Subjects
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ELITE (Social sciences) , *CASTLES , *ABBOTS , *HISTORY ,ROME (Italy) politics & government - Abstract
Among the comital elites of the early 11th century mentioned in the documentation for the Rome area, the counts of Galeria occupied a prominent place. Though we can reconstruct their history until the second half of the 13th century, not all the individuals who held this title were of the same lineage. Count Gerardo [I], son of Ranieri, is the most important figure of all the Counts of Galeria, and therefore the main focus of this paper. He is documented between 1040–1060 and played an important role in Rome’s political history during these years. He collaborated with Popes Benedict IX and Benedict X; he played a leading role in the Roman Tuscia where he also owned several castles, and was a close ally of the abbots of Farfa. Count Sassone of Civita Castellana was his brother. Both men had descendants. It is very likely that after Count Gerardo’s death, in the early 1060s Galeria Castle returned under papal control. According to a document in the archives of San Paolo fuori le mura, Gregory VII granted it to the monastery in Via Ostiense. By contrast, the descendants of Count Sassone, his son Rainieri [II] and his grandson Sassone [II], managed to retain control of Civita Castellana until almost the end of the century. Our information on this family ceases in the last 20 years of the 11th century. At the end of the first millennium, other Roman families began to appear in the Roman contado and the southern Tuscia, and in the space of a century their ambitions obliterated the old families that had hitherto dominated. Other counts of Galeria appear sporadically in the documents of the 12th and 13th centuries, but none of these individuals were as important as the two brothers Gerardo [I] and Sassone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. 30. Un papiro di Eschine con correzioni (P.Oxy. 2404). Considerazioni sull' ekdosis alessandrina.
- Author
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Montanari, Franco
- Subjects
- *
CHRISTIAN Alexandrian school , *PHILOLOGISTS , *PHILOLOGY , *AUTHORSHIP , *GRAMMARIANS , *EDITIONS , *PAPYRUS manuscripts , *TEXTUAL criticism - Abstract
In order to acquire an understanding of how the ekdosis of a text was constructed by the Alexandrian philologists, it is essential to keep in mind the common technical and material aspects of book production, designed to improve the new copy that was produced. The grammarians employed precisely these well-known methods that had the character of craft work, but utilized them in pursuit of a critical-philological aim, namely the creation not merely of a good copy, but rather of a good edition of the text itself. From this perspective, the present paper examines the example of a papyrus of Aeschines, P.Oxy. 2404. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A proposito di alcuni papiri berlinesi con Scholia Minora all' Iliade.
- Author
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Muratore, Davide
- Subjects
- *
PAPYRUS manuscripts , *SCHOLIA , *EDITIONS , *LITERARY criticism - Abstract
Editions, studies, repertories and web sites dedicated to the Scholia Minora in Homerum testify to the growing interest in these exegetical texts preserved on papyrus. A reconsideration of already published papyri -- such as P. Berol. inv. 5014, 11518 and 21306 which constitute the object of the present paper -- can often be fruitful, when accompanied by a new inspection and a closer examination in the light of parallel texts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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