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| Essential
Architecture- Search by style
Sicilian Baroque |
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| Illustration 1: Sicilian Baroque. "Collegiata"
in Catania, designed by Stefano Ittar, circa 1768 |
Illustration 2: University of Catania,
designed by Vaccarini and completed by 1752, exemplifies typical Sicilian
Baroque, with putti supporting the balcony, wrought iron balustrades,
decorated rustication and two-tone lava masonry. |
Illustration 3: A Sicilian belfry crowns
Rosario Gagliardi's Church of San Giuseppe in Ragusa Ibla |
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| Illustration 4: The Cathedral of San
Giovanni Battista, Ragusa, (1694–1735), an example of early Sicilian
Baroque. |
Illustration 5: Piazza Pretoria,
Palermo. The fountain (circa 1554) by Francesco Camilliani is the only
example of high Renaissance art in the capital city. Dominating the piece is
the Church of Santa Caterina (circa 1556), with its spectacular later
Baroque dome. |
Illustration 6: Early Sicilian Baroque:
Quattro Canti, Palermo, (circa 1610). |
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| Illustration 7: Catania and the
Palazzo Biscari, begun in 1702. Catania replaced Messina as Sicily's second
city after the revolt of 1686. |
Illustration 8: Piazza del Duomo,
Syracuse. Andrea Palma's Cathedral (Illustration 11 below); the pillared
cathedral is flanked by Baroque palazzi. |
Illustration 9: Via Nicolasi, Noto. |
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| Illustration 10: The Cathedral of San
Giorgio, Modica. |
Illustration 11: Duomo in Syracuse,
Andrea Palma's cathedral façade (begun in 1728). Based on the formula of a
Roman triumphal arch, the broken masses within a columned façade create a
theatrical effect. |
Illustration 12: Rosario Gagliardi's Church
of San Giorgio, Ragusa. |
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Sicilian Baroque
Sicilian Baroque is the distinctive form of Baroque architecture that took
hold on the island of Sicily, off the southern coast of Italy, in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The style is recognizable not only by
its typical Baroque curves and flourishes, but also by its grinning masks
and putti and a particular flamboyance that has given Sicily a unique
architectural identity.
The Sicilian Baroque style came to fruition during a major surge of
rebuilding following a massive earthquake in 1693. Previously, the Baroque
style had been used on the island in a naïve and parochial manner, having
evolved from hybrid native architecture rather than being derived from the
great Baroque architects of Rome. After the earthquake, local architects,
many of them trained in Rome, were given plentiful opportunities to recreate
the more sophisticated Baroque architecture that had become popular in
mainland Italy; the work of these local architects — and the new genre of
architectural engravings that they pioneered — inspired more local
architects to follow their lead. Around 1730, Sicilian architects had
developed a confidence in their use of the Baroque style. Their particular
interpretation led to further evolution to a personalised and highly
localised art form on the island. From the 1780s onwards, the style was
gradually replaced by the newly-fashionable neoclassicism.
The highly decorative Sicilian Baroque period lasted barely fifty years, and
perfectly reflected the social order of the island at a time when, nominally
ruled by Spain, it was in fact governed by a wealthy and often extravagant
aristocracy into whose hands ownership of the primarily agricultural economy
was highly concentrated. Its Baroque architecture gives the island an
architectural character that has lasted into the 21st century.
Characteristics of Sicilian Baroque
Baroque architecture is a European phenomenon originating in 17th-century
Italy; it is flamboyant and theatrical, and richly ornamented by sculpture
and an effect known as chiaroscuro, the strategic use of light and shade on
a building created by mass and shadow.
The Baroque style in Sicily was largely confined to buildings erected by the
church, and palazzi[1] built as private residences for the Sicilian
aristocracy. The earliest examples of this style in Sicily lacked
individuality and were typically heavy-handed pastiches of buildings seen by
Sicilian visitors to Rome, Florence, and Naples. However, even at this early
stage, provincial architects had begun to incorporate certain vernacular
features of Sicily's older architecture. By the middle of the 18th century,
when Sicily's Baroque architecture was noticeably different from that of the
mainland, it typically included at least two or three of the following
features, coupled with a unique freedom of design that is more difficult to
characterise in words.
1: Grotesque masks and putti, often supporting balconies or decorating
various bands of the entablature of a building; these grinning or glaring
faces are a relic of Sicilian architecture from before the mid-17th century
(Illustrations 2 and 9).
2: Balconies, often complemented by intricate wrought iron balustrades after
1633 (Illustrations 2 & 9), and by plainer balustrades before that date
(Illustration 6).
3: External staircases. Most villas and palazzi were designed for formal
entrance by a carriage through an archway in the street façade, leading to a
courtyard within. An intricate double staircase would lead from the
courtyard to the piano nobile. This would be the palazzo's principal
entrance to the first-floor reception rooms; the symmetrical flights of
steps would turn inwards and outwards as many as four times. Owing to the
topography of their elevated sites it was often necessary to approach
churches by many steps; these steps were often transformed into long
straight marble staircases, in themselves decorative architectural features
(Illustration 19), in the manner of the Spanish Steps in Rome.
4: Canted, concave, or convex façades (Illustrations 1 and 6). Occasionally
in a villa or palazzo, an external staircase would be fitted into the recess
created by the curve.
5: The Sicilian belfry. Belfrys were not placed beside the church in a
campanile tower as is common in Italy, but on the façade itself, often
surmounting the central pediment, with one or more bells clearly displayed
beneath its own arch, such as at Catania's Collegiata (Illustration 1). In a
large church with many bells this usually resulted in an intricately
sculpted and decorated arcade at the highest point of the principal façade
(Illustration 3). These belfries are among the most enduring and
characteristic features of Sicilian Baroque architecture.
6: Inlaid coloured marble set into both floor and walls especially in church
interiors. This particular form of Intarsia developed in Sicily from the
17th century (see the floor of Illustration 14).
7: Columns that are often deployed singularly, supporting plain arches and
thus displaying the influence of the earlier and much plainer Norman period
(Illustration 3). Columns are rarely encountered, as elsewhere in Europe, in
clustered groups acting as piers, especially in examples of early Sicilian
Baroque.
8: Decorated rustication. Sebastiano Serlio had decorated the blocks of
ashlar in his rustication; by the end of the 16th century, Sicilian
architects were ornamenting the blocks with carvings of leaves, fish-scales,
and even sweets and shells; shells were later to become among the most
prevalent ornamental symbols of Baroque design. Sometimes the rustication
would be used for pillars rather than walls, a reversal of expectations and
almost an architectural joke (Illustration 2).
9: The local volcanic lava stone that was used in the construction of many
Sicilian Baroque buildings, because this was the most readily available.
Shades of black or grey were used to create contrasting decorative effects,
accentuating the Baroque love of light and shade as demonstrated in
(Illustration 2).
10: The Spanish influence. The architectural influence of the ruling Spanish
(Illustration 13), although this was a milder influence than that of the
Normans. The Spanish style, a more restrained version of French renaissance
architecture, is particularly evident in eastern Sicily, where — owing to
minor insurrections — the Spanish maintained a stronger military presence.
Messina's monumental Porta Grazia, erected in 1680 as the entrance to a
Spanish citadel, would not be out of place in any of the towns and citadels
built by the Spanish in their colonies elsewhere. The style of this arched
city gate, with its ornate mouldings and scrolls, was widely copied all over
Catania immediately following the quake.
While these characteristics never occur all together in the same building,
and none are unique to Sicilian Baroque it is the coupling together which
gives the Sicilian Baroque its distinctive air. Other Baroque
characteristics, such as broken pediments over windows, the extravagant use
of statuary and curved topped windows and doors are all emblematic of
baroque architecture, but can all be found on Baroque building all over
Europe.
Early Sicilian Baroque
Volcanic Sicily in the central Mediterranean, off the Italian peninsula, has
been colonised by the Greeks, oppressed under the Romans, governed by
Byzantines, conquered by barbarians, was then a Moslem emirate, a Norman
duchy, a Hohenstaufen kingdom, ruled by Angevins, given to Spain and then to
the Neapolitan Bourbons, before finally being absorbed into the Kingdom of
Italy in 1860. Thus Sicilians have been exposed to a rich sequence of
disparate cultures; this is reflected in the extraordinary diversity of
architecture on the island.
A form of decorated classical architecture peculiar to Sicily had begun to
evolve from the 1530s. Inspired by the ruined Greek architecture and by the
Norman cathedrals on the island, this often incorporated Greek architectural
motifs such as the Greek key pattern into late Norman architecture with
Gothic features such as pointed arches and window apertures. The Sicilian
Norman architecture incorporated some Byzantine elements seldom found in
Norman architecture elsewhere, and like other Romanesque architecture it
went on to incorporate Gothic features. This early ornate architecture
differs from that of mainland Europe in not having evolved from Renaissance
architecture; instead, it was developed from Norman styles. Renaissance
architecture hardly touched Sicily; in the capital city of Palermo, the only
remnant of the High Renaissance is a water fountain, brought from Florence
when it was already 20 years old (Illustration 5).
Whatever the reason that Renaissance style never became popular in Sicily,
it was certainly not ignorance. Antonello Gagini was midway through
constructing the church of Santa Maria di Porto Salvo in 1536 in the
Renaissance style when he died; he was superseded by the architect Antonio
Scaglione, who completed the building in a Norman style. This style seems to
have influenced Sicilian architecture almost up to the time of the 1693
earthquake. Even Mannerism passed the island by. Only in the architecture of
Messina[2] could a Renaissance influence be discerned, partly for
geographical reasons: within sight of mainland Italy and the most important
port in Sicily, Messina was always more amenable to the prevailing tides of
fashion outside the island. The town's aristocratic patrons would often call
on Florence or Rome to provide them with an architect; one example was the
Florentine Giovanni Angelo Montorsoli, who established the Tuscan styles of
architecture and sculpture there in the mid-16th century. However, these
influences remained largely confined to Messina and the surrounding
district. It seems likely that it was the patronage of the Roman Catholic
Church, removed from the influences of Roman fashion, that remained
conservative in architectural taste.
This is not to say that Sicily was completely isolated from trends elsewhere
in Europe. Architecture in the island's major cities was strongly influenced
by the family of the sculptor Domenico Gagini, who arrived from Florence in
1463. This family of sculptors and painters decorated churches and buildings
with ornate decorative and figurative sculpture. Less than a century after
his family had begun to cautiously decorate the island's churches (1531–37),
Antonio Gagini completed the proscenium-like arch of the "Capella della
Madonna" in the "Santuario dell'Annunziata" at Trapani. This pedimented arch
to the sanctuary has pilasters — not fluted, but decorated heavily with
relief busts of the saints; and, most importantly in terms of architecture,
the pediment is adorned by reclining saints supporting swags linked to the
central shield that crowns the pediment. This ornate pediment, although
still unbroken, was one of the first signs that Sicily was forming its own
style of decorative architecture. Similar in style is the Chiesa del Gesù
(Illustration 14), constructed between 1564 and 1633, which also shows early
signs of the Sicilian Baroque.
Thus a particular brand of Baroque architecture had begun to evolve in
Sicily long before the earthquake of 1693. While the majority of those
buildings that can be clearly classified as Baroque in style date from
around 1650, the scarcity of these isolated, surviving examples of Sicily's
17th-century architectural history makes it hard to fully and accurately
evaluate the architecture immediately before the natural disaster: the
earthquake destroyed not only most of the buildings, but also most of their
documentation. Yet more information has been lost in subsequent earthquakes
and severe bombing during World War II.
The earliest example of Baroque on the island is Giulio Lasso's Quattro
Canti, an octagonal piazza, or circus, constructed around 1610 at the
crossroads of the city's two principal streets. Around this intersection are
four open sides, being the streets, and four matching buildings with
identical canted corners. The sides of the four buildings are curved,
further heightening the Baroque design of the buildings lining the circus.
These four great buildings dominating the circus are each enhanced by a
fountain, reminiscent of those of Pope Sixtus V's "Quattro Fontane" in Rome.
However, here in Palermo the Baroque theme continues up three storeys of the
buildings, which are adorned with statues in recessed niches depicting the
four seasons, the four Spanish kings of Sicily, and the four patronesses of
Palermo: Saints Cristina, Ninfa, Olivia, and Agata.
While each façade of Quattro Canti is pleasing to the eye, as a scheme, it
is both out of proportion with the limited size of the piazza and, like most
other examples of early Sicilian Baroque, can be considered provincial,
naive and heavy-handed, compared with later developments.[3] Whatever its
merit, it is evident that during the 17th century, the Baroque style in the
hands of the local architects and sculptors was already deviating from that
of mainland Italy. This localised variation on the mainstream Baroque was
not peculiar to Sicily, but occurred as far afield as Bavaria, and Russia,
where Naryshkin Baroque would be just as eccentric as its Sicilian cousin.
Sicilian Baroque from 1693
Earthquake and patrons
The great Sicilian earthquake of 1693 severely damaged 54 cities and towns
and 300 villages. The epicentre of the disaster was in Val di Noto, where
the city of Noto was destroyed, while the city of Catania was very severely
damaged. In total it is estimated over 100,000 people were killed. Other
towns which suffered severely were Ragusa, Modica, Scicli, and Ispica.
Rebuilding began almost immediately.
The lavishness of the architecture that was to arise from this disaster is
connected with the politics of Sicily at the time; Sicily was still
officially under Spanish rule, but rule was effectively delegated to the
native aristocracy. This was led by the Duke of Camastra, whom the Spanish
had appointed viceroy to appease the aristocracy, who were numerous. The
aristocracy was relatively concentrated compared to most of Europe, and a
gentry class was missing. In the 18th century, one estimate held that there
were 228 noble families, who provided Sicily with a ruling class consisting
of 58 princes, 27 dukes, 37 marquesses, 26 Counts, one viscount and 79
barons; the Golden Book of the Sicilian nobility (last published in 1926)
lists even more. [4] In addition to these were the younger scions of the
families, with their courtesy titles of nobile or baron.
Architecture was not the only legacy of the Normans. Rule over the peasants
(there was no established middle class) was also enforced by a feudal
system, unchanged since its introduction following the Norman conquest of
1071. Thus the Sicilian aristocracy had not only wealth but vast manpower at
their command, something that had by this time declined in many other parts
of Europe. As in Southern Spain, the huge rural estates remained almost as
concentrated as when they had been Roman "latifundi". The Sicilian economy,
though very largely agriculturally based, was very strong, and became more
so during the eighteenth century as shipping became more efficient and the
threat of Muslim piracy died away. The export markets for lemons (for the
great eighteenth century fashion for lemonade) and wines increased greatly,
and Sicilian wheat remained, as it had been since Roman times, the backbone
of the economy. The disaster that was to give Sicily its modern reputation
of poverty, namely the opening-up of the American Middle West to
wheat-farming, was a century away. When it came, this permanently more than
halved the price of wheat, and destroyed the old economy forever.
The aristocracy shared their power only with the Roman Catholic Church. The
Church ruled by fear of damnation in the next life and of the Inquisition in
the present, and consequently both upper and lower classes gave as
generously as they could on all major saints' days. Many priests and bishops
were members of the aristocracy. The wealth of the Church in Sicily was
further enhanced by the tradition of pressing younger children of the
aristocracy to enter monasteries and convents, in order to preserve the
family estates from division; a large fee, or dowry, was usually paid to the
Church to facilitate this, in the form of property, jewels, or money. Thus
the wealth of certain religious orders grew out of all proportion to the
economic growth of any other group at this time. This is one of the reasons
that so many of the Sicilian Baroque churches and monasteries, such as San
Martino delle Scale, were rebuilt after 1693 on such a lavish scale.
Once rebuilding began, the poor rebuilt their basic housing in the same
primitive fashion as before. By contrast, the wealthiest residents, both
secular and spiritual, became caught in an almost manic orgy of building.
Most members of the nobility had several homes in Sicily.[5] For one thing,
the Spanish viceroy spent six months of the year in Palermo and six in
Catania, holding court in each city, and hence members of the aristocracy
needed a town palazzo in each city. Once the palazzi in devastated Catania
were rebuilt in the new fashion, the palazzi in Palermo seemed antiquated by
comparison, so they too were eventually rebuilt. Following this, from the
middle of the 18th century, villas to retire to in the autumn, essentially
status symbols, were built at the fashionable enclave at Bagheria. This
pattern was repeated, on a smaller scale, throughout the lesser cities of
Sicily, each city providing a more entertaining social life and a magnetic
draw for the provincial aristocrat than their country estate. The country
estate also did not escape the building mania. Often Baroque wings or new
façades were added to ancient castles, or country villas were completely
rebuilt. Thus the frenzy of building gained momentum until the increasingly
fantastical Baroque architecture demanded by these hedonistic patrons
reached its zenith in the mid-18th century.
New cities
Following the quake a program of rebuilding was rapidly put into action, but
before it began in earnest some important decisions would permanently
differentiate many Sicilian cities and towns from other European urban
developments. The Viceroy, the Duke of Camastra, aware of new trends in town
planning, decreed that rather than rebuilding in the medieval plan of
cramped narrow streets, the new rebuilding would offer piazze and wider main
streets, often on a rational grid system. The whole plan was often to take a
geometric shape such as a perfect square or a hexagon, typical of
Renaissance and Baroque town planning.
This concept was still very new in the 1690s, and few new cities had had
reason to be built in Europe - Christopher Wren's city plan after the Great
Fire of London in 1666 having been turned down because of the complexities
of land ownership there. There were some other examples such as Richlieu,
Indre et Loire, and later of course Saint Petersberg. The prototype may well
have been the new city of Terra del Sole, constructed in 1564. Another of
the first towns to be planned using symmetry and order rather than an
evolution of small alleys and streets was Alessandria in southern Piedmont.
A little later, from 1711, this Baroque form of planning was favoured in the
Hispanic colonies of South America, especially by the Portuguese in Brazil.
In other parts of Europe, lack of finance, complex land ownership and
divided public opinion made radical replanning after disaster too difficult:
after 1666, London was rebuilt on its ancient plan, though new extensions to
the west were partially on a grid system. In Sicily, public opinion (the
public being anyone not a member of the ruling class) counted for nothing,
and hence these seemingly revolutionary new concepts of town planning could
be freely executed.
In Sicily, the decision was taken not just for fashion and appearance but
also because it would minimise the damage to property and life likely to be
caused in future quakes. In 1693, the cramped housing and streets had caused
buildings to collapse together like dominoes (a hazard that was to remain in
the still cramped and narrow areas housing the poor). Architecturally and
aesthetically, the big advantage of the new order of town planning was that
unlike many Italian towns and cities, where one frequently encounters a
monumental Renaissance church squeezed terrace fashion between incongruous
neighbours, in urban Baroque design one can step back and actually see the
architecture in a more conducive setting in relation to its proportions and
perspective. This is most notable in the largely rebuilt towns of
Caltagirone, Militello Val di Catania, Catania, Modica, Noto, Palazzolo
Acreide, Ragusa, and Scicli.
One of the finest examples of this new urban planning can be seen at Noto
(Illustration 9), the town rebuilt approximately 10 km from its original
site on Mount Alveria. The old ruined town now known as "Noto Antica" can
still be viewed in its ruinous state. The new site chosen was flatter than
the old to better facilitate a linear grid-like plan. The principal streets
run east to west so they would benefit from a better light and a sunnier
disposition. This example of town planning is directly attributable to a
learned local aristocrat, Giovanni Battista Landolina; helped by three local
architects, he is credited with planning the new city himself.
In these new towns, the aristocracy was allocated the higher areas, where
the air was cooler and fresher and the views finest. The church was
allocated the town centre (Illustration 8), for convenience to all, and to
reflect the church's global and central position; round the pairing of
cathedral and episcopal Palazzo Vescovile were built the convents. The
merchants and storekeepers chose their lots on the planned wider streets
leading from the main piazzas. Finally, the poor were allowed to erect their
simple brick huts and houses in the areas nobody else wanted. Lawyers,
doctors, and members of the few professions including the more skilled
artisans - those who fell between the strictly defined upper and lower class
- and were able to afford building plots, often lived on the periphery of
the commercial and upper class residential sectors, but equally often these
people just lived in a larger or grander house than their neighbours in the
poorer areas. However, many of the skilled artists working on the rebuilding
lived as part of the extended households of their patrons. In this way
Baroque town planning came to symbolize and reflect political authority, and
later its style and philosophy spread to such far away places as Annapolis
and Savannah in English America, and perhaps most notably Haussmann's 19th
century re-designing of Paris. The stage was now set for the explosion of
Baroque architecture, which was to predominate in Sicily until the early
19th century.
Later many other Sicilian towns and cities which had been either little
damaged or completely untouched by the quake, such as Palermo, were also
transformed by the Baroque style, as the fashion spread and aristocrats with
a palazzo in Catania came to wish their palazzo in the capital to be as
opulent as that in the second city. In Palermo the Church of Santa Caterina,
began in 1566, was one of many in the city to be redecorated inside in the
18th century in the Baroque style, with coloured marbles.
New churches and palazzi
Of Sicily's own form of Baroque, post 1693, it has been said, "The buildings
conceived in the wake of this disaster expressed a light-hearted freedom of
decoration whose incongruous gaiety was intended, perhaps, to assuage the
horror".[6] While this is an accurate description of a style which is almost
a celebration of joie de vivre in stone, it is unlikely to be the reason for
the choice. As with all architectural styles, the selection of style would
have directly linked to current fashion. Versailles had been completed in
1688 in a far sterner Baroque style; Louis XIV's new palace was immediately
emulated across Europe by any aristocrat or sovereign in Europe aspiring to
wealth, taste, or power. Thus it was the obvious choice for the "homeless
rich" of Sicily, of whom there were hundreds. The excesses of the Baroque
style palazzi and country villas to be constructed in Sicily, however, were
soon to make Versailles seem a model of restraint.
As the 18th century dawned, Sicilian architects were employed to create the
new palazzi and churches. These architects, often local, were able to design
in a more sophisticated style than those of the late 17th century; many had
been trained in mainland Italy and had returned with a more detailed
understanding of the Baroque idiom. Their work inspired less-travelled
Sicilian designers. Very importantly, these architects were also assisted by
the books of engravings by Domenico de' Rossi, who for the first time wrote
down text with his engravings, giving the precise dimensions and
measurements of many of the principal Renaissance and Baroque façades in
Rome. In this way, the Renaissance finally came late to Sicily by proxy.
At this stage of its development, Sicilian Baroque still lacked the freedom
of style that it was later to acquire. Giovanni Battista Vaccarini was the
leading Sicilian architect during this period. He arrived on the island in
1730 bringing with him a fusion of the concepts of Bernini and Borromini,
and introduced to the island's architecture a unified movement and a play of
curves, which would have been unacceptable in Rome itself. However, his
works are considered of lesser quality than that which was to come.[7]
Notable works which date from this period are the 18th century wings of the
Palazzo Biscari at Catania; and Vaccarini's church of Santa Agata, also in
Catania. On this building Vaccarini quite clearly copied the capitals from
Guarino Guarini's Architettura Civile. It is this frequent copying of
established designs that causes the architecture from this period, while
opulent, also to be disciplined and almost reined in. Vaccarini's style was
to dominate Catania for the next decades.
A second hindrance to Sicilian architects' fully achieving their potential
earlier was that frequently they were only rebuilding a damaged structure,
and as a consequence having to match their designs to what had been before,
or remained. The Cathedral of San Giorgio at Modica (Illustration 10) is an
example. It was badly damaged in the earthquake of 1613, rebuilt in 1643 in
a Baroque style while keeping the medieval layout, then damaged again in
1693. Rebuilding again began in 1702, by an unknown architect. Finally,
Rosario Gagliardi oversaw the façade's completion in 1760,[8] but the
compromises he had to make in deference to the existing structure are
obvious. While Gagliardi used the same formulae he used so successfully at
the church of San Giorgio in Ragusa, here in Modica the building is heavier,
and lacks his usual lightness of touch and freedom of design.
There were also at this time other influences at work. Between 1718 and 1734
Sicily was ruled personally by Charles VI from Vienna, and as a result close
ties with Austrian architecture can be perceived. Several buildings on the
island are shameless imitations of the works of Fischer von Erlach.[9] One
Sicilian architect, Tomasso Napoli, a monk, visited Vienna twice early in
the century, returning with a store of engraving and drawings. He was later
the architect of two country villas of the early Sicilian Baroque period,
remarkable for their concave and convex walls and the complex design of
their external staircases. One villa, his Villa Palagonia begun in 1705, is
the most complex and ingenious of all constructed in Sicily's Baroque era;
its double staircase of straight flights, frequently changing direction, was
to be the prototype of a distinguishing feature of Sicilian Baroque.
Later, a new wave of architects, who would master the Baroque sentiments,
aware of Rococo interior styles beginning elsewhere to gain an ascendancy
over Baroque, would go on to develop the flamboyance, freedom, and movement
that are synonymous with the term Sicilian Baroque today.
High Sicilian Baroque
Around 1730, the Baroque style gradually began to break away from the
defined Roman style of Baroque and gain an even stronger individuality, for
two reasons: the rush to rebuild was subsiding, construction was becoming
more leisurely and thoughtful; and a new clutch of home-grown Sicilian
architects came to the forefront. This new generation had watched the
rebuilding in the Baroque, and studied the ever more frequent engravings and
architectural books and treatises arriving from the mainland. However, they
were not like their predecessors (the former students of the Romans), and
consequently were able to formulate strong individual styles of their own.
They included Andrea Palma, Rosario Gagliardi and Tomasso Napoli. While
taking account of the Baroque of Naples and Rome, they now adapted their
designs for the local needs and traditions. Their use of resources and
exploitation of the sites was often wildly inventive. Napoli and then
Vaccarini had promoted the use of the external staircase, which was now
taken to a new dimension: churches upon the summits of a hills would be
reached by fantastical flights of steps evoking Vaccarini's mentor Francesco
De Sanctis's Spanish Steps in Rome.
Façades of churches often came to resemble wedding cakes rather than places
of worship as the architects grew in confidence, competence, and stature.
Church interiors, which until this date had been slightly pedestrian, came
especially in Palermo to be decorated in a riot of inlaid marbles of a wide
variety of colours. Anthony Blunt has described this decoration as "either
fascinating or repulsive, but however the individual spectator may react to
it, this style is a characteristic manifestation of Sicilian exuberance, and
must be classed amongst the most important and original creations of Baroque
art on the island". This is the key to Sicilian Baroque; it was ideally
matched to the Sicilian personality, and this was the reason it evolved so
dramatically on the island. Nowhere in Sicily is the development of the new
Baroque style more evident than in Ragusa and Catania.
Ragusa
Ragusa was very badly damaged in 1693. The town is in two halves, divided by
a deep ravine known as the "Valle dei Ponti": the older town of Ragusa Ibla,
and the higher Ragusa Superiore.
Ragusa Ibla, the lower city, boasts an impressive array of Baroque
architecture, which includes the Church of San Giorgio by Rosario Gagliardi,
designed in 1738 (Illustration 12). In the design of this church Gagliardi
exploited the difficult terrain of the hillside site. The church towers
impressively over a massive marble staircase of some 250 steps, a Baroque
feature, especially exploited in Sicily due to the island's topography. The
tower seems to explode from the façade, accentuated by the columns and
pilasters canted against the curved walls. Above the doorways and window
apertures, pediments scroll and curve with a sense of freedom and movement
which would have been unthinkable to those earlier architects inspired by
Bernini and Borromini. The neoclassical dome was not added until 1820.
In an alley connecting Ragusa Ibla with Ragusa Superiore is the church of
Santa Maria delle Scale. This church is interesting, though badly damaged in
the earthquake. Only half the church was rebuilt in Baroque style, while the
surviving half was kept in the original Norman (with Gothic features), thus
demonstrating in one piece the evolution of Sicilian Baroque.
The Palazzo Zacco is one of the more notable Baroque buildings of the city,
its Corinthian columns supporting balconies of amazing wrought iron work,
while supports of grotesques mock, shock or amuse the passerby. The palazzo
was built in the second half of the 18th century by the Baron Melfi di San
Antonio. It was later acquired by the Zacco family, after which it is named.
The building has two street façades, each with six wide balconies bearing
the coat of arms of the Melfi family, a frame of acanthus leaves from which
a puttino leans. The balconies, a feature of the palazzo, are notable for
the differing corbels which support them, ranging from putti to musicians
and grotesques. The focal points of the principal façade are the three
central balconies, divided by columns with Corinthian capitals. Here the
balconies are supported by images of musicians with grotesque faces.
The Cathedral of San Giovanni Battista in Ragusa Superiore was built between
1718 and 1778. Its principal façade is pure Baroque, containing fine
carvings and sculptures. The cathedral has a high Sicilian belfry in the
same style. The ornate Baroque interior is separated into three colonnaded
aisles (Illustration 3). Ragusa Superiore, the most badly damaged part of
the town, was replanned following 1693 around the cathedral and displays an
unusual phenomenon of Sicilian Baroque: the palazzi here are peculiar to
this town, of only two storeys and long, with the central bay only
emphasised by a balcony and an arch to the inner garden. This very
Portuguese style, probably designed to minimise damage in future
earthquakes, is very different from the palazzi in Ragusa Ibla, which are in
true Sicilian style. Unusually, Baroque lingered on here until the early
19th century. The last palazzo built here was in the Baroque form but with
columns of Roman Doric and neoclassical balconies.
Catania
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Illustration 13: Catania duomo. Giovanni Battista
Vaccarini's principal façade of 1736 shows Spanish architectural influences.
Sicily's second city, Catania, was the most damaged of all the larger cities
in 1693, with only the medieval Castello Ursino and three tribunes of the
cathedral remaining. Thus it was replanned and rebuilt. The new design
separated the city into quarters, divided by two roads meeting at an
intersection known as the Piazza dell Duomo (Cathedral Square). Rebuilding
was supervised by the Bishop of Catania, and the city's only surviving
architect, Alonzo di Benedetto. Benedetto headed a team of junior architects
called in from Messina, which quickly began to rebuild, concentrating first
on the Piazza dell Duomo. Three palazzi are situated here, the Bishop's
Palace, the Seminario and one other. The architects worked in complete
harmony and it is impossible to distinguish Benedetto's work from that of
his junior colleagues. The work is competent but not remarkable, with
decorated rustication in the 17th-century Sicilian style, but often the
decoration on the upper floors is superficial. This is typical of the
Baroque of this period immediately after the earthquake.
In 1730, Vaccarini arrived in Catania as the appointed city architect and
immediately impressed on the architecture the Roman Baroque style. The
pilasters lose their rustication and support Roman type cornices and
entablatures, or curved pediments, and free-standing columns support
balconies. Vaccarini also exploited the local black lava stone as a
decorative feature rather than a general building material, using it
intermittently with other materials, and spectacularly for an obelisk
supported on the back of the Catanian heraldic elephant, for a fountain in
the style of Bernini in front of the new Town hall. Vaccarini's principal
façade to Catania's cathedral, dedicated to Santa Agata, shows strong
Spanish influences even at this late stage of Sicilian Baroque. Also in the
city is Stefano Ittar's Church of the Collegiata, built around 1768. It is
an example of Sicilian Baroque at its most stylistically simple.
Church interiors
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Illustration 14: La chiesa del Gesù, Palermo
(1564–1633), with abundant use of polychrome marble on the floor and walls.
Sicilian church exteriors had been decorated in elaborate styles from the
first quarter of the 17th century, with profuse use of sculpture, stucco,
frescoes, and marble (Illustration 14). As the post-earthquake churches were
becoming completed in the late 1720s, interiors also began to reflect this
external decoration, becoming lighter and less intense (compare Illustration
14 to the later interior of Illustration 15), with profuse sculpted
ornamentation of pillars, cornices, and pediments, often in the form of
putti, flora, and fauna. Inlaid coloured marbles on floors and walls in
complex patterns are one of the most defining features of the style. These
patterns with their roundels of porphyry are often derived from designs
found in the Norman cathedrals of Europe, again demonstrating the Norman
origins of Sicilian architecture. The high altar is usually the pièce de
resistance: in many instances a single block of coloured marble, decorated
with gilt scrolls and swags, and frequently inset with other stones such as
lapis lazuli and agate. Steps leading to the altar dais are
characteristically curving between concave and convex and in many cases
decorated with inlaid coloured marbles. One of the finest examples of this
is in the church of St Zita in Palermo.
The building of Sicily's churches would typically be funded not just by
individual religious orders but also by an aristocratic family. Contrary to
popular belief, the majority of Sicily's nobility did not choose to have
their mortal remains displayed for eternity in the Capuchin catacombs of
Palermo, but were buried quite conventionally in vaults beneath their family
churches. It has been said, though, that "the funeral of a Sicilian
aristocrat was one of the great moments of his life".[10] Funerals became
tremendous shows of wealth; a result of this ostentation was that the stone
memorial slabs covering the burial vaults today provide an accurate
barometer of the development of Baroque and marble inlay techniques at any
specific time. For instance, those from the first half of the 17th century
are of simple white marble decorated with an incised armorial bearing, name,
date, etc. From circa 1650, small quantities of coloured marble inlay
appear, forming patterns, and this can be studied developing until, by the
end of the century, the coats of arms and calligraphy are entirely of inset
coloured marble, with decorative patterned borders. Long after Baroque began
to fall from fashion in the 1780s, Baroque decor was still deemed more
suitable for Catholic ritual than the new pagan-based neoclassicism.
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Illustration 15: Church of San Benedetto, Catania, with
frescoes by Giovanni Tuccari. & Illustration 16: The nun's choir in the
Church of San Benedetto, Catania.
The Church of St Benedetto in Catania (Illustrations 15 and 16) is a fine
example of a Sicilian Baroque interior, decorated between 1726 and 1762, the
period when Sicilian Baroque was at the height of its fashion and
individuality. The ceilings were frescoed by the artist Giovanni Tuccari.
The most spectacular part of the church's decoration is the nun's choir
(Illustrations 16), created circa 1750, which was designed in such a way
that the nuns' voices could be heard during services, but the nuns
themselves were still quite separate from and unseen by the less spiritual
world outside.
Palazzi interiors
With only a few notable exceptions, the interiors of the palazzi were from
the start less elaborate than those of Sicily's Baroque churches. Many were
finished without ornate Baroque interior decoration, simply because they
took so long to build; by the time they were completed Baroque had passed
from fashion, and the principal rooms were decorated in the new neoclassical
style known as "Pompeian". Often one can find a fusion of the two styles, as
in the ballroom wing of the Palazzo Aiutamicristo in Palermo, built by
Andrea Giganti in 1763, where the ballroom ceiling was frescoed by Giuseppe
Cristadoro with allegorical scenes framed by Baroque gilded motifs in
plaster. This ceiling[11] was already old-fashioned when it was finished,
and the rest of the room was decorated in a far simpler mode. Changing use
over the past 250 years has simplified palazzo decor further, as the ground
floors are now usually shops, banks, or restaurants, and the upper floors
divided into apartments, their interiors lost.
A third reason for the absence of Baroque decoration, and the most common,
is that most rooms were never intended for such decoration. Many of the
palazzi were vast, meant for huge numbers of people. The household of the
Sicilian aristocrat, beginning with himself, his wife and many children,
would typically also contain a collection of poorer relatives and other
extended family members, all of whom had minor apartments in the house.
There were also paid employees, often including a private chaplain or
confessor, a major domo, governesses, secretary, archivist, accountant,
librarian, and innumerable lower servants, including a porter who rang a
bell for a prescribed number of times according to the rank of an
approaching guest. Often the servants' extended families, especially if
elderly, also lived in the palazzo. Thus many rooms were necessary to house
the household. These everyday living quarters, even for the "Maestro and
Maestra di Casa", were often simply decorated and furnished. Further rooms
were required by the Sicilian tradition that it was a sign of poor breeding
to permit even mere acquaintances to stay in local inns. Any visiting
foreigner, especially an Englishman, was regarded as a special trophy and
added social prestige. Hence the Sicilian aristocrat's home was seldom empty
or quiet.
.jpg)
Illustration 17: The ballroom at the Palazzo Gangi,
Palermo
As in the rest of Italy, the finest and most decorated rooms were those on
the piano nobile, reserved for guests and entertaining. Entered formally
from the external Baroque double staircase, these rooms consisted of a suite
of large and small salons, with one very large salon being the principal
room of the house, often used as a ballroom. Sometimes the guest bedrooms
were sited here too, but by the end of the 18th century they were more often
on a secondary floor above. If decorated during the Baroque era, the rooms
would be profusely ornamented. Walls were frequently mirrored, the mirrors
inset into gilded frames in the walls, often alternating with paintings
similarly framed, while moulded nymphs and shepherdesses decorated the
spaces between. Ceilings were high and frescoed, and from the ceiling hung
huge coloured chandeliers of Murano glass, while further light came from
gilded sconces flanking the mirrors adorning the walls. One of the most
notable rooms in this style is the Gallery of Mirrors in Palermo's Palazzo
Valguarnera-Gangi (Illustration 17). This room[12] with its frescoed ceiling
by Gaspare Fumagalli is however one of the few Baroque rooms in this Baroque
palazzo, which was (from 1750) extended and transformed by its owner
Marianna Valguarnera, mostly in the later neoclassical style.
Furniture during the Baroque era was in keeping with the style: ornate,
gilded and frequently with marble used for tabletops. The furniture was
transient within the house, frequently moved between rooms as required,
while leaving other rooms unfurnished. Sometimes furniture was specifically
commissioned for a certain room, for example to match a silk wall panel
within a gilt frame. As in the rest of Europe, the furniture would always be
left arranged against a wall, to be moved forward by servants if required,
never in the later conversational style in the centre of a room, which in
the Baroque era was always left empty so as better to display the marble, or
more often ceramic, patterned floor tiles.
The common element to both church and palazzi interior design was the stucco
work. Stucco is an important component of the Baroque design and philosophy,
as it seamlessly combines architecture, sculpture, and painting in
three-dimensional form. Its combination with trompe l'oeil ceilings and
walls in Baroque illusionistic painting confuses reality and art. While in
churches the stucco could represent angels and putti linked by swags of
flowers, in a private house it might represent the owner's favourite foods
or musical instruments.
Final period
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Illustration 18: Palazzo Beneventano del Bosco,
Syracuse, designed by Luciano Alì between 1779–88 in restrained late
Sicilian Baroque. The wrought iron balconies and sweeping curves, however,
keep the approaching neoclassicism at bay.
As with all architectural styles, people eventually tired of Baroque. In
some parts of Europe, it metamorphosed into the rococo, but not in Sicily.
No longer ruled by Austria, Sicily, from 1735 officially the Kingdom of
Sicily, was ruled by the King of Naples, Ferdinand IV. Hence Palermo was in
constant association with the principal capital Naples, where there was
architecturally a growing reversion to the more classical styles of
architecture. Coupled with this, many of the more cultured Sicilian nobility
developed a fashionable obsession with all things French, from philosophy to
arts, fashion, and architecture. Many of them visited Paris in pursuit of
these interests and returned with the latest architectural engravings and
theoretical treatises. The French architect Léon Dufourny was in Sicily
between 1787 and 1794 to study and analyse the ancient Greek temples on the
island. Thus Sicilians rediscovered their ancient past, which with its
classical idioms was now the height of fashion. The change in tastes did not
come about overnight. Baroque remained popular on the island, but now
Sicilian balconies, extravagant as ever, would be placed next to severe
classical columns. Dufourny began designing in Palermo, and his "Entrance
Temple" (1789) to the Botanical Gardens was the first building in Sicily in
a style based on the Greek Doric order. It is pure neoclassical
architecture, as established in England since 1760, and it was a sign of
things to come.
It was Dufourny's great friend and fellow architect Giuseppe Marvuglia who
was to preside over the gradual decline of Sicilian Baroque. In 1784 he
designed the Palazzo Riso-Belmonte,[13] the finest example of this period of
architectural transition, combining both Baroque and Palladian motifs, built
around an arcaded courtyard providing Baroque masses of light and shade, or
chiaroscuro. The main façade, punctuated by giant pilasters, also had
Baroque features, but the skyline was unbroken. The pilasters were
undecorated, simple, and Ionic, and supported an undecorated entablature.
Above the windows were classical unbroken pediments. Sicilian Baroque was
waning.
Another reason for the gradual decline in the development of Sicily's
Baroque and building in general was that the money was running out. During
the 17th century, the aristocracy had lived principally on their landed
estates, tending and improving them, and as a result their income also
increased. During the 18th century, the nobility gradually migrated towards
the cities, in particular Palermo, to enjoy the social delights of the
Viceroy's court and Catania. Their town palazzi grew in size and splendour,
to the detriment of the abandoned estates, which were still expected to
provide the revenue. The land agents left to run the estates over time
became less efficient, or corrupt, often both. Consequently, aristocratic
incomes fell. The aristocracy borrowed money using the estates as surety,
until the value of the neglected estates fell below the money borrowed
against them. Moreover, Sicily was by now as unstable politically as its
nobility were financially. Ruled from Naples by the weak Ferdinand IV and
his dominant wife, Sicily had declined to the point of no return long before
1798 and again in 1806 when the King was forced by the invading French to
flee Naples to Sicily. The French were kept at bay from Sicily only by an
expeditionary force of 17,000 British troops, and Sicily was now ruled by
Britain in effect if not in name. King Ferdinand then in 1811 imposed the
first taxes, at a single stroke alienating his aristocracy.
The tax was rescinded by the British in 1812, who then imposed a British
style constitution on the island. One legal innovation of this time of
particular consequence for the aristocracy was that creditors, who had
previously only been able to enforce repayments of the interest on a loan or
mortgage, could now seize property. Property began to change hands in
smaller parcels at auctions, and consequently a land-owning bourgeoisie
immediately began to flourish. Revolts against the Bourbons in 1821, and
1848 divided the nobility, and liberalism was in the air. These factors
coupled with the social and political upheaval of the following Risorgimento
in the 19th century meant the Sicilian aristocracy was a doomed class.
Furthermore, because of their neglect and dereliction of noblesse oblige, an
essential element of the feudal system, the countryside was often ruled by
bandits outside the enclosed villages, and the once grand country villas
were decaying. The building mania of the Sicilian upper class was over.
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Illustration 19: Palazzo Ducezio, Noto, by Vincenzo
Sinatra, with Baroque on the ground floor, and neoclassical influences
above.
However, the British influence in Sicily was to provide Sicilian Baroque
with one last flourish. Marvuglia, recognising the new fashion for all
things British, developed the style he had first cautiously used at Palazzo
Riso-Belmonte in 1784, combining some of the plainer, more solid elements of
Baroque with Palladian motifs rather than Palladian designs. The late
Sicilian Baroque was similar in style to the Baroque popular in England at
the beginning of the 18th century, popularised by Sir John Vanbrugh with
such edifices as Blenheim Palace. An example is Marvuglia's Church of San
Francesco di Sales, which is almost English in its interpretation of
Baroque. However, this was a temporary success and the neoclassical style
was soon dominant. Few aristocrats could now afford to build, and the new
style was mainly used in public and civil buildings such as those at the
Botanical Gardens in Palermo. Sicilian architects — even Andrea Giganti,
once a competent architect in Baroque — now began to design in the
neoclassical style, but in this case in the version of the neoclassical
adopted by fashionable France. Giganti's Villa Galletti at Bagheria is
clearly inspired by the work of Ange-Jacques Gabriel.
As with the early days of Sicilian Baroque, the first buildings of the new
neoclassical era were often copies or hybrids of the two styles. The Palazzo
Ducezio (Illustration 19) was begun in 1746, and the ground floor with
arcades creating play of light and shadow is pure Baroque. However, when a
few years later the upper floor was added, despite the use of Baroque broken
pediments above the windows, the neoclassical French influence is very
pronounced, highlighted by the central curved bay. The Sicilian Baroque was
gradually and slowly being superseded by French neoclassicism.
Legacy
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Illustration 20: The Church Of Anime Santes Del Purgatorio, Ragusa,
constructed in the latter half of the 18th century.
Sicilian Baroque is today recognised as an architectural style, largely due
to the work of Sacheverall Sitwell, whose Southern Baroque Art of 1924 was
the first book to appreciate the style, followed by the more academic work
of Anthony Blunt.
Most of the Baroque palazzi continued in private ownership throughout the
19th century, as the old aristocracy either married middle-class money or
fell further into debt. There were a few exceptions and some of these retain
the ancestral palazzo still today. Thanks to the continuing religious
devotion of the Sicilian people many of the Sicilian Baroque churches are
today still in the use for which they were designed.
However, much of the blame for the decay and ruinous state of preservation
of so many palazzi must fall not just on owners unwilling to accept change,
but the political agendas of successive socialist governments. Some of the
finest Baroque villas and palazzi, including the Palermo palace of the
Prince of Lampedusa, are still in ruins following the United States bombing
raids of 1943. Often no attempt has been made to restore or even secure
them. Those that survived the raids in good repair are often sub-divided
into offices or apartments, their Baroque interiors dismantled, divided, and
sold.
The remaining members of the Sicilian aristocracy who still inhabit their
ancestral palazzi are unable to make opening their houses to tourism a major
source of income, unlike some Northern, especially English, counterparts.
The local equivalent of the National Trust is very small, and there is much
less local interest among the general population. The Princes, Marquesses,
and Counts of Sicily still living in their houses dwell in splendid
isolation, surrounded often by beauty and decay. It is only today both
owners and the state are awakening to the possibility that if action is not
taken soon it will be too late to save this particular part of the Sicilian
heritage.
As Sicily now becomes a more politically stable, secure and less corrupt
environment, the Baroque palazzi are slowly beginning to open their doors to
an eager paying public, American and Northern European as much as Italian. A
few years ago the Gangi Palace ballroom was alone in its status of having
been a film set, but today long unused salons and ballrooms are hosting
corporate and public events. Some palazzi are offering a bed and breakfast
service to paying guests, once again providing impressive hospitality to
visitors to Sicily, the purpose for which they were originally intended.
In 2002, UNESCO selectively included baroque monuments of Val di Noto into
its World Heritage List as "providing outstanding testimony to the exuberant
genius of late Baroque art and architecture" and "representing the
culmination and final flowering of Baroque art in Europe.[14]
Notable architects of Sicilian Baroque
Antonello Gagini
Rosario Gagliardi
Andrea Giganti
Guarino Guarini
Stefano Ittar
Paolo Labisi
Giulio Lasso
Giuseppe Venanzio Marvuglia
Tomasso Napoli
Andrea Palma
Vincenzo Sinatra
Giovanni Battista Vaccarini
Notes
^ "Palazzo" (pl. palazzi): is any large building in a town, state or private
(often much smaller than the term palace implies in the English-speaking
world). While palazzo is the technically correct appellation, and postal
address, no Sicilian aristocrat would ever use the word, instead referring
to his or her own house, however large, as "casa". "Palazzo" followed by the
family name was the term used by officials, tradesmen, and delivery
men.Gefen, p15
^ Messina, once Sicily's second city, fell into poverty and obscurity
following punitive measures against it by the Spanish following an uprising
in 1626. Closely related for geographical reasons to mainland Italy, Messina
once contained some of Sicily's finest buildings. The combined effect of
earthquakes in 1693, 1783 and 1908, and bombing raids in 1943, robbed the
city of virtually all of these.
^ Blunt, Sicilian Baroque Pages 9 & 31.
^ Gefen, p8.
^ The Prince of Lampedusa author of The Leopard wrote in his book Places of
my Early Childhood of his family's six homes: a townhouse in Palermo, a
villa at Bagheria, a palazzo at Toretta, a country house at Reitano, a
"great" castle at Santa Marherita de Belice, and "two where we never went":
a castle and house at Palma de Montechiaro.
^ Mary Miers. Country Life Magazine. 1 Nov. 2004
^ Blunt, Sicilian Baroque
^ Blunt, Sicilian Baroque page 150.
^ Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach had begun to rebuild Schönbrunn Palace
in 1686 in a simple form of Baroque; this form was later to be reproduced in
Sicily in the final years of its Baroque era. The palace also had an
external staircase (removed in 1746) similar to those that later evolved in
Sicily.Guide to the Castles of Europeretrieved 19 october 2008.
Brook-Shepherd, pp213-221
^ Gérard Gefen, Land of the Leopard Princes.
^ Photograph of the ceiling of the ballroom of the Palazzo Aiutamicristo
^ This room was used as the film set for the ballroom scene of Visconti's
The Leopard.Begley, p2.
^ The Palazzo is today a shell, badly damaged by bombing in World War II.
^ UNESCO
References
Barocco ibleo, (in Italian)
Begley, Adam. 2008. Sicily, Through the Eyes of the Leopeard. Retrieved 19
October 2008.
Blunt, Anthony (1968). Sicilian Baroque. Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
Brook-Shepherd, Gordon (1969). Great Palaces. London: Hamlyn Publishing
Group Ltd. ISBN 0600 01682 X.
Drago, Francesco Palazzolo (1927). Famiglie nobili siciliane. Arnaldo Forni,
Palermo.
Du Pays, A J. (1877). Guide d'Italie et Sicile. Hachette.
Gefen, Gérard (2001). Sicily, Land of the Leopard Princes. Tauris Parke.
Hamel, Pasquale (1994). Breve storia della societa siciliana (1790–1980).
Sellerio di Giorgianni, Palermo.
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