Books by Fabrizio D'Avenia
The cardinal of the Spanish Crown Giannettino Doria embodies the typical international profile of... more The cardinal of the Spanish Crown Giannettino Doria embodies the typical international profile of an ecclesiastic involved in multiple political loyalties within the context of the transformations affecting the Habsburg "Monarquía católica" and the Holy See between the Sixteenth and the Seventeenth century. The book reconstructs Giannettino’s Genoese origins, his proud family membership, his long Spanish formation and the complex negotiations for his cardinal promotion. It then illuminates his power relations, his frustrated career ambitions in the Roman Curia and his political and pastoral choices. These latter were characterized by a jealous defense of his reputation and jurisdiction, and marked his second life in Sicily, where he served as archbishop of Palermo and as interim viceroy. The analysis of a wide geography of sources shows that his figure is much more complex than that reconstructed by hagiographic works. These mainly focused on his prominent role in the invention of the cult of Santa Rosalia and in the liberation from the plague in 1624.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
La storiografia siciliana cade spesso in una tentazione “siculo-centrica”, viziata dalla rivendic... more La storiografia siciliana cade spesso in una tentazione “siculo-centrica”, viziata dalla rivendicazione dell’unicità dell’esperienza storica dell’isola, dallo spettro delle famigerate “dominazioni straniere”, nonché dall’ambivalente giudizio sulla sua classe dirigente e le sue istituzioni, ora baluardo delle libertates del Regnum Siciliae contro sovrani dispotici o in frangenti di anarchia politica, ora ostacolo a tutti i tentativi di modernizzazione. Il volume propone invece un’analisi di più ampio respiro storico e storiografico attraverso la ricostruzione della complessa articolazione della Chiesa siciliana nei primi due secoli dell’età moderna, quando essa è stata all’origine di continue controversie, caratterizzate dalla pluralità tanto degli attori coinvolti quanto dei livelli di conflitto: a livello locale, tra le giurisdizioni ecclesiastiche
(e tra queste ultime e quelle secolari); a livello centro-periferia, tra le istituzioni del Regno di Sicilia e la corte di Madrid; a livello centrale, tra il sovrano e il Consiglio d’Italia; a livello internazionale, tra il governo spagnolo e la Santa Sede. Insomma né “misero” né “splendido isolamento”.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Malo esse quam videri. La fonte documentaria dei processi di nobiltà degli Ordini militari (o rel... more Malo esse quam videri. La fonte documentaria dei processi di nobiltà degli Ordini militari (o religioso-cavallereschi), e dell’Ordine di Malta in particolare, ha dimostrato la sua utilizzabilità come “specchio” nel quale seguire le evoluzioni di una società – in particolare quella siciliana lungo i secoli dell’età moderna – in continuo mutamento e, perciò, teatro di frequenti conflitti tra famiglie in cerca di affermazione politico-economica. Come tutte le rappresentazioni di una società, quella risultante dai processi di nobiltà è naturalmente un’immagine indiretta, riflessa dalla particolarità della fonte utilizzata. L’analisi attenta dei singoli dossier dei processi di nobiltà svela spesso una realtà governata da logiche parentali e clientelari: dispense, raccomandazioni, complicità, ma anche scontri tra famiglie e patriziati concorrenti o tra le stesse sedi istituzionali dell’Ordine preposte al giudizio delle prove di nobiltà, all’interno delle quali, per di più, non sempre si raggiungeva l’unanimità dei consensi. Il risultato dei processi – promozione o bocciatura – non sempre era quindi il riflesso della vera condizione del candidato: sembrare contava più di essere! (dall’introduzione)
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Papers by Fabrizio D'Avenia
The concentration of ecclesiastical powers held by the Spanish crown in the kingdom of Sicily in ... more The concentration of ecclesiastical powers held by the Spanish crown in the kingdom of Sicily in the early modern period was very often translated into jurisdictional competencies among the ecclesiastical courts of the island: each of them tried, indeed, to extend his own prerogatives over suspects and crimes in spite of others, putting its "falcem in alienam messem". The defendants themselves, often clerics, were well aware of this jurisdictional overlap and tried, often successfully, to take advantage of it, sometimes involving Roman congregations and courts. Other times it was the Holy See itself to tackle the Sicilian caesaropapism head-on, sending commissars and apostolic vicars in quarrelsome dioceses (bishop against local communities), or devoid of a bishop (temporarily absent), or with bishops unable to govern due to his advanced age. The consequences of this struggle between Rome and Madrid are well summarised in an anonymous "Discurso" – drafted on occasion of some disputes that broke out in the early 1630s in three Sicilian dioceses (Messina, Catania and Agrigento) – which this article focuses on, putting it in relation to its historical context.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
A. Jiménez Estrella, J.J. Lozano Navarro, F. Sánchez-Montes González (eds.), "Urdimbre y memoria de un imperio global. Redes y circulación de agentes en la Monarquía Hispánica", Editorial Universidad de Granada Granada, Granada, pp. 551-571, 2023
The royal patronage was configured as a space for mobility of bishops not only among the dioceses... more The royal patronage was configured as a space for mobility of bishops not only among the dioceses of continental Spain, but among all the kingdoms and territories of the Habsburg Monarchy, including America. In this context, the examination of the careers of the Spanish prelates who were bishops in Sicily (sometimes before or after occupying Neapolitan sees) allows to reconstruct well-drawn and narrow routes, which hardly communicate with each other. The investigation of these trajectories is a clear demonstration of how ecclesiastical careers woven a warp through the domains of the Habsburg Monarchy over which a web of close relations and exchanges of religious, cultural, and political experiences was woven. There is no doubt that the redistribution of the resources of the ecclesiastical patronage constituted, in fact, one of the avenues – along with the granting of nobility titles, public offices and pecuniary favors- – that guaranteed the loyalty of individuals and groups (family and clientele) to the Crown, in this case from the common adherence to the Catholic confession and its institutions.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
G. Braghi, D. Dainese (ads.), "War and Peace in the Religious Conflicts of the Long Sixteenth Century", Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen, pp. 167-188, 2023
After the fall of Rhodes (1522), the Order of St. John needed to recover its reputation as militi... more After the fall of Rhodes (1522), the Order of St. John needed to recover its reputation as militia Christi and to redraft its chivalrous ideals within the context of the Catholic Renewal. However, this so-called Religion met this challenge partially and late, although it represented its glorious past as a gallery of saints and martyrs, even if they were not always officially recognised by the Church. This past, since its origin in the Holy Land, casted a shadow of sanctity into the present, confirming this Religion as being semper eadem. Such a representation is found in the book Il glorioso trionfo della sacrosanta religion militare di S. Giovanni Gierosolimitano, published in 1619 in Italy and Spain, which is investigated in this paper. In these peculiar acta sanctorum, the knights of St. John were por-trayed between their religious fidelity and military value up to the extreme of martyrdom. However, this sacrifice silenced the real behaviour of men whose religious practice was often inadequate. The narrative strategies of this work are set within the context of the coeval literature on the Crusades and the “Christian soldier”, and included: the hagiographic reconstruction of the Order origins and devel-opment, the providential interpretation of military victory/defeat, the stereotyped portrayal of the “bar-barous” infidel, the complaint about the internal divisions of Christianity against the Turk, the urgent appeal to the reconquest of the Holy Land.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
C. Cremonini, E. Riva (eds), Il Seicento allo specchio. Le forme del potere nell'Italia spagnola: uomini, libri, strutture", pp. 79-93, 2011
Cremonini, C., Riva, E., Musi, A., Lerra, A., Cirillo, G., Rosiello, C., et al. (2011). Gli ordin... more Cremonini, C., Riva, E., Musi, A., Lerra, A., Cirillo, G., Rosiello, C., et al. (2011). Gli ordini militari nella Monarchia spagnola: una lunga latitanza storiografica. In Il Seicento allo specchio. Le forme del potere nell'Italia spagnola: uomini, libri, strutture (pp.79-93). Roma : Bulzoni Editore.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Manuscrits. Revista d'Història Moderna, 2020
Dossier de la revista Manuscrits. Revista d'Història Moderna.
Coordinat per Ignasi Fernández Ter... more Dossier de la revista Manuscrits. Revista d'Història Moderna.
Coordinat per Ignasi Fernández Terricabras i Ida Mauro
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Politics and Piety at the Royal Sites of the Spanish Monarchy in the Seventeenth Century (Habsburg Worlds, 5), ed. by J. E. Hortal Muñoz, Brepols, Turnhout, 2021
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Mediación y circulación cultural en la Monarquía Hispánica: obispos entre España e Italia (siglos XVI-XVII) / Mediation and cultural circulation in the Hispanic Monarchy: bishops between Spain and Italy (16th-17th centuries), ed. by Ida Mauro and Ignasi Fernández Terricabras, 2020
Between the 16th and 17th centuries the kings of Spain appointed distinguished Spanish prelates o... more Between the 16th and 17th centuries the kings of Spain appointed distinguished Spanish prelates of converso origin as bishops in Sicily because their «tainted» blood prevented them from holding Spanish episcopal seats. The article aims to establish whether the converso condition of these bishops could have influenced their pastoral reforms as well as «radicalised» their application of the Tridentine model. If so, this could be interpreted as a clear proof of their loyalty to the Catholic faith in the name of which their ancestors were persecuted. This work will shed light on the cases of Cardinal Luis de Torres, Archbishop of Monreale (1588-1609), and of Juan de Orozco y Covarrubias, Bishop of Agrigento (1594-1606), both model guides and reformers in their dioceses. Their converso descent as well as family entourage and the ecclesiastical careers built by some of their relatives in Spain, Rome, and Sicily will be analysed.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
La Iglesia en Palacio. Los eclesiásticos en las cortes hispánicas (siglos XVI-XVII), ed. by R. Valladares, Viella, Rome, 2019
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Los Judeoconversos en el mundo ibérico, ed. by E. Soria Mesa and A. J. Díaz Rodríguez, Universidad de Córdoba, Córdoba, 2019
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Journal of Early Modern History, n. 22/6, 2018
This article focuses on a group of conversos families from Spain, who established themselves in P... more This article focuses on a group of conversos families from Spain, who established themselves in Palermo after the Expulsion of the Jews in 1492. There they supported financial activities of the Nazione Catalana and established strong relationships with the local aristocracy. Thanks to this alliance, they managed to avoid persecution by the Spanish Inquisition, “cleanse” their “impure” blood and reach high positions within politics and
society: feudal titles, political and financial offices, habits of military orders, ecclesiastical appointments and sometimes even sainthood. Firstly, the paper will give a brief sketch of the phenomenon of conversos in Sicily as well as the activities of the Spanish Inquisition before and after the expulsion of 1492. A significant case study will then be presented, focusing on the Torongi family (New Christians from Majorca settled in Palermo) and its network of relationships in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The Council of Trent: Reform and Controversy in Europe and Beyond (1545-1700), vol. II, Between Bishops and Princes, Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2018
Exactly 450 years after the solemn closure of the Council of Trent on 4 December 1563, scholars f... more Exactly 450 years after the solemn closure of the Council of Trent on 4 December 1563, scholars from diverse regional, disciplinary and confessional backgrounds convened in Leuven to reflect upon the impact of this Council, not only in Europe but also beyond. Their conclusions are to be found in three impressive volumes. In particular, the second one analyzes the changes in local ecclesiastical life, initiated by bishops, orders and congregations, and the political strife and confessionalisation accompanying this reform process.
Within this historiographical context, the aim of this chapter is to include the pastoral and reforming activities of Giannettino Doria, Cardinal from 1604 and Archbishop of Palermo from 1608 to 1642, the year of his death. Belonging to one of the most prestigious noble families of the Republic of Genoa and Cardinal of the “Spanish party”, in Sicily he played a prominent political role as head of the ecclesiastical chamber of Parliament, president of the Kingdom of Sicily (four times). Despite his political career, six major fields of the Archbishop’s pastoral action sharply emerge: discipline and training of the secular clergy, improvement of the seminary, reform of nunneries, control of the lay confraternities or sodalities, worship and liturgical reform, defence of ecclesiastical immunity.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Cahiers de la Méditerranée, dossier Nobles et chevaliers en Europe et en Méditerranée, coord. by Anne Brogini et al., 2018
The Order of St. John always paid special attention to the publications documenting its military ... more The Order of St. John always paid special attention to the publications documenting its military activities, in order to justify both its mission in defence of the faith and its requests to Christian princes for human and material resources. This editorial investment was particularly strong after the dramatic sieges of Rhodes (1480, 1522) and Malta (1565) by the Ottomans. In 1619, just a few years after the Order’s new landing in Malta, "Il glorioso trionfo della sacrosanta religion militare de’ nobili, valorosi e invitti cavalieri di S. Giovanni Gierosolimitano" was published in Italian and Spanish. This article analyses the narrative strategies used in this text within the context of coeval literature on the Crusades and the “Christian soldier”. These strategies included the hagiographic reconstruction of the Order’s origins and development, the providential interpretation of military victory/ defeat, the stereotyped portrayal of the “barbarous” infidel, the complaint about the internal divisions of Christianity against the Turks and the urgent appeal for the reconquest of the Holy Land.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
"Loyalty Put to the Test: Family, Monarchy and Church.
The Political Career of Cardinal Giannetti... more "Loyalty Put to the Test: Family, Monarchy and Church.
The Political Career of Cardinal Giannettino Doria (1573-1642)"
The historiography of the Spanish Monarchy has long ascribed it the
quality of an open space for élites careers in the service of the Habsburgs.
This was the case for cardinals who were Spanish subjects in the King of
Spain’s Italian dominions and so belonged to the “Spanish faction”. They
played a difficult role, considering their multiple offices and sometimes
conflicting loyalties: as princes of the Roman Church; as bishops of politically significant dioceses that were also important for pastoral care; as mediators for prestigious marriages and the ecclesiastical careers of their own relatives; in some cases even as viceroys of Italian domains. This
article aims to reconstruct this complex of duties and ties through the
career of Giannettino Doria, who belonged to a noble family of Genoa
with a long record of service to the Spanish Monarchy. Doria was Cardinal
(1604), Archbishop of Palermo (1608-42) and four times Viceroy ad
interim of Sicily. In the latter role his multiple loyalties were particularly
put to the test by the jurisdictional struggle between Rome and Madrid
regarding the controversial Papal privilege of the Apostolic Legateship or
Regia Monarchia.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Los textos de la "literatura" sobre cardenales examinados en este artículo (escrituras de conclav... more Los textos de la "literatura" sobre cardenales examinados en este artículo (escrituras de conclave, biografías, oraciones y relaciones de exequias, así como maquinas funerarias) demuestran una ostentada prevalencia de la purpura sobre la sangre, de la nobleza eclesiástica sobre el honor del linaje, de la genealogía de la Iglesia sobre aquella de los arboles familiares. Prevalencia, por supuesto, retorica en un sistema que hacía del las relaciones de parentesco su punto fuerte y que tenía un preciso bloque social nobiliario a sus espaldas, donde la excepción de algún cardenal o papa de humilde origen confirmaba la regla de la ascendencia patricia o aristocrática de los otros. En ese sentido, como sugiere Peter Burke, más que “reflejar la vida de su tiempo”, parece que arte y literatura “compensen lo que falta a su época” y en alguna manera influyan en ella.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
Books by Fabrizio D'Avenia
(e tra queste ultime e quelle secolari); a livello centro-periferia, tra le istituzioni del Regno di Sicilia e la corte di Madrid; a livello centrale, tra il sovrano e il Consiglio d’Italia; a livello internazionale, tra il governo spagnolo e la Santa Sede. Insomma né “misero” né “splendido isolamento”.
Papers by Fabrizio D'Avenia
Coordinat per Ignasi Fernández Terricabras i Ida Mauro
society: feudal titles, political and financial offices, habits of military orders, ecclesiastical appointments and sometimes even sainthood. Firstly, the paper will give a brief sketch of the phenomenon of conversos in Sicily as well as the activities of the Spanish Inquisition before and after the expulsion of 1492. A significant case study will then be presented, focusing on the Torongi family (New Christians from Majorca settled in Palermo) and its network of relationships in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
Within this historiographical context, the aim of this chapter is to include the pastoral and reforming activities of Giannettino Doria, Cardinal from 1604 and Archbishop of Palermo from 1608 to 1642, the year of his death. Belonging to one of the most prestigious noble families of the Republic of Genoa and Cardinal of the “Spanish party”, in Sicily he played a prominent political role as head of the ecclesiastical chamber of Parliament, president of the Kingdom of Sicily (four times). Despite his political career, six major fields of the Archbishop’s pastoral action sharply emerge: discipline and training of the secular clergy, improvement of the seminary, reform of nunneries, control of the lay confraternities or sodalities, worship and liturgical reform, defence of ecclesiastical immunity.
The Political Career of Cardinal Giannettino Doria (1573-1642)"
The historiography of the Spanish Monarchy has long ascribed it the
quality of an open space for élites careers in the service of the Habsburgs.
This was the case for cardinals who were Spanish subjects in the King of
Spain’s Italian dominions and so belonged to the “Spanish faction”. They
played a difficult role, considering their multiple offices and sometimes
conflicting loyalties: as princes of the Roman Church; as bishops of politically significant dioceses that were also important for pastoral care; as mediators for prestigious marriages and the ecclesiastical careers of their own relatives; in some cases even as viceroys of Italian domains. This
article aims to reconstruct this complex of duties and ties through the
career of Giannettino Doria, who belonged to a noble family of Genoa
with a long record of service to the Spanish Monarchy. Doria was Cardinal
(1604), Archbishop of Palermo (1608-42) and four times Viceroy ad
interim of Sicily. In the latter role his multiple loyalties were particularly
put to the test by the jurisdictional struggle between Rome and Madrid
regarding the controversial Papal privilege of the Apostolic Legateship or
Regia Monarchia.
(e tra queste ultime e quelle secolari); a livello centro-periferia, tra le istituzioni del Regno di Sicilia e la corte di Madrid; a livello centrale, tra il sovrano e il Consiglio d’Italia; a livello internazionale, tra il governo spagnolo e la Santa Sede. Insomma né “misero” né “splendido isolamento”.
Coordinat per Ignasi Fernández Terricabras i Ida Mauro
society: feudal titles, political and financial offices, habits of military orders, ecclesiastical appointments and sometimes even sainthood. Firstly, the paper will give a brief sketch of the phenomenon of conversos in Sicily as well as the activities of the Spanish Inquisition before and after the expulsion of 1492. A significant case study will then be presented, focusing on the Torongi family (New Christians from Majorca settled in Palermo) and its network of relationships in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
Within this historiographical context, the aim of this chapter is to include the pastoral and reforming activities of Giannettino Doria, Cardinal from 1604 and Archbishop of Palermo from 1608 to 1642, the year of his death. Belonging to one of the most prestigious noble families of the Republic of Genoa and Cardinal of the “Spanish party”, in Sicily he played a prominent political role as head of the ecclesiastical chamber of Parliament, president of the Kingdom of Sicily (four times). Despite his political career, six major fields of the Archbishop’s pastoral action sharply emerge: discipline and training of the secular clergy, improvement of the seminary, reform of nunneries, control of the lay confraternities or sodalities, worship and liturgical reform, defence of ecclesiastical immunity.
The Political Career of Cardinal Giannettino Doria (1573-1642)"
The historiography of the Spanish Monarchy has long ascribed it the
quality of an open space for élites careers in the service of the Habsburgs.
This was the case for cardinals who were Spanish subjects in the King of
Spain’s Italian dominions and so belonged to the “Spanish faction”. They
played a difficult role, considering their multiple offices and sometimes
conflicting loyalties: as princes of the Roman Church; as bishops of politically significant dioceses that were also important for pastoral care; as mediators for prestigious marriages and the ecclesiastical careers of their own relatives; in some cases even as viceroys of Italian domains. This
article aims to reconstruct this complex of duties and ties through the
career of Giannettino Doria, who belonged to a noble family of Genoa
with a long record of service to the Spanish Monarchy. Doria was Cardinal
(1604), Archbishop of Palermo (1608-42) and four times Viceroy ad
interim of Sicily. In the latter role his multiple loyalties were particularly
put to the test by the jurisdictional struggle between Rome and Madrid
regarding the controversial Papal privilege of the Apostolic Legateship or
Regia Monarchia.
Within the framework of “The culture of blood and lineage in the literature of the Spanish Golden Age”, the project coordinated by David García Hernán, this paper aims to provide some initial results of research on the connection between the nature of nobility (blood or merit) and fiction (novels and drama) in XVI and XVII century Italy. In particular, the paper focuses on representations of the image of nobility offered by individuals in literature related to the Order of Malta (both characters as well as authors), which in the Italy of the time was the reference point of noble and religious-chivalric ideals. Especially in XVI and XVII centuries, the Order of Malta goes through a phase of inner renewal with the admission of hundreds of knights. It therefore makes its “proofs of nobility” much more demanding. That is clearly cause and effect of the fact that wealth and power (the “other side of merit”) produce remarkable social mobility within the aristocracy and become conditiones sine quibus non for admission to the Order. To what extent does literature reflect all this? Is it more important “to be” noble (of blood) than “to appear” noble (of merit)?
late, although they represented themselves as belonging to this "glorious Religion". Such a dialectic between practice and theory is proved, for example, by an apologetic book published in 1619 in Italy and Spain, as well as by unpublished instructions in the late seventeenth century directed at
the chaplains providing religious support within the Order galleys. These works offer a precise view of the contrast between the rhetoric pair made of noble blood and military value (up to the extreme of martyrdom in defence of the faith), on the one hand, and the real behaviour of men
whose inadequate religious education and practice was often not compatible with their mission, on the other.
vínculos entre la Iglesia y la política. De hecho, las cortes europeas son un
observatorio fundamental para analizar esta cuestión. Los numerosos
religiosos que desempeñaron su labor en las capillas palatinas, o que se
ocuparon de la conciencia de destacados cortesanos y miembros de las
familias reales, ejercieron un papel que trascendió la simple misión
espiritual para convertirse en consejeros o diplomáticos. El objetivo del
seminario será profundizar en estos aspectos a través de las diferentes
cortes de la Monarquía Hispánica, tanto en Europa como en América.
en la Monarquía Española. Historia. Literatura. Patrimonio", organizado por Laboratorio de Estudios Judeoconversos, Rectorado de la Universidad de Córdoba (España), 8-10 de abril de 2015
Many of them were Italian and, belonging to family networks branched out into the whole Spanish Monarchy, built their cursus honorum moving between its Iberian and Italian domains (Milan, Naples and Sicily).
The ecclesiastics, in particular, above all cardinals, played an important role because of their frequent overlapping positions: 1) princes of Roman Church; 2) archbishops of key dioceses for politics and pastoral care; 3) viceroys ad interim of Italian domains.
The paper aims to reconstruct this context of transnational mobility, in particular through Giannettino Doria’s career (b. 1573). He was, indeed, cardinal (1604), archbishop of Palermo (1608-42) and viceroy ad interim of Sicily. He also belonged to a distinguished noble family of Genoa with widespread naval and commercial interests within the Spanish Monarchy.
Convegno internazionale promosso da
Politecnico di Torino - Dipartimento di Architettura e Design
Università “G. d’Annunzio” di Chieti-Pescara - Dipartimento di Architettura
Malta Study Center, Hill Museum & Manuscript Library (HMML)
Centro di Studi sulla Cultura e l’Immagine di Roma
Associazione Scientifica “Palazzo Cappello”. Centro Internazionale per la Ricerca ed il Restauro degli Apparati Decorativi Barocchi e Neoclassici
Centro di Ricerca CSELT di Torino (Centro Studi E Laboratori Tecnologici Sulle Innovazioni Tecnologiche Del Nuovo Millennio)
Accademia Nazionale di San Luca
Curatela scientifica
Federico Bulfone Gransinigh(Università “G. d’Annunzio” di Chieti-Pescara, LabiSAlp-Accademia di Architettura di Mendrisio, Università della Svizzera Italiana)
Valentina Burgassi (Politecnico di Torino, École Pratique des Hautes Études Sorbonne)
Daniel K. Gullo (Malta Study Center, Hill Museum & Manuscript Library)
Alessandro Spila (Politecnico di Torino)
Comitato scientifico
Francesco Amendolagine Foschini (Università eCampus, Ass. Scientifica “Palazzo Cappello”)
Lorenzo Bartolini Salimbeni (già Università “G. d’Annunzio” di Chieti-Pescara)
Donata Battilotti (Università di Udine)
Mario Carlo Alberto Bevilacqua (Università degli Studi di Firenze)
Federico Bulfone Gransinigh (Università “G. d’Annunzio” di Chieti-Pescara, LabiSAlp-Accademia di Architettura di Mendrisio, Università della Svizzera Italiana)
Emanuel Buttigieg (Università ta’ Malta)
Valentina Burgassi (Politecnico di Torino, École Pratique des Hautes Études, Sorbonne)
Maria Celeste Cola (Sapienza Università di Roma)
Marcello Fagiolo (CSRoma, Accademia dei Lincei)
Sabine Frommel (École Pratique des Hautes Études, Sorbonne)
Daniel K. Gullo (Malta Study Center, Hill Museum & Manuscript Library)
Fabio Mangone (Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II)
Sergio Pace (Politecnico di Torino)
Delfín Rodriguez Ruíz (Universidad Complutense de Madrid)
Marco Rosario Nobile (Università di Palermo)
Pasquale Rossi (Università degli Studi Suor Orsola Benincasa)
Valentina Russo (Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II)
Alessandro Spila (Politecnico di Torino)
Claudio Varagnoli (Università “G. d’Annunzio” di Chieti-Pescara)
Marcello Villani (Università “G. d’Annunzio” di Chieti-Pescara)
Con il patrocinio di
Sovrano Militare Ordine Ospedaliero di San Giovanni di Gerusalemme di Rodi e di Malta (SMOM), Conservatoria delle Raccolte d’Arte
Malta Study Center. Hill Museum & Manuscript Library
Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II - Centro Interdipartimentale di ricerca per i Beni Architettonici e Ambientali e per la Progettazione Urbana
University of Malta – Department of History, Faculty of Arts
University of Malta – Department Library Information & Archive Sciences, Faculty of Media & Knowledge Sciences
AISTARCH - Associazione Italiana di Storia dell’Architettura
Associazione Scientifica “Palazzo Cappello”. Centro Internazionale per la Ricerca ed il Restauro degli Apparati Decorativi Barocchi e Neoclassici
Centro di Ricerca CSELT di Torino (Centro Studi E Laboratori Tecnologici Sulle Innovazioni Tecnologiche Del Nuovo Millennio
https://www.accademiasanluca.eu/it/news/id/3428/convegno-internazionale-strong-br-l-ordine-di-malta-e-la-lingua-d-italia-br-architettura-e-temi-decorativi-dalla-controriforma-al-settecento-strong-