Adragna family explained

Surname:Adragna
Caption:Motto

"Do not keep silent"
(Latin: Non Tacebo)

Type:Sicilian noble family
Country:

Titles:
Styles:"Grace"
Vostra Signoria
Don
Current Head:Francesco Adragna (it)Gilles Adragna (fr)
Ethnicity:Italian

The Adragna family is an Italian noble house. The family ruled the territory of Altavilla in Sicily, Italy.

History

The family can trace its ancestry to the Norman conquest of Sicily and is descended from the ancient nobility of Bologna.[1] Related to the Pepoli family of Bologna, the family's noble ancestry dates back over 800 years.[2] [3] [4]

The family is found in Salemi, Mazzara, Erice, Monté San Giuliano and today in Trapani. Nobile Giuseppe Adragna was among the first jurors of Salemi in the years 1567–68; 1573–74.[5] In Mazzara, Pietro Adragna held the rank of captain in charge of Justice on 7 October 1665.[6] In recognition of the family's feudal rights, In 1763 Francesco Adragna invested himself in the Barony of Altavilla Salina, by lease granted to him by Domenico Corvino, Prince of Mezzojuso inherited in his Vault by Baroness Paola Sabia Ventimiglia. Today, the Sicilian Heraldry Commission lists the family in the Golden Book of Italian Nobility, now preserved in the Italian historical archives in Rome.[7] Similarly to other Italian Norman families, the House of Adragna has historic links with the Knights Hospitaller (the present day Order of Malta) through participation in the Crusading movement in the Holy Land.[8]

Gioacchino Napoleone Pepoli, a cousin of the Adragna family, was a senator of the Kingdom of Italy, Mayor of Bologna, and Italian envoy to Russia. Moreover, he was also a grand-nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte through his mother, Princess Louisa Julie Caroline Murat the daughter of Prince Joachim Murat - Napoleon's brother-in-law.[9]

Two younger branches of the family emigrated to France (Adragna d') and the United States (Beccadelli of Bologna) at the end of the 20th century. The title of Duca d'Adragna (Duke of Adragna) became extinct in 1920 after the death of Pietro "Paolo" Beccadelli of Bologna, Senator, Last Prince De Camporeale, 11th Duke of Adragna, without male issue and from marriage of his daughter Anna Maria, Princess of Camporeale with the de La Tour family.The title of Duke of Adragna and a coat of arms resulting from the history of the ancestors Hauteville (Altavilla) / Beccadelli de Bologna / Adragna has been taken over by the French branch in descent from Piétro Adragna (d') to Erice (1665), common ancestor of Baron d'Altavilla and current Count of Puglia. By acquisition, the hereditary eldest of the French branch also recovers the courtesy title of Count of Bourbon-Siciles. The arms of the Duke of Adragna and Count of Bourbon-Sicily are deposited in the armorial of Royal House of France.

Notable buildings

Castello Grifeo in Partanna, Trapani, a medieval castle dating from c.1300, was owned by the family from 1890 until the property was donated to the Cultural Heritage Department of Trapani in 1991.[10]

The last King of Italy, Umberto II of Italy visited the Castle in 1941 while Crown prince.[11] Through relation to the Pepoli family, the Norman Castle in Erice, which includes the Torri Pepoli, is partially owned by the Adragna family.[12] In Valderice, the Villa Betania, was built by Baron Girolamo Adragna in the second half of the 19th century.[13] [14]

Notable buildings and structures associated with the family include;

In literature, media and popular culture

The character Baron Adragna appears in Vito Bruschini's fictional novel The Prince (published in Italian as The Father – Il Padrino dei Padrini è).[16] The book depicts the rise of the Italian Fascist Party in Sicily, following the story of Ferdinando Licata, a Sicilian nobleman known as the prince.[17] Baron Adragna appears as a conservative nobleman opposed to popular rule.[18]

Notable members

See also

Notes and References

  1. Paul Oldfield, 'The Bari charter of privileges of 1132: articulating the culture of a new Norman monarchy', Historical Research, 1 (2015), p.581.
  2. Web site: Andiamo Sicilia.. 24 January 2017. 3 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160303095328/http://luxurytoursforless.com/wwwroot/Sicily_daybyday.html. dead.
  3. Paul Oldfield, 'The Bari charter of privileges of 1132: articulating the culture of a new Norman monarchy', Historical Research, 1 (2015), 577–597.
  4. Web site: Museo Pepoli, custode dei tesori di Trapani - Notizie Trapani – La Sberla. www.lasberla.com. 2 September 2015 .
  5. http://www.regione.sicilia.it/beniculturali/bibliotecacentrale/mango/accomando.htm Dr. A. Mango Casalgerardo, Nobility of Sicily, Accomando to Adragna
  6. Web site: Nobiliario di Sicilia.
  7. Web site: Personaggi Trapanesi – Vincenzo Adragna. Gigante. Lorenzo.
  8. Jonathan Riley-Smith, The Sovereign Military Order of Malta: A short history, 2001.
  9. http://badigit.comune.bologna.it/sindaci/pepoli_g.htm|{{Dead link|date=September 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} Biografia e bibliografia di Gioacchino Napoleone Pepoli su Archiweb – Raccolte digitali della Biblioteca dell'Archiginnasio di Bologna
  10. Web site: Castello Grifeo Partanna. 24 January 2017. 2 February 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170202070310/http://castellogrifeopartanna.altervista.org/Struttura%20esterna%20Eng.html. dead.
  11. Web site: Grifeo di Partanna.
  12. Web site: Trapani on a plate. Fiona. Sims. 12 August 2006. The Guardian.
  13. Theotokis G. The Norman Invasion of Sicily, 1061–1072: Numbers and Military Tactics, War in History, 2010;17(4):381–402.
  14. Web site: About Valderice.
  15. Web site: Castelli Sicilia. www.castelli-sicilia.com.
  16. Book: Bruschini, Vito. The Prince: A Novel. 27 September 2016. Simon and Schuster. 9781451687200. Google Books.
  17. Web site: Review: 'The Prince," By Vito Bruschini. Staff. 5 April 2015.
  18. Book: Bruschini, Vito. The Prince: A Novel. 27 September 2016. Simon and Schuster. 9781451687200. Google Books. p. 16, p. 141.
  19. Vincenzo Regina, Profilo storico di Alcamo e sue opere d'arte dalle origini al secolo XV, Edizioni Accademia di Studi "Cielo d'Alcamo", 1972.