Banditismo e fazioni nobiliari nella Sicilia del Seicento
LEPORI, MARIA
2013-01-01
Abstract
In his essay, Bruno Pomara distances himself from an interpretationof ancient regime Sicilian crime as forerunner of the Mafia or social banditry, and as a consequence of misery. Studying band Ferla, heidentifies the strong knot of delinquency in the island in the early Seventeenth Century in the tensions between irreducible and antagonistic aristocratic factions. The “enemistades capitales”, producedby the competition in marriage and asset strategies, gave rise to extensivenetworks of class and interclass solidarity and seemed to violence everywhere. Even in the most remote lands, protection and fidelity networks involved both small and great nobles, men of the offices of all levels, regular and secular clergy. Compositions between parties, agreed and recorded public peaces , to which also the sovereign had to adapt, were more successful in calling a truce than thestrict laws of the king, exemplary executions or spectacular repressive campaignsFile | Size | Format | |
---|---|---|---|
Banditismo pdf.pdf Solo gestori archivio
Type: Author’s Accepted Manuscript AAM, Post-print, (version accepted by the publisher)
Size 107.87 kB
Format Adobe PDF
|
107.87 kB | Adobe PDF | & nbsp; View / Open Request a copy |
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.