Tuesday, July 22, 2008

How To Make A A3 Chart

Presentation: SILVA Sambuceti (San Giovanni Teatino, Friday, July 25, 18,30)


The July 25 at 18:30 at the library inside the mall IperCoop Sambuceto, there will be a presentation of the book, published by Solfanelli, "Sambuceti Silva (1095 - 1099) - The Norman conquest of the lower valley of the Pescara " by Prof. Simon Longo .
This publication, which is essentially a second edition due innovated and updated a study first published in 2001 by the City of St. John Teatino presents for the first time, transcribed and translated from Latin by Angela Longo, Professor of Ancient Philosophy at the University of Geneva, two documents of 1095 and 1099, preserved in the Archives of the Archbishop of Chieti and constitute a precious witness of the history of the area of \u200b\u200bthe lower valley of the Pescara horse Norman conquest of the first Abruzzo Adriatic.
In these documents the churches and the parish of Aterno, the "silva Sambuceti" and the castle of Furka (from today's San Giovanni Teatino), is donated by the Norman Count Robert of the Bishop of Chieti Loritello Ranulf who ruled the diocese of Chieti 1097 to 1105.
Just two decades after the Battle of Ortona (1075) in which the accounts had been defeated Attonidi of Chieti, Robert of Guiscard Loritello, is the master of Abruzzo Adriatic.
Behind the usual medieval donation as we are faced with real policies to structure a transaction territory recently taken from the accounts Attonidi of Chieti and the native noble class.
documents while focusing on the ancient town of "castellum Furca" at the current center of San Giovanni and Teatino Sambuceto have more general and provide valuable information on an era in the history of the Abruzzi, in some ways still obscure and little studied, after which the region since Charlemagne had gravitated towards north-central Italy, is positioned in the Norman kingdom of Sicily. This
cultural and publishing effort, strongly supported by Laurent Feller, professor of Medieval History at the Sorbonne in Paris, which handled the presentation is an attempt to "how you can steal a territory through its history, and through archival research, help ensure that it riapproprino those who inhabit this land, you live and live. "
The event is of particular importance for the great contribution that this effort in the direction of historical research has discovered the origins of the metropolitan area of \u200b\u200bChieti-Pescara.


some news About the author Simon

Longo was born in Pescara in 1964, holds a doctorate in letters. He completed his education - historical literature at "La Sapienza" of Rome.
has studied medieval history of Abruzzo, with particular reference to the phenomenon dell'eremitismo and the relationship between aristocratic and ecclesiastical institutions of the Adriatic.