Fisichella is an Italian noble family, forming part of the Sicilian nobility.[2][3][4][5] Members of the family include multiple judges and prelates, among them a justice of the Supreme Court of the Kingdom of Sicily and an archbishop of the Roman Catholic Church.
Fisichella | |
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Italian noble family | |
Country | Italy Former countries |
Etymology | Medieval Latin: physicus, lit. 'physician' |
Place of origin | Val di Catania |
Founded | 17th century |
Titles | Baron |
Style(s) | "Don" |
Arms of the House of Fisichella | |
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Versions | |
Shield | Azure, a tree proper topped by a turtle dove argent perched.[1]
Italian: Arma d'azzurro, con albero al naturale sormontato da una tortora appollaiata d'argento.[2][3][4] |
History
editCoat of arms of Rino Fisichella | |
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Adopted | 1998 |
Shield | Gules, a tree proper eradicated, fructed or, topped by a dove argent volant, a label of the same tincture.[1]
Italian: Arma di rosso, all'albero sradicato al naturale, fruttato d'oro, sormontato da una colomba volante con le ali spiegate d'argento, al lambello dello stesso.[6] |
Motto | Latin: VIAM VERITATIS ELEGI ('I have chosen the way of truth') |
Other elements | External ornaments for archbishops |
Inspired by the family arms.[6] |
The House of Fisichella, originally from the Val di Catania, has long been prominent in the fields of diplomacy, jurisprudence, philosophy and theology.
Among the family's forefathers, at the beginning of the 17th century Domenico Fisichella was chaplain at the monasterium album of Campanarazzu, Misterbianco, and later at the local St. Nicholas Church,[7][8] while Francesco Fisichella was ambassador of the city of Catania to the royal court of Madrid since 1671.[5][9]
In the 18th century, two renowned members of the family were both named Giuseppe Fisichella: the elder was referred to as 'signore don' around 1718,[10] whereas the younger, namely Giuseppe Maria Fisichella, served as justice of the Supreme Court of the Kingdom of Sicily in the years 1770, 1771, 1772 and 1782.[3][11][12][9]
Among his nephews, in the 19th century a namesake was giudice circondariale – that is commissioner and judge – of Centorbi and Mascali, in 1826 and 1830, respectively,[13][14] while Ignazio Fisichella was Deputy Secretary of the General Prosecution Office of the Kingdom of Italy at the Catania Appeal Court, and later Clerk to the civil and criminal court of Nicosia.[a]
Meanwhile, three members of the family have been prominent in other fields, such as Francesco Fisichella[9][15] (1841–1908), priest, philosopher and jurist, Domenico Fisichella[9][15][16] (born 1935), academic and influential politician, minister and later senator of the Italian Republic, and Salvatore Fisichella[9][15] (born 1943), renowned operatic tenor.
In the 20th century, two cadet branches branched off from the main line, whose family seat is located in Militello in Val di Catania, moving to Lombardy and Lazio, respectively; the first is represented by Rino Fisichella[b][6][17][9] (born 1951), academic, theologian and archbishop of the Roman Catholic Church, while the second by Giancarlo Fisichella[c][18][19][20][21][22][9] (born 1973), famous athlete.
Onomastics
editIn popular culture
editA mysterious "baron Fisichella"[23] appears several times in Leonardo Sciascia's historical novel The council of Egypt , played in the homonymous film by Gilberto Idonea .
Notes and references
editNotes
edit- ^ Mentioned in several numbers of the Official Gazette of the Kingdom of Italy: N. 77 (1876), N. 287 (1897).
- ^ Genealogy: son of Paolo Fisichella, who moved to Codogno in 1948.[17][15]
- ^ Genealogy: son of Roberto Fisichella (†2015), who moved to Pietralata.[15]
References
edit- ^ a b Parker, James, A GLOSSARY OF TERMS USED IN HERALDRY, retrieved 29 November 2023
- ^ a b Palizzolo Gravina (1875)
- ^ a b c Mango (1912)
- ^ a b Famiglie Nobili di Sicilia
- ^ a b Ligresti (2006)
- ^ a b c "Stemma Mons. Fisichella", Forum dell'Istituto Araldico Genealogico Italiano (in Italian), 21 June 2008, retrieved 29 November 2023
- ^ Luca Marchese (in Italian), 22 May 1600, retrieved 29 November 2023
- ^ La reliquia [The relic] (in Italian), retrieved 29 November 2023
- ^ a b c d e f g PalermoToday
- ^ Ventura (2009)
- ^ Cancila (2013)
- ^ Boglino (1889)
- ^ Ripartimento Polizia (1826)
- ^ Ripartimento Polizia (1830)
- ^ a b c d e MyHeritage
- ^ Stella, Gian Antonio (21 June 2019), "La tarantella di Fisichella: "Non c'è democrazia senza le aristocrazie"", Corriere della Sera (in Italian), retrieved 29 November 2023
- ^ a b Paticchio, Vincenzo (20 May 2016), "Mons. Rino Fisichella" (PDF), Trinità e Liberazione (in Italian), pp. 22–25, retrieved 29 November 2023
- ^ Fisichella Giancarlo – ITALIA (in Italian), Associazione Museo Nicolis, 3 March 2018, retrieved 29 November 2023,
Di antica famiglia nobile siciliana, dei Fisichella appunto
- ^ Giancarlo Fisichella: biografia e curiosità su pilota (in Italian), 13 August 2018, retrieved 29 November 2023,
Giancarlo Fisichella appartiene alla nobile famiglia siciliana omonima
- ^ Tanti auguri a Giancarlo Fisichella (in Italian), 14 January 2018, archived from the original on 12 January 2021, retrieved 29 November 2023,
Giancarlo Fisichella è nato a Roma il 14 gennaio 1973 da una nobile famiglia di origine siciliana
- ^ Tedde, Giovanna (26 November 2018), Chi è Giancarlo Fisichella, il pilota tra amori e… nobiltà (in Italian), retrieved 29 November 2023,
Il campione ha origini importanti, poiché appartiene alla nobile famiglia dei Fisichella di Sicilia
- ^ Caruso, Daniela (13 November 2019), Chi è Giancarlo Fisichella? (in Italian), retrieved 29 November 2023,
Il pilota ha origini nobili, poiché fa parte della famiglia Fisichella originaria della Sicilia
- ^ Sciascia (1989)
Bibliography
editHeraldic literature
edit- Annuario della nobiltà italiana [Yearbook of the Italian nobility] (in Italian), Giovan Battista di Crollalanza (32nd ed.), Teglio, 2014 [First published 1878], Index
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link) - Palizzolo Gravina, Vincenzo (1875) [First published 1871], Il blasone in Sicilia, ossia raccolta araldica [The coat of arms in Sicily, that is heraldic collection] (in Italian), Palermo: Visconti & Huber, pp. 183, 482, retrieved 29 November 2023
- Mango, Antonino (1912), "Da Fiorenza a Fontanetta" [From Fiorenza to Fontanetta], Nobiliario di Sicilia [Collection of the nobility of Sicily] (in Italian), Palermo: A. Reber, archived from the original on 23 September 2015, retrieved 29 November 2023
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: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
Non-fiction
edit- Ligresti, Domenico (2006), "Le nobiltà e la vita nobile nel sistema cortigiano europeo" [The nobilities and the noble life in the European court system] (PDF), Sicilia aperta (secoli XV-XVII): Mobilità di uomini e idee [Open Sicily (XV-XVII centuries): Mobility of men and ideas] (in Italian), Palermo: Associazione Mediterranea, p. 115, ISBN 8890239328, retrieved 29 November 2023
- Ventura, Piero (October 2009), L'Arciconfraternita dello Spirito Santo dei Napoletani a Roma tra XVI e XVIII secolo (in Italian), Rome: Aracne, p. 241, ISBN 978-88-548-2778-3, retrieved 29 November 2023
- Cancila, Rossella (2013), Autorità sovrana e potere feudale nella Sicilia moderna [Sovereign authority and feudal power in modern Sicily] (PDF) (in Italian), Palermo: Associazione Mediterranea, p. 194, ISBN 978-88-96661-39-0, retrieved 29 November 2023
Historical fiction
edit- Sciascia, Leonardo (1989) [First published 1963], Il consiglio d'Egitto [The council of Egypt] (in Italian) (3rd ed.), Milan: Adelphi, ISBN 9788845973598, retrieved 29 November 2023
Chronicle
edit- Ripartimento Polizia (1826), "Repertorio anno 1826", Repertori del Ripartimento Polizia (in Italian), Real Segreteria di Stato presso il Luogotenente Generale in Sicilia, retrieved 29 November 2023
- Ripartimento Polizia (1830), "Repertorio anno 1830" (PDF), Repertori del Ripartimento Polizia (in Italian), Real Segreteria di Stato presso il Luogotenente Generale in Sicilia, pp. 33, 46, 106, retrieved 29 November 2023
- "Supplemento al N. 149", Gazzetta Ufficiale del Regno d'Italia (in Italian), Rome: Eredi Botta, 1 April 1876, p. 40, retrieved 29 November 2023
- Boglino, Luigi (1889), I manoscritti della Biblioteca comunale di Palermo (in Italian), vol. II, Palermo: Virzì, pp. 26, 47, 239, 325, retrieved 29 November 2023
- Gazzetta Ufficiale del Regno d'Italia (in Italian), Rome: Eredi Botta, 11 December 1897, p. 5743, retrieved 29 November 2023
See also
editExternal links
edit- "Fisichella", Famiglie Nobili di Sicilia (in Italian), archived from the original on 3 April 2014, retrieved 29 November 2023
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - "Family tree", MyHeritage, retrieved 29 November 2023
- Miranda, Francesco (19 October 2020), "Fisichella: Riferimenti storici e personaggi" [Fisichella: Historical references and characters], L'origine dei cognomi: Pilo, Leocata, Corrao, Fisichella [The origin of the surnames: Pilo, Leocata, Corrao, Fisichella], Cognomen omen (in Italian), Palermo: CityNews, retrieved 29 November 2023 – via PalermoToday