Di Sangro family

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Di Sangro
Parent familyCounts of Marsi
Current region Italy
Founded1093; 931 years ago (1093)
FounderOderisio Di Sangro
Titles
MottoUnicum militiae fulmen.
Estate(s)Castello Angioino di Civitacampomarano
Palazzo di Sangro di Casacalenda, Naples
Palazzo di Sangro di Sansevero, Naples

The Di Sangro family (or De Sangro) is an Italian noble family.[1]

Origins[edit]

The Di Sangro family descends from an Oderisio, who was nephew of Berardo "il Francisco", founder of the Berardi family, known as Conti dei Marsi, who inherited the fief of Sangro from his father Rainaldo (today's Castel di Sangro ), located near the homonymous river, becoming the 1st count in 1093 and, thanks to the Lombard law of the time that allowed to change one's surname with the name of the fief owned, changed its surname to Di Sangro.

History[edit]

Exponents of the family held both state and ecclesiastical positions; among those who received the ecclesiastical ones we remember an Odorisio, who was cardinal of Montecassino, a Gregorio and a Gentile, also cardinals, a Consalvo and an Alfonso, bishops, and an Alessandro, Patriarch of Alexandria and archbishop of Benevento; among the state offices belonged to the family twelve councilors of state, eight courtiers, two executioners, four generals, five field teachers and two general commissioners of the army. The family was also added to the Seggio di Nilo dei Sedili di Napoli.[2]

The Di Sangro family owned a total of 6 principalities, 11 duchies, 6 marquisates, 9 counties and 180 fiefdoms.[3]

Currently there are descendant genealogical lines of Casacalenda, Castel di Sangro, Fondi and San Severo.

Notable members[edit]

  • Raimondo di Sangro (1710-1771), prince of San Severo, a man of multiple interests, whose name is linked to the Cappella Sansevero, which he designed and commissioned.
    THE DE SANGRO FAMILY DESCENDANTS

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Sangro, di". treccani.it. treccani.it. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  2. ^ Memorie delle Famiglie Nobili delle Province Meridionali d'Italia (Volume 3). Candida-Gonzaga, Berardo, conte. 1876. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  3. ^ Memorie delle Famiglie Nobili delle Province Meridionali d'Italia (Volume 3). Candida-Gonzaga, Berardo, conte. 1876. Retrieved 2 August 2020.

Bibliography[edit]