The Former Augustinian Monastery in Vicopelago, Lucca: From a Villa of the Buonvisi Family to a Place of Contemplative Life

The Villa of Vicopelago is among the properties of the Buonvisi family since 1600, when Geronimo Buonvisi establishes, with his last will, the family’s large fideicommissum. Sold in 1756 to the Seminary of San Martino by Francesco Buonvisi, in 1809 the Villa becomes a state property as a consequence...

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Main Author: Stefania Aimar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2021-09-01
Series:In_Bo
Subjects:
Online Access:https://in-bo.unibo.it/article/view/12356
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spelling doaj-287c69df7b014869a50370880624b1802021-09-09T13:57:32ZengUniversity of BolognaIn_Bo2036-16022021-09-0112692–10792–10710.6092/issn.2036-1602/1235610664The Former Augustinian Monastery in Vicopelago, Lucca: From a Villa of the Buonvisi Family to a Place of Contemplative LifeStefania Aimar0Università degli Studi di FirenzeThe Villa of Vicopelago is among the properties of the Buonvisi family since 1600, when Geronimo Buonvisi establishes, with his last will, the family’s large fideicommissum. Sold in 1756 to the Seminary of San Martino by Francesco Buonvisi, in 1809 the Villa becomes a state property as a consequence of the secularization policy of religious orders conducted by Napoleon and implemented in Lucca by the Princes Baciocchi. Allocated in the same year to the Real Collegio, in 1886 it was purchased by the Nuns of the Monastery of San Nicolao Novello, who were in search of a new home after the suppressions occurred during the Napoleonic period and the later Kingdom of Italy. The archive research has made it possible to retrace the changes in ownership, the design and configuration of the spaces, including those of the exteriors, as well as the transformations the Villa underwent over the centuries, thus providing an important cognitive tool for future restoration and recovery projects.https://in-bo.unibo.it/article/view/12356villa buonvisivillas of luccaseminary of s. martinosuppression of religious ordersaugustinian monastery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
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author Stefania Aimar
spellingShingle Stefania Aimar
The Former Augustinian Monastery in Vicopelago, Lucca: From a Villa of the Buonvisi Family to a Place of Contemplative Life
In_Bo
villa buonvisi
villas of lucca
seminary of s. martino
suppression of religious orders
augustinian monastery
author_facet Stefania Aimar
author_sort Stefania Aimar
title The Former Augustinian Monastery in Vicopelago, Lucca: From a Villa of the Buonvisi Family to a Place of Contemplative Life
title_short The Former Augustinian Monastery in Vicopelago, Lucca: From a Villa of the Buonvisi Family to a Place of Contemplative Life
title_full The Former Augustinian Monastery in Vicopelago, Lucca: From a Villa of the Buonvisi Family to a Place of Contemplative Life
title_fullStr The Former Augustinian Monastery in Vicopelago, Lucca: From a Villa of the Buonvisi Family to a Place of Contemplative Life
title_full_unstemmed The Former Augustinian Monastery in Vicopelago, Lucca: From a Villa of the Buonvisi Family to a Place of Contemplative Life
title_sort former augustinian monastery in vicopelago, lucca: from a villa of the buonvisi family to a place of contemplative life
publisher University of Bologna
series In_Bo
issn 2036-1602
publishDate 2021-09-01
description The Villa of Vicopelago is among the properties of the Buonvisi family since 1600, when Geronimo Buonvisi establishes, with his last will, the family’s large fideicommissum. Sold in 1756 to the Seminary of San Martino by Francesco Buonvisi, in 1809 the Villa becomes a state property as a consequence of the secularization policy of religious orders conducted by Napoleon and implemented in Lucca by the Princes Baciocchi. Allocated in the same year to the Real Collegio, in 1886 it was purchased by the Nuns of the Monastery of San Nicolao Novello, who were in search of a new home after the suppressions occurred during the Napoleonic period and the later Kingdom of Italy. The archive research has made it possible to retrace the changes in ownership, the design and configuration of the spaces, including those of the exteriors, as well as the transformations the Villa underwent over the centuries, thus providing an important cognitive tool for future restoration and recovery projects.
topic villa buonvisi
villas of lucca
seminary of s. martino
suppression of religious orders
augustinian monastery
url https://in-bo.unibo.it/article/view/12356
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