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'''Barbiellini''' is an Italian family name. |
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'''Barbiellini''' is a noble family of ]s, a title obtained from an assembly in ] during the ]. Before this, the Barbiellini originally came from the family of ], an ancient family which lasted from 700 to 1477 and was a descendant of the King of Antiochia. The first member of the family was said to be a man who traveled all over the world with ]. The family combined by marriage to the ] on 20 April 1749. In 1800, in order to maintain their name, there was a wedding between Filippo Barbiellini Amidei and ] or ], a rich family that only had a female issue. They came to an agreement, so that the last name could be kept and would become Barbiellini Amidei Lelmi. The Barbiellinis still live mainly in ] and ]. |
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* Alessandro Barbiellini Amidei reportedly volunteered to sell a property he owned, a wedge-shaped site on the western peak of the Aventine, for the construction of the Sant'Anselmo all'Aventino church, monastery, and college in Rome.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Sant'Anselmo in Rome: College and University; From the Beginnings to the Present Day|last=Engelbert|first=Pius|publisher=Liturgical Press|year=2012|isbn=9780814637135|location=Collegeville, Minnesota|pages=24}}</ref> |
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== Notable figures == |
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* Bernardo Barbiellini Amidei was a prominent and founded a '']'' or Fascist workers' club.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=The Culture of Consent: Mass Organisation of Leisure in Fascist Italy|last=de Grazia|first=Victoria|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2002|isbn=0521526914|location=Cambridge|pages=28}}</ref> |
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A Count Alessandro Barbiellini Amidei was mentioned in historical records transacting with representatives of the ] who wanted to construct a monastery and school of ] in Rome. Having heard of the difficulty in finding an appropriate and viable site for the edifice, the count volunteered to sell a property he owned, which was a wedge-shaped site on the western peak of the Aventine beside a parcel of land owned by the Knights of Malta.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Sant'Anselmo in Rome: College and University; From the Beginnings to the Present Day|last=Engelbert|first=Pius|publisher=Liturgical Press|year=2012|isbn=9780814637135|location=Collegeville, Minnesota|pages=24}}</ref> The deal was concluded swiftly and to this day, it is the home to the Sant'Anselmo all'Aventino church, monastery, and college. |
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The Count Bernardo Barbiellini Amidei emerged as an important political figure between 1920 and 1940. He was the son of the daughter of ], who was beatified in the 9th of April 2000. Count Bernardo was the founder of a school in Naples, which teaches oriental languages. In his honor, a street in Rome was named after him. He was also ian adherent of fascism and credited to have founded one of the earliest '']'' on record in Italy.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=The Culture of Consent: Mass Organisation of Leisure in Fascist Italy|last=de Grazia|first=Victoria|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2002|isbn=0521526914|location=Cambridge|pages=28}}</ref> An account revealed that by 1923, the count and his cohorts were the undisputed arbiter of the life of the province of ] and "were now dedicating themselves to social work and worker education and presided over cultural, educational, and welfare associations of singular importance."<ref name=":0" /> |
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The children of Bernardo Barbiellini Amidei with the Countess Anna Maria Pullè are (in descending age order): |
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* Rosanna Barbiellini Amidei, an Italian art historian; |
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* ], a famous Italian journalist and writer; |
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* Guido Barbiellini Amidei, a famous Italian physicist, involved in the discovery of the top quark; |
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* Silvia Barbiellini Amidei; and, |
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* Carla Barbiellini Amidei. |
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One of the possessions of the Barbiellinis was a mansion in the center of Rome which was then sold at the end of the nineteenth century to the State and a palace in Placense. In Elba island, another mansion was given first to ] and then it was transformed into a museum. The family is now very numerous and is even related to a marquise, Clarice Barbiellini Amidei de' Medici Tornaquinci, who descended from the family of the ] of ]. A castle in ] was then sold from the husband in the second marriage, to a rich owner of an industry who later on donated it to the ]. The family's villa at San Martino in Elba was sold to a convent and is now the Park Hotel Napoleone, a 4-star hotel. Some properties and a few castles still remain part of the Barbiellini family. |
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==References== |
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==References== |
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{{reflist}} |
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<references /> |
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