23 Oct 2019

The frescoes in the Crypt of San Marciano

On the chapel walls there are four figures: the first on the left is a bearded saint with a nimbus, whose right hand blesses with his fingers outstretched according to the Eastern rite, while his left hand holds a cross. The figure wears a red tunic under a black cloak. The second figure is a youn...
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23 Oct 2019

St. Zosimus, the work of Antonello da Messina

Inside the chapel of the Crucifix, the work depicts the image of the Bishop Zosimus. The figure appears standing in pontifical robes while he blesses with a mitre on his head and a pastoral staff in his left hand. This panel has been attributed to the Sicilian painter Antonello da Messina. The An...
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23 Oct 2019

Francesco Paolo Priolo

Francesco Paolo Priolo lived in Palermo between 1818-1892. He was a painter, a pupil of the famous Giuseppe Patania, and specialised in the production of copies and historical and religious subjects, often in watercolour. He had a neoclassical background. In the second half of the 19th century, he ...
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23 Oct 2019

St. Paul preaches in the Latomie

A watercolour on paper, painted in 1867 by the artist Francesco Paolo Priolo and kept in the Museum of Palazzo Bellomo, depicts a curious event: in the year 61 AD, during a stop on his way to Rome, the apostle Paul was said to have spoken to the Syracusans at the Latomie. In the work you can see th...
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23 Oct 2019

Philoxenus of Cythera and the tyrant Dionysius

In his monumental work, the Bibliotheca historica (Historical Library), the Sicilian historian Diodorus Siculus wrote that the tyrant Dionysius, on account of his poetic inclinations, would invite experts to his court to comment on his compositions. When questioned, the poet Philoxenus admitted wit...
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23 Oct 2019

St. Marcian

Marcian was born in Antiochia around the 1st century and was a martyred bishop, venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church. According to local legend, Marcian was the first bishop of Syracuse, where he was sent by St. Peter to preach the Gospel and found the Christian commu...
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23 Oct 2019

Salvatore Quasimodo, a modern poet

The Sicilian poet Salvatore Quasimodo spent many of his days walking along the steep paths of Pantalica. In fact, the nature and colours of this place inspired his poetry, like the poem Albero (Tree, translation by Jack Bevan): "From you a shadow melts\making mine seem dead\though with its motion i...
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23 Oct 2019

Virgil

Publius Vergilius Maro, commonly known as Virgil, was a Latin poet and writer. He was born near Mantua in 70 BC and died in Brindisi in 19 BC. He is known for his literary works the Bucolics and the Georgics, but mainly for the Aeneid, which recounts the origins of Rome. The third book of the Oper...
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23 Oct 2019

Frederick II, the “stupor mundi”

Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor belonged to the Suevian noble Hohenstaufen family and was the last ruler of this dynasty to reign in Sicily. He descended on his mother's side from the Normans of Hauteville, conquerors of Sicily and founders of the Kingdom of Sicily. Known as the stupor mundi ("the...
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23 Oct 2019

Plato and the world of ideas

Plato was an Athenian philosopher who lived between the 5th and 4th centuries BC. He mainly wrote dialogues that delved further into Socrates' philosophy and developed a philosophical concept based on the relationship between "things" belonging to a physical reality and "ideas", conceptual models ...
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