SOUTH ITALY, MEZZOGIORNO. The Violent Latinization/Catholicization of Sicily, Calabria, Apulia, Basilicata and Campania).

 

*SOUTH ITALY, MEZZOGIORNO. The Violent      Latinization/Catholicization

of Sicily, Calabria, Apulia, Basilicata     and Campania).


“The Pope sent inquisitors to southern Italy to investigate the Greeks, and if they had found any who did not adhere to the Latin doctrine, they would have had to burn him at the stake...” (Anonymous Calabrese of the 12th century, code Vatic.gr.316)

                                    *******





*****HISTORY IS NOT A SINGLE NARRATIVE. BUT MANY. THAT IS SOMEONE MUST READ THEM ALL, BEFORE FORMING AN OPINION

*****LA STORIA NON E UN'UNICA  NARRAZIONE, MA MOLTE. PER QUESTO, BISOGNA LEGGERE TUTTE PRIMA DI FORMRE  UN OPINIONE.

                                                *********


The Concordat of 1059. The beginning of the end for Magno Greeks.

 

At the end of August 1059, the Bavarian Gerardo de Chelone (Pope Nicholas II ) celebrated a “council” in Melfi di Potenza. He was accompanied by the infamous Cardinal Hildebrando di Soana (the future Gregory VII) and an impressive entourage of cardinals, bishops, and abbots. The reason for all this pomp? The stipulation of a Concordat with the Norman barons engaged in the conquest of southern Italy. By displaying the Constitutum Constantini, a false document according to which the Emperor Constantine I, had abdicated in favor of the Pope, making southern Italy (Magna Crecia) Patrimonium sancti Petri, the first nucleus of the Papal State. Nicholas II granted Robert Guiscard possession of all of Magna Graecia, continental Greece and Sicily, naming him Apostolic Legate, his personal alter ego. For his part, Roberto swore by God and the Gospel that he will be the Pope's ally against any adversary; he promised not to advance in war without the Pope's authorization; he promised to hand over the conquered population of southern Italy, keeping it in obedience to the Holy Roman Church. 

 

The bishops from Sicily, Apulia, Basilicata and Calabria had remained in the Orthodox faith in the period after the Schism and participated in the Synods called by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople. The Pope with the help of the Franko-German conquerors who ruled these areas, put unbearable pressure on the Orthodox inhabitants and forced them to follow the Latin ritual and Latin language. The oppression and persecutions forced many Orthodox to flee to Byzantium, such as Saint Nikephoros, who was a Philocaly teacher of Saint Gregory Palamas and Saint Bartholomew from Symeri, reformer of the Monastery of Saint Basil in Arsana of Chilandarius on Mount Athos.

 

They politically subjugated Apulia, Basilicata, Campania, Calabria and Sicily and in 1071 installed Franko-German bishops in Sicily. But in Calabria and Apulia there was a serius reaction. Here the Latinization was more violent, because the resistance of the Orthodox was strong. In 1089 they replaced the magnogreek Archbishop of Regio Vasilios. Two great confessors were Saint Luke (†1114) and Saint Bartholomew (†1131) were miraculously saved from the flames thrown at them by the Fracolatins. In Ierakas (Gerace), the apostate Athanasios Chalkeopoulos replaced the Orthodox standard with the Latin one in 1480, and in Voua (Bova) in 1572, the Armenian-Cypriot Julius Stavrianos. 

 

The methods used to reduce the Orthodox Italo-Greek nation to obedience, during and after the military conquest, are well known:

 

* Ethnic cleansing: extermination of the inhabitants of entire cities, then repopulated by settlers of the same ethnic group as the invaders, brought in from Provence.

 

Evacuation and mass deportation from one part of the occupied territory to another (between the 12th and 15th/16th centuries, Greek names and surnames disappear from the cities).

 

Expropriation of Greek homes and fields (except for the collaborators). All the landowners of southern Italy from the 12th century were Anglo-French-Saxon barons. Also known as the gattopardi.

 

Seizure and destruction of Greek books (between the 12th and 17th centuries, all Greek manuscripts, disappeared from Sicily and the rest of southern Italy, which used to be one of the major centers of book production in the Eastern Roman Empire.

 

Replacement of the local Italo-Greek and Orthodox bishops with trusted hierarchs (Normans by blood and English, such as Walter of the Mills in Palermo).

 

Suppression of Orthodox monasteries and establishment, in the same buildings, of new religious organizations. For example, Benedictines in the Monastery of San Filippo di Agira, near Enna. Or submission of Orthodox monasteries to the feudal authority of Catholic bishops/princes or abbots/barons. For example, the Salvatore of Messina submitted to the Catholic bishop of the city; the Monastery of Theristìs submitted to the abbot of the Chartreuse.

 

Latinization or, better said, Catholicization of the local Magno-Greek population. It is no coincidence that, with the conquest still in progress, Catholic churches and monasteries dedicated to the Trinitarian doctrine sprung up like mushrooms throughout Southern Italy.

 

 

 

 “The Pope sent inquisitors to southern Italy to investigate the Greeks, and if they had found any who did not adhere to the Latin doctrine, they would have had to burn him at the stake...” (Anonymous Calabrese of the 12th century, code Vatic.gr.316)

                                             

 

After the region was cut off from the East, due to the conquest by the Turks of Constantinople in 1453, and especially of mainland Greece, which was adjacent to Calabria and Sicily, the Orthodox submitted by force to the brutal power of the Pope and ”Holy Roman Inquizition”.

 

After the ecclesiastical Synod in Messina (1520) and Otranto, (1580) the last  Sicilians, Calabrians, Apulians…  were forced to leave Orthodox Christianity and thir maternal Greek language. More than 1600 churches hermetaries and monasteries, were forced to close, or to change language in their ceremonies. We can still see the ruins of these churches today, everywhere.  The Greeks had two choices. To convert to Roman Catholicism and become Latins or lose their lives as heretics. So, the Sicilians-Calabrians…   lost their language, their conscience and their heritage. They became the latinized Greeks of today.

 

In 1579 the Pope established a Unitarian Diocese for the Orthodox Albereshi speakers of Sicily in Palermo. They had arrived in small numbers in the 15th century, from the Peloponnese, in order to save their lives from the Ottoman Turks. They considered themselves Greeks. They did not build  new villages but accepted in the  older Greek villages, by the older MagnoGreek population, and mixed  with them. Their village of “Piena degli Greci”, was renamed by Mussolini in 1934, to “Piena degli Albanesi” for political reasons. Finaly, the Arberesh became Uniates. Orthodox ritual, but Papal Jurisdiction! So the magnogreek churches, under Arberesh, became  Romancatholic property!

There are thousands of sources and documents in the Vatican and elsewhere showing that Greeks were systematically targeted by the Inquisition in Sicily and the rest of Southern Italy until 1600. By 1500 the persecutions had intensified and lasted for about a century, until all the Sicilians, Calabrians, Apulians… had become Latin and Roman Catholic.

 

Controversial was and the Bourbonic policy against the Magno-Greeks and the remaining Orthodox. Around 1830, the king of the Two Sicilies (in Caserta), Francisco I, issued a decree against the Greeks who insisted on remaining Greek and Orthodox: "Whoever among the inhabitants of the state did not recognize the Pope as head of the Christian Church, must leave the country". This decree, if nothing else, shows that even in the 19th century the Greek population in Magna Graecia was quite considerable. A few years earlier, in 1821, they had forced the closure of the last 16 Greek monasteries in Calabria and Apulia.

 

Mussolini's fascist regime, whose every act of violence received the blessings of the Vatican, completed the persecution with the attempt to de-Hellenize the last Greek-speaking towns of Calabria and Apulia. Τo completely  erase every memory of 3,000 years of Greek history in the area. The government of Rome did not develop economically the regions of Calabria, Basilicata, Apulia, Campania and Sicily, and millions of inhabitants of the region and its last Orthodox presence migrated in the twentieth century to Argentina, Brazil, the USA and Australia.

 

In 1932, the German linguist, Gerhard Rholfs, published his research in four Books with the titles: a) Hellenism in Sicily, b) Hellenism in Calabria, c) Greek toponyms d) Etymology of toponyms, names and surnames. Mussolini’s regime reacted. The books were banned, and the remaining Greek speaking population in Sicily, Caldaria, Apulia and a small region near Napoli, the Cilento, were oppressed and the men pushed in the frontlines of WWII.

 

In 1994, a new era began when the saintly monks Fr. Cosmas and Fr. Gennadios from the monastery of Megisti Lavra of Athos, (Macedonia, Greece) settled in the monastery of Agios Ioannis the Theristis in Bivonzi, Calabria. The katholikon (the main church) was without a roof and floor and in it lived hens and goats. With the death of Fr. Cosmas, Romanian Orthodox monks seized forcibly the greek monastery with the assistance of an anti-Greek local mayor. The holy monasteries of Agios Ilias in the cave of Melikoukas, Agios Ilias and Filaretos in Seminara Calabria and of the Annunciation in Madranici in Catania Sicily, the saint Nicolas in Messina, in Syracusa church with temporarelly service…(in Palermo the martorana church is forcibly romancatholic today), have also reopened. In Reggio, a new church of Saint Paul the Apostle was built with the assistance of the “Paracletos”, a Greek monastery in Oropos.

 

In the last twenty-five years there has been a strong interest by the local population in Calabria, Apulia, Sicily etc. to find their cultural and ethnic roots. The initial interest was for the Greek language, history and culture. Searching for the roots, the interest in Orthodoxy and the ancient Greek religion, also began. In Palermo, with the help of Cypriots, a new church of Apostle Andreas was erected, and an effort is made to establish parishes and an Orthodox monastery. Palermo University has become the biggest center in the world (according to number of students) for the teaching of the Greek language and history.

 

The population of southern Italy is proud of their Greek origin, but above all, they are proud because they are the descendants of the last Orthodox of Italy who were Latinized by force and deceit. They are proud of the holy Bishops Leo, Agathon and Pagratius, the martyrs Agatha and Loukia and the Saints Elias the Younger of Spileotis, Philaretos the gardener, Nicodemus of Mammola, John the Theristis, Luke of Demena, Nilos of Rossano, Fantinus the Old and New, Saint Nikephoros the Myroblyte and monk Saint Luke of Melikoukas, Philippos di Agira and the countless other martyrs that this region produced who were confessors of Orthodoxy.

 

The Ethnic and Religious Cleansing inMagna Graecia

 

         

 

      Linguistic map in the 10th century. By Alessandro Palieri.

                                           *******

The ethnological situation in  Magna Grecia/Sicily at the time

 

 What was the true ethnological identity of Sicily during the 13th century? Despite the pressures of Latinization, the Greek element remained domina

 

1. The Testimony of Roger Bacon (1280)

Just two years before the Sicilian Vespers, in 1280, the English humanist Roger Bacon, while traveling through Sicily, sent a letter to Pope Nicholas III, Orsini. He wrote in Latin:

«... in most places, the clergy and people were purely Greek.» (“Nec multum eset pro tanta utilitate in Siciliam, in pua clerus et populus sunt pure Graeci in multiw locis”) .

Source: Roger Bacon, Compendium Studii Philosophiae, Chap. VI.

 

2. The Legislation of Frederick II (1231)

The German Emperor and King of the Two Sicilies, Frederick II, issued his famous legislation, the Constitution of Melfi, in 1232. It was written in three languages: Medieval Greek (the language spoken and understood by the common people in 8 Sicily, Calabria and rest of magna Grecia), Arabic, and Scholarly Latin. (classical latin was a dead language, but he was the scholar language for the legislations).

 

In Chapters I, II, and IV of this legislation, severe measures were enacted against the MagnoGreci (Greeks of Sicily, Calabria, Apulia, Basilicata, and Campania) and the "Heretic" Orthodox Church. Penalties included:

Prohibition of property acquisition or inheritance.

2 Imprisonment and the banning of the Greek language in official use.

3 Prohibition of Greek Orthodox ceremonies.

Prohibition of studies at the University of Constantinople (students were forced to attend the University of Naples, est. 1224). These measures paved the way for the Holy Inquisition, though many Magno-Greco Orthodox communities survived until as late as 1580.

 Source: «THE CONSTITUTION OF FREDERICK II HOHENSTAUFEN, KING OF SICILY.... ROYAL DECREES».

Original: «ΤΟ ΣΥΝΤΑΓΜΑ ΤΟΥ ΦΡΕΙΔΕΡΙΚΟΥ Β΄ του ΧΟΧΕΝΣΤΑΟΥΦΕΝ, ΒΑΣΙΛΕΩΣ ΤΗΣ ΣΙΚΕΛΙΑΣ... ΒΑΣΙΛΙΚΑΙ ΔΙΑΤΑΞΕΙΣ».

ed. Thea Von der Lieck-Buyken, Koln-Wien 1978


3. French Chroniclers, P.Meyer (13th Century)

A 13th-century French chronicler noted: “The peasants of Calabria spoke nothing but Greek.” (“Et par toute Calabre li paisant ne parlent se grizois non”) . Source: P. Meyer, Romania XIV (1885).

 

4. Petrarch’s Advice (14th Century)

In the 14th century, the great scholar Petrarch advised , with a letter, a young student seeking to learn Greek to go to Calabria instead of Constantinople, stating: “In our time there are many men in Calabria who are scholars in Greek literature.”

 

5. Pietro Bembo in Messina (1492)

Pietro Bembo traveled to Messina in 1492 to study Greek under the famous teacher Constantine Lascaris. Bembo wrote in a letter: “In every street of the city and every village of the Province of Demone, you hear the Greek tongue.” (Note: The name Demone or Lakedemone suggests Spartan roots).

 

6. The Collegio Greco (1521)

In 1521, the Sicilians of Messina founded the renowned Collegio Greco, which attracted students from all over Sicily, Calabria, Basilicata, and Apulia to study the Greek language and culture.

 

7. The Prophecy of Agathangelos (1279)

The Greek monk Theokletos Polyeides wrote his prophetic work, The Visions of Agathangelos, in Medieval Greek in 1279 in Messina. It was later translated into Italian (1555) and Modern Greek (1751).

 

8. The Research of Gerhard Rohlfs

The eminent German linguist Gerhard Rohlfs (University of Tübingen) proved that the Greek language in Italy was a continuous survival from antiquity. His major works include:

 

Lexicon of the Griko Dialects of Southern Italy

(Λατινικά/Γερμανικά: Lexicon Graecanicum Italiae Inferioris)

2 Greeks and Romans in Southern Italy

(Γερμανικά: Griechen und Romanen in Unteritalien)

3 Etymological Dictionary of the Greek Elements in Southern Italy

(Γερμανικά: Etymologisches Wörterbuch der unteritalienischen Gräzität)

4 Linguistic Excavations in Magna Graecia

(Γερμανικά: Scavi linguistici nella Magna Grecia)

Rohlfs’ books were banned during Mussolini’s fascist regime, as the dictator feared their popularity among the Greek-descended populations of Southern Italy before his 1940 invasion of Greece. Rohlfs and Giuseppe Morosi researched municipal and notarial archives to trace the language:

 

9.The Archives

Rohlfs and Giuseppe Morosi researched municipal and notarial archives to trace the language:

 

A) 15th Century: Greek remained dominant in the Nebrodi Mountains and

cities like Randazzo and San Fratello.

 

B) 16th Century: Greek language dominated notarial documents in Messina.

 

Γ) Syracuse & South: In the "Crown of Hellenism," Syracuse, the language faded earlier (last Greek notarial documents in 1330). The Aragonese rulers imposed a harsh assimilation policy. Catholic orders (Benedictines, Cistercians) forcibly seized Greek monasteries. The famous Temple of Athena (the Duomo of Syracuse), which was Orthodox, was converted to Roman Catholicism. The same period in Noto, Ragusa, Gela, Agrigento…

 

Δ) Central Sicily: In Piazza Armerina, Greek notarial archives reach the 15th century, and scholars believe the spoken language survived in surrounding villages for another 100 years. The same in Enna, Eggyon (Ganggi), Agira (Argyrion) and Caltaniseta

 

Ε) Earthquakes. It is important to note that the massive earthquakes of 1789 and 1908 caused catastrophic damage throughout Southern Italy-Sicily, destroying a vast portion of the municipal and church archives in many cities.

 

Στ) Because of this loss of primary sources, we lack a complete and clear picture of exactly how many other towns and villages maintained their Greek- speaking populations and for how long. The records that could have testified to the persistence of the Greek language in these areas were lost forever under the ruins.

 

10. The «Holy» Inquisition .

After 1500, the Inquisition became unbearably harsh. It sought to uproot everything Greek through torture, social pressure, and administrative bans. The Greek language…..

             

                                      ********

Here is Pope Gregory's thought, condensed in the autograph Dictatus Papae: the Pope is bishop of the entire world (§3) and has the exclusive right to use the insignia of the emperors (§8); everyone must kiss his feet (§12) and only his name must be pronounced in church (§10) because his is the only name in the world (§11) and no one can judge him (§19); the Church of Rome has never erred nor will it ever err (§22) and no one, if he does not agree with the Pope, can be considered Catholic (§26).

 Archimandrita Antonio Scordino. Sicily.

                                       

                                     

 

                            Galatro, Magno-Greek Monastery

                                          

  

“The ethnic and religious cleansing in the south is still with us in the public imagination which says that the Italo-Greeks, who for example founded the monastic lordships such as Licusati, San Giovani a Piro and Rofrano, came here as refugees from the iconoclastic policy of Constantionople and that they were therefore not our ancestors but “Foreigners”.

                                       *********

 

 

EPILOGOS

The rebirth of Hellenism continues, whether through antiquities or through Orthodoxy.

As i write these lines, an GreekOrthodox Hesychaster of “Sain Giovani Theristis” (in Bivogi Calabria exist also Church and Monastery in honor to this magnogreek saint) and church has been reopened in southern Sicily, in the city of NOTOS (after six centuries of prohibition and restriction), on the ruins of one of the many historic Greek Orthodox churches of the region, by a brotherhood of  local Sicilians, from Noto. The "Fraternità dei Siciliani” !

The rite of the opening of the doors was celebrated by the Orthodox Metropolitan of Italy, Prokopios.

·  The Location is situated in an idyllic location within the region of Noto, a city famous for its Baroque architecture, yet one that conceals deep ancient Greek and Orthodox-Byzantine roots.

·  The Orthodox Brotherhood "Fraternità dei Siciliani" (Brotherhood of the Sicilians) consists primarily of native Sicelogreek who have embraced Orthodoxy and are working toward the revival and promotion of the "Italo-Greek Saints" (Santi Italo-Greci).

We hope that soon the crown jewel of Hellenism in Sicily—Syracuse—will also acquire its own parish.


                                            **********

Metropolitan Procopiοs is of Sicilian origin, possessing a deep consciousness of the Greek-Byzantine heritage of Southern Italy.

His secular name is Procopio Di Miceli. Born and raised in Sicily, he is one of the central figures in the movement to revive Orthodoxy among south Italians.

Key Aspects of His Identity:

  • Sicilian Identity: As a native-born Sicilian, he leads the effort to reconnect modern Sicilians with their roots, which were purely Greek and Orthodox prior to the Great Schism and the Norman conquest.
  • Language and Worship: Although his native language is Italian/Sicilian, the liturgical life of the brotherhood often includes the Greek language (the tongue of the Italo-Greek Saints), emphasizing the continuity of the Magna Graecia tradition.
  • Ecclesiastical Status: It is important to note that Metropolitan Procopius belongs to an ecclesiastical jurisdiction that does not fall under the Ecumenical Patriarchate (which is represented in Italy by Metropolitan Polykarpos), but rather to an autonomous Orthodox structure focusing on the local Italian character.
  • Historical Significance: His presence in Noto and the opening of the Church of Saint John the Harvester are considered a milestone for the local Orthodox community, signaling the return of Orthodox worship to a space that historically belonged to it.

Footnote: He follows the Old (Julian) Calendar, whereas the Metropolis of the Ecumenical Patriarchate follows the Revised Julian (Gregorian) calendar. In essence, these represent two distinct expressions of the Italo-Greek church tradition.

       

The Ecumenical Patriarchate, metropolis of Italy have the next parishes.         

Today, the following Sicelogreek parishes are reopening and are active in Sicily under his jurisdiction (those are Local, ancient Sicelogreek  churches. Exists also churches of the emigrants from eastern Europe, like Ukrainian, Romanian etc, which are not Sicilian orthodox. The Sicilian orthodox are the medieval SikeloGreeks, before their forcibly  latinization)

·  Orthodox Church of Saint Leo –Catania,

·  Orthodox Church of Saint Mark of Ephesus –Palermo* ·        *  Orthodox Church of Saint Andreas– Palermo. And is expected to Martorana be open Greek and Orthodox.

·  Orthodox Parish of Cefalù –Cefalù

·  Orthodox Church of Saint Nicholas – Messina

·  Saint Catherine of Alexandria Orthodox Churchστο Milazzo

·  Monastery of the Presentation of the Lord at the Temple- Messina region

·   San Calogero- Caltaniset

·  Sacro Monastery – Madranici, Catania

While in other towns as well, such as Agyrion (Agira), the Roman Catholic Church kindly grants the use of its churches so that Sicilian Greek Orthodox faithful may celebrate their liturgical services.

Naturally, in Calabria—rightly called today the heart of Magna Graecia—the return to Greek roots is even stronger. The same is true in Apulia and in southern Basilicata. For this reason, we cannot refer in detail  the monasteries and churches in Calabria and Apulia, as they are now numerous.
However, they can be viewed—along with photographs—in the book, available for free reading on the blog sicilia-calabria.blogspot.com, as well as on the Facebook pages cited in the bibliography and sources.

 

 SikeloGreek monastery after 500 years of prosecution by Romancatholic Inquizition-prosecution

 

 

SOURSES:

 

Sicilia-calabria.blogspot.com (page)

Santi italogreci (page in Facebook)

Eredita cultural monachesimo Italo-greco (page in facebook)

Sinassatrio of Italo-greek (or MagnoGreek) Saints. Edit.Orthodox archdiocese of Italy

Vasile Mutu: Luci e riflessioni bizantini in Sicilia”. Bonano Editore Catania sicily, 2024. (Vasilemutu.com. And in facebook).

 Susanna Valpreda “La cultura bizantina della Sicilia orientale", Lithos Edizioni, Castelvetrano Sicily 2023, Volumes I and II, (academia.edu).

 

·         See the paper THE SICILIAN VESPERS: A Turning Point in History

*I VESPRI SICILIANI: Una svolta nella storia”,  in the blog: sicilia-calabria.blogspot.com   or in Academia.edu, Stefanos,Sotiriou.

 

 


                                                Greek Genetics from 1,000 BC until today 2025.

 

Genetic Reality of the Mezzogiorno  today!  Challenging the myth and propaganda of Romanic, Normanic, Germanic & Arab  DNA ancestry.

“Contrary to popular belief the many invasions in southern Italy and Sicilia, that followed the fall of the Western Roman Empire, did not significantly alter the local genetic landscape of the Apennine Peninsula. In fact, DNA studies show that only the Greek presence in southern Italy had any lasting effect on the genetic makeup of the peninsula”.

Source: Cavalli-Sforza (University of Stanford, USA), Luigi Luca, Menozzi Paolo, Piazza Alberto (Turin Italy), "The History and Geography of Human Genes. p. 295”. Also reserche of : Michaela Sarno  and the  university of Peruggia and Max Plank institute, Germany.

                                             ******* 

Pages in Academia.edu, related to South Italy’s history , mythology

and prehistory. Adh her in thiw Blogg:  sicilia-calabia.blogspot.com

 

https://www.academia.edu/161291377/THE_MYCENAEAN_COLONIZ

ATION_in_SICILY_and_SOUTH

 

https://www.academia.edu/150276120/VATICAN_CATHOLIC_CHIRC

H_The_Greek_Popes_from_Calabria_Sicilia_Athens_Efesos_Damascos_

and_Jerusalem_1_

 

https://www.academia.edu/146186278/THE_SICILIAN_VESPERS_A_T

urning_Point_in_History_I_VESPRI_SICILIANI_Una_svolta_nella_stor

ia

 

https://www.academia.edu/145875108/SOUTH_ITALY_MEZZOGIORN

O_The_Violent_Latinization_Catholicization_of_Sicily_Calabria_Apulia

_Basilicata_and_Campania

 

https://www.academia.edu/145784826/Sikani_Sikuli_and_Elymi_Who_

were_they

 

https://www.academia.edu/145784412/FRIEDRICH_NIETZSCHE_Helle

nism_and_Magna_Graecia_Southern_Italy_Sicily

 

https://www.academia.edu/145782473/MARTORANA_PALERMO_SIC

ILY_Giorgio_dAntiochia_%CE%93%CE%95%CE%A9%CE%A1%CE

%93%CE%99%CE%9F%CE%A3_%CE%91%CE%9D%CE%A4%CE%

99%CE%9F%CE%A7%CE%95%CE%A5%CE%A3_and_the_MARTO

RANA_Santa_Maria_D_Ammiraglio_Palermo_Sicily

 

 

And the full mythology, prehistory and history, until 13 century, in the Blogg: sicilia-

calabria.blogspot.com

sicilia-calabria.blogspot.com

SOUTH ITALY, MEZZOGIORNO. The Violent Latinization/Catholicization of Sicily, Calabria, Apulia, Basilicata and Campania).

  *SOUTH ITALY, MEZZOGIORNO.  The Violent        Latinization/Catholicization of Sicily, Calabria, Apulia, Basilicata       and Campania). “...