The late-medieval Royal chancery of the Kingdom of Sicily and the inquisitio of Giovan Luca Barberi (14th-16th century)

Authors

  • Alessandro Silvestri Birkbeck, University of London

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6092/1593-2214/528

Keywords:

Archives, Chanceries, Rule from afar, Political conflict, Officers

Abstract

At the beginning of the sixteenth century, Giovan Luca Barberi, Magister notarius of the Sicilian Royal chancery, led an intense and long-lasting inquisitio on the royal patrimony of the island and on the possessions of local lords on behalf of King Ferdinand II of Aragon. This well-known inquiry arouse the interest of a number of scholars, who have especially stressed the aspects connected to its importance in the history of law, as well as its political consequences. However, by analysing Barberi’s work (a system of books known as capibrevi) through an administrative perspective, it can now be understood as the result of an “archival enterprise” and, at the same time, strictly connected to the role of Magister notarius that Barberi had in the Sicilian chancery. On the one hand, this study describes the fourteenth- and fifteenth-century dynamics that influenced the functioning of the Regia cancelleria and the tasks of its personnel, as well as to define the methods for producing, recording and preserving documentation. On the other hand, this study promotes a new explanation of Barberi’s inquisitio, illustrating in detail how the Magister notarius worked in royal archives and how carried out his inquiry, in other words, how he retrieved, used and organised information for compiling the capibrevi.

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Published

2016-09-13

How to Cite

Silvestri, Alessandro. 2016. “The Late-Medieval Royal Chancery of the Kingdom of Sicily and the Inquisitio of Giovan Luca Barberi (14th-16th Century)”. Reti Medievali Journal 17 (2):419-90. https://doi.org/10.6092/1593-2214/528.

Issue

Section

Materials and Notes

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