Bourbon Del Monte Di San Faustino Family Papers, 801 - Ca

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Bourbon Del Monte Di San Faustino Family Papers, 801 - Ca http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8js9tth No online items Bourbon del Monte di San Faustino Family papers, 801 - ca. 1920 Finding aid prepared by Orietta Filippini, 2013; edited by Guendalina Ajello Mahler, 2016; machine-readable finding aid created by Caroline Cubé. UCLA Library Special Collections Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA, 90095-1575 (310) 825-4988 [email protected] Finding aid last modified 24 March 2016. Bourbon del Monte di San 1868 1 Faustino Family papers, 801 - ca. 1920 Title: Bourbon del Monte di San Faustino Family papers Collection number: 1868 Contributing Institution: UCLA Library Special Collections Language of Material: English Physical Description: 24.3 linear ft.(48 boxes and 8 oversize boxes) Date: 801 - ca. 1920 Abstract: The Bourbon del Monte are an important Italian noble family. Their domain was a Marquisate in central Italy, centered on the town of Monte Santa Maria (today Monte Santa Maria Tiberina). It included areas in today's Umbria and Tuscany, and bordered on the Grand-Duchy of Tuscany and the Papal States. From an institutional point of view, it depended mostly on the emperor, because the Marquisate was an imperial fiefdom. The papers at UCLA are the archive of the branch of Ancona, one of several lines which made up the family. In 1861 this branch was endowed with the title of princes of San Faustino. Several heirs of this branch moved to the United States in the twentieth century. The archive contains numerous genealogical documents, reconstructions of the history of the family, correspondence among the various branches of the family, wills, inventories, administrative documents (sometimes including drawings or maps, a number of which are reproduced here), litigations, concessions made by imperial authority, family agreements, agreements of mutual recognition (accomandigie) with the Grand-Dukes of Tuscany, and concessions made by ecclesiastical authorities. *** Estratto La famiglia Bourbon del Monte rappresenta un'importante famiglia nobile italiana di et moderna. Ebbe dominio su un Marchesato nell'Italia centrale, imperniato sul centro di Monte Santa Maria (oggi Monte Santa Maria Tiberina), comprendente territori delle attuali regioni dell'Umbria e della Toscana e confinante con il Granducato di Toscana e lo Stato della Chiesa. Con queste due importanti realt politiche coltiv i maggiori rapporti politici e istituzionali. Soprattutto, dal punto di vista istituzionale, dipese dall'Imperatore, poich il Marchesato rappresentava un feudo imperiale. Quello qui in esame , dei diversi rami di cui la famiglia fosse composta, l'archivio del ramo di Ancona, che ottenne nel 1861 il titolo principesco di San Faustino. Alcuni eredi di questo ramo si trasferirono nel Novecento negli Stati Uniti. L'archivio conserva numerosi atti genealogici, ricostruzioni della storia di famiglia, corrispondenza tra i vari rami della famiglia, testamenti, inventari di beni, atti di amministrazione delle propriet (talvolta con disegni e mappe, una parte dei quali verr riprodotta), atti di cause, concessioni provenienti dall'autorit imperiale, patti di famiglia, patti di riconoscimento reciproco (accomandigie) con i Granduchi di Toscana, concessioni provenienti dalle autorit ecclesiastiche. Physical location: Stored off-site at SRLF. Advance notice is required for access to the collection. Please contact UCLA Library Special Collections for paging information. Creator: Bourbon del Monte di San Faustino family Restrictions on Access Open for research. STORED OFF-SITE AT SRLF. Advance notice is required for access to the collection. Please contact UCLA Library Special Collections for paging information. Restrictions on Use and Reproduction Property rights to the physical object belong to the UC Regents. Literary rights, including copyright, are retained by the creators and their heirs. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine who holds the copyright and pursue the copyright owner or his or her heir for permission to publish where The UC Regents do not hold the copyright. Provenance/Source of Acquisition Gift of Montino and Rita Bourbon, 2011. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Bourbon del Monte di San Faustino Family Papers (Collection 1868). UCLA Library Special Collections, Charles E. Young Research Library, University of California, Los Angeles. UCLA Catalog Record ID UCLA Catalog Record ID: 7612988 Biography/History The Bourbon del Monte family (which became Bourbon del Monte di San Faustino only in 1861) was composed of various branches. In chronological order, from the middle ages to the modern era, they were: di Petriolo, di Valiana, di Civitella, di Pesaro, di Ancona, di Citt di Castello, di Monte Santa Maria. As various lines died out, their archives were incorporated into Bourbon del Monte di San 1868 2 Faustino Family papers, 801 - ca. 1920 those of the surviving branches. In the modern era, the time to which most documents belong, the family's main branches were those of Florence, Monte Santa Maria (later known as that of Ancona), Pesaro and Rome (whose importance mainly derived from its place in the context of papal Rome). The branches of the Bourbon di Petrella and Sorbello are usually considered to be separate. The family temporarily lost its feudal authority with the arrival of the French in the late eighteenth century, and permanently with the Congress of Vienna, after which the family's properties were joined to the Grand-Duchy of Tuscany. The archive at UCLA is that of the branch of Ancona. The lines of Monte Santa Maria (later of Ancona), Florence and Rome are those mainly represented in the documentation. The nature of the family's dominion as an imperial fief, which required that the different lines jointly determine who would act as regent of the Marquisate, suggests that other branches of the family had archives analogous to this one. Indeed, a similar archive is preserved at the Archivio di Stato in Florence, presumably that of the Florentine branch of the family. Due to the importance of the family, as well as a long-standing friendship and family ties, in 1861 Pietro, of the branch of Ancona, received from pope Pius IX a princely title for the estate of San Faustino, which he had acquired. The fact that the heirs of this branch moved to the United States in the twentieth century facilitated the library's acquisition of the archive in 2010 (2011?). The archive's current structure reflects a reorganization, probably datable to the nineteenth century. This structure has been preserved, and the series reflect a logical ordering of the material. The use of key-word searching will allow researchers to identify material which did not clearly lend itself to placement in a single series. A number of documents and objects of unusual dimensions or materials have been removed from their original contexts and housed in boxes more appropriate for their preservation. These include mostly parchments, but also maps and silk textiles. Finally, the common usage has been used in rendering family names (Fr[ancesc]o for Francesco, M[ari]a, Gio[vanni], Gio[vanni] Batt[ist]a, F[ilippo]). *** Dalla bibliografia relativa alla famiglia par di capire che la famiglia Bourbon del Monte (divenuta Bourbon del Monte di San Faustino solo nel 1861) era composta, andando dal Medioevo all'Et moderna, da diverse ramificazioni: di Petriolo, di Valiana, di Civitella, di Pesaro, di Ancona, di Citt di Castello, di Monte Santa Maria. L'estinzione di diversi rami e il confluire degli uni negli altri permettono di dire che in et moderna, il tempo cui maggiormente si riferiscono i materiali dell'archivio, i rami fondamentali - i Bourbon di Petrella e Sorbello sono infatti usualmente considerati a parte - erano quelli di Firenze, Monte Santa Maria (poi Ancona), Pesaro e Roma (quest'ultimo, per il contesto particolare rappresentato dalla capitale pontificia). La famiglia perse temporaneamente l'autorit feudale con l'arrivo dei Francesi nel tardo Settecento e definitivamente con il Congresso di Vienna, che accorp questo territorio al Granducato di Toscana. Il presente archivio costituisce l'archivio del ramo di Ancona. I rami di Monte Santa Maria (poi Ancona), Firenze e Roma e sono quelli maggiormente rappresentati nella documentazione. La natura di feudo imperiale del dominio della famiglia, che imponeva le diverse branche determinassero congiuntamente il Reggente del Marchesato, permette di pensare che gli altri rami di famiglia avessero archivi analoghi a quello qui considerato, e, di fatto, si ha notizia di un archivio simile conservato presso l'Archivio di Stato di Firenze, verosimilmente appunto quello del ramo fiorentino della famiglia. Per ragioni di rilievo della famiglia, amicizia di lunga data e legami familiari, Pietro, appartenente al ramo di Ancona, ebbe nel 1861 da Pio IX il titolo principesco, che venne legato alla tenuta di San Faustino che egli aveva acquistato. Il trasferimento degli eredi del ramo anconetano negli Stati Uniti nel corso del Novecento ha facilitato l'acquisizione dell'archivio nel 2010 (2011?) da parte della Biblioteca. L'archivio conserva l'impronta di un riordinamento probabilmente ottocentesco, che stata rispettata; le serie che sono state istituite riflettono un ordinamento logico del materiale. L'uso di parole chiave nella ricerca permetter di individuare il materiale la cui natura non permetteva facilmente di individuare una serie di riferimento in modo univoco. Per le loro dimensioni o per la natura particolare del materiale, alcuni documenti e oggetti (segnatamente le pergamene, ma anche materiali quali mappe e drappi serici) sono stati posti in boxes di adeguate dimensioni al fine di garantirne la preservazione. Il lettore rinverr, al riguardo, appropriati rimandi. Infine, le forme grafiche dei nomi sono quelle d'uso (in particolare, per i nomi di famiglia che ricorrono: Fr[ancesc]o per Francesco, M[ari]a, Gio[vanni], Gio[vanni] Batt[ist]a, F[ilippo]). Scope and Content The material in the archive largely reflects the family's noble standing and the imperial nature of the Marquisate.
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