• Thumbnail for Farfa Abbey
    Farfa Abbey (Italian: Abbazia di Farfa) is a territorial abbey in northern Lazio, central Italy. In the Middle Ages, it was one of the richest and most...
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  • Rieti Farfa Abbey, one of the main medieval abbeys in Italy A personal name, as: Farfa (poet), an Italian Futurist poet (1881–1964) An alias, as: Farfa (YouTuber)...
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  • Pavia Cervara Abbey, Santa Margherita Ligure Chiaravalle Abbey, Milan Chiaravalle Abbey, Tolentino Cistercian Abbey, Albino Farfa Abbey, Fara Sabina,...
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    itineraries the Pantheon, the Gardens of Bomarzo, the Abbey of Fossanova, Monte Cassino Abbey and Farfa Abbey. Lazio has many small and picturesque villages...
    45 KB (3,939 words) - 13:59, 26 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Fulcoald of Farfa
    increased the abbey's patronage by the greater landowners of the Sabina. The notitia (notice) of one of Lupo's judicial decisions in Farfa's favour survives...
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    duchy of Spoleto, he granted the title curtis 'Germaniciana' to the Farfa Abbey, adding substantial lands and prestige to the institution. For additional...
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  • Thumbnail for Pope Paschal I
    cooperating with the Papal Curia than his father. He held a court and declared Farfa Abbey, just north of Rome, exempt from papal taxation. Paschal's aristocratic...
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  • Thumbnail for Pope Eugene III
    reside in Rome. Hardly had he left the city to be consecrated in the Farfa Abbey (about 40 km north of Rome), when the citizens, under the influence of...
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  • Hugh (died 1039) was the Abbot of Farfa from 998. He founded the abbatial school and wrote its history from the late ninth through the early eleventh...
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    fifteenth century. The book of customs or “Consuetudines” of Farfa Abbey, a Benedictine abbey close to Rome in Italy which traces itself back to Syrian origins...
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  • 4th century Thomas of Maurienne or Thomas of Farfa Abbey (died 720), the first abbot of the Abbey of Farfa Thomas Becket (died 1170), also called Saint...
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  • Thumbnail for Pope Gregory IV
    discussions. In January 829, Gregory was involved in a dispute with Farfa Abbey over the ownership of local monastic land by the Roman church. In a court...
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  • the Early Medieval Italy: Local Society, Italian Politics, and the Abbey of Farfa, c.700–900 (Cambridge: 2007), 344. It survives only in a fragmentary...
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  • Emperor Louis II of all of Farfa's lands on 27 May 872 and another from Charles the Bald in 875. Charles confirmed the abbey's freedom from taxation and...
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  • Thumbnail for Sabina (region)
    can stick on a horse better than I supposed". Sabines Strada dell'Olio Farfa Abbey Province of Rieti Province of Rome Santacittarama Buddhist Monastery...
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  • obscure figures even to Gregory of Catino, the abbey's historian of the eleventh century. In 883 Farfa received a "privilege of greatest freedom" (praeceptum...
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    of Offida. The true first historical mention dates to 1039, when the Farfa Abbey received the castle of Ophida, being confirmed in 1261 by Pope Urban...
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    possessions. For spiritual benefit, a union was made between Subiaco and the Farfa Abbey, but it lasted only a short time. In 1514, Subiaco joined the Congregation...
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  • Thumbnail for Peter of Farfa
    Saracens. Under Peter's direction, the monks of Farfa fled, some to Rome and others to Rieti. The abbey buildings were used as a barracks by the Saracens...
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  • Costambeys, Power and Patronage in the Early Medieval Italy: Local Society, Italian Politics, and the Abbey of Farfa, c.700–900 (Cambridge: 2007), 162n. v t e...
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  • Thumbnail for Amatrice
    comitatus of Ascoli. The town of Matrice is mentioned in the papers of the Farfa Abbey in 1012 as commanding the confluence of the Tronto and Castellano rivers...
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  • Teuto (redirect from Teuto of Farfa)
    Catino was chronicling the abbey's history and editing its charters in the late eleventh century. Suppose he succeeded at Farfa on 12 May 883, as one nineteenth-century...
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  • Abbot of Farfa sometime between 757 and 761, one of a series of abbots from Aquitaine. His abbacy coincided with a troubled period in the abbey's history...
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  • was the Abbot of Farfa, Italy from 802 until his death. He is the first abbot mentioned in the eleventh-century history of the abbey written by Gregory...
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  • Thumbnail for Feronia (mythology)
    recorded in a single inscription, copied in a manuscript of the rule of the Farfa Abbey as colonia Iulia Felix Lucoferonensis. Another important site was near...
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  • Thumbnail for Abbey of San Cassiano, Narni
    evidence dates the monastery in 1091 falling under the governance of the Abbey of Farfa in Lazio. However, epigraphs at the site point to an earlier foundation...
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  • Thumbnail for Apocalypticism
    grants future concessions to Farfa Abbey. Another document in 999 shows two brothers taking a 29-year loan on lands of the abbey of San Marciano in Tortona...
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  • Thumbnail for Acquaviva Picena
    coastal population to move inland. The village was originally owned by the Farfa Abbey (947), then became a feudal holding of the Acquaviva family (hence the...
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  • Thumbnail for San Salvatore in Campo
    patronage of an Abbot Campo, who was then leading the powerful Benedictine Farfa Abbey. Alternatively, it may be that the church stood before a campi, a name...
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  • Patrimonium Sabinense or Carseolanum (on the Via Salaria, ending at Farfa Abbey); Patrimonium Tiburtinum (bounded by the Via Nomentana and the Via Tiburtina);...
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