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  2. Sicilian Baroque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sicilian_Baroque

    Influence of taste, art and above all British architecture; due to the strong ties that have linked Sicily to England for a long time; especially the aristocracy While these characteristics never occur all together in the same building, and none are unique to Sicilian Baroque, it is the coupling together which gives the Sicilian Baroque its ...

  3. Sicilian Renaissance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sicilian_Renaissance

    The Sicilian Renaissance forms part of the wider currents of scholarly and artistic development known as the Italian Renaissance. Spreading from the movement 's main centres in Florence , Rome and Naples , when Renaissance Classicism reached Sicily it fused with influences from local late medieval and International Gothic art and Flemish ...

  4. Sicilian vase painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sicilian_vase_painting

    Particularly typical of Sicilian vase painting is the use of additional colours, notably of white paint. Especially in the initial phase, large vessels such as chalice kraters , volute kraters and hydriai were painted, but small vessels such as bottles, lekanes , lekythoi and skyphoid pyxides are also typical.

  5. Category:Sicilian Baroque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Sicilian_Baroque

    Sicilian Baroque — a style of Baroque architecture in Sicily which evolved in the Kingdom of Sicily from the 1693 until the mid−18th century. Subcategories.

  6. Italian architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_architecture

    The Greek Temple of Concordia in the Valle dei Templi, Sicily. Along with pre-historic architecture, the first people in Italy to truly begin a sequence of designs were the Greeks and the Etruscans. In Northern and Central Italy, it was the Etruscans who led the way in architecture in that time.

  7. Sicilians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sicilians

    Sicilian Catholics. For Catholics in Sicily, the Virgin Hodegetria is the patroness of Sicily. The Sicilian people are also known for their deep devotion to some Sicilian female saints: the martyrs Agatha and Lucy, who are the patron saints of Catania and Syracuse respectively, and the hermit Saint Rosalia, patroness of Palermo. Sicilian people ...

  8. Culture of Italy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Italy

    Sicilian granitas, or a frozen dessert of flavoured crushed ice, more or less similar to a sorbet or a snow cone, are popular desserts not only in Sicily or their native towns of Messina and Catania, but all over Italy (although the northern and central Italian equivalent, grattachecca, commonly found in Rome or Milan, is slightly different ...

  9. Monreale Cathedral mosaics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monreale_Cathedral_mosaics

    The mosaics of the Cathedral of Monreale were influenced by the spread of Byzantine art throughout Southern Italy and Sicily. Many Byzantine artists remaining in Italy after the Islamic conquest of Sicily in 965, took part in decorating the interiors of many structures, including the many mosaics that reflect the Byzantine style of the artists. [5]