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The State Archives of Italy consists of numerous repositories located in the capital city of each of the provinces of Italy, along with several additional local sub-branches ("sezione"). It is overseen by a central office which is part of the Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities and Tourism in Rome.
The Central Archives of the State (in Italian: Archivio centrale dello Stato) is the national archives of Italy which keeps the archives and documents produced after the Unification of Italy (1861) by the central bodies of the Kingdom of Italy and of the present Italian Republic, as well as by public bodies of national importance and by selected private individuals.
Italy.—The administration of the public records of the kingdom is attached to the Ministry of the Interior, for which office Signor Vazio published (1883) his Relazione sugli archivi di stato italiani. There are seventeen repositories,
This became state property in 1806, used as a prison from 1811, then as a tobacco warehouse. In 1925 the State Archives exchanged some buildings on the Giudecca of the Magistrato alle Acque for the Palace of the Dieci savi alle decime in Rialto, which had served as a subsidiary until then. However, these spaces proved to be unsuitable, and so ...
The State Archives of Naples (Italian: Archivio di Stato di Napoli) is an archive located in Naples, Italy. With its more than 50,000 linear meters of book and document shelving, [ 1 ] is of fundamental importance for the history of southern Italy from the 10th century to today.
Jean-Étienne Liotard, Portrait of Count Wenzel Anton Kaunitz, 1762, private collection. The date with which the formation of the nucleus of what was to become the State Archives of Milan (at that time called the Government Archives of Milan) [2] is identified is 1781, [3] the year in which the documentation from the Porta Giovia Castle, the present-day Sforza Castle, [4] was transferred to ...
The State Archives of Bari (Italian: Archivio di Stato di Bari) is the repository of documents and archives of public ownership in the city of Bari, Italy. It was established as a provincial archive on 22 October 1812, as a result of the decree by Joachim Murat and the subsequent organic law of 1818 on the Archives of the Kingdom. [1]
The Archivio di Stato di Firenze, is the repository for the public records and archives of the Italian city of Florence. The archive holds over 600 fonds dating back to the 8th century which, laid out in a line, would stretch over 75 km (46 miles). [1] It was founded on February 20, 1852, by decree of the Grand Duke Leopoldo II of Tuscany.