Felice Palma. Massa 1583-1625. Collezione / Collection.
Texts by Claudio Casini, Andrei Cristina, Ciarlo Nicola, Federici Fabrizio and Sara Ragni.
Italian and English Text.
Pontedera, 2024; bound in a case, pp. 289, b/w and col. ill., b/w and col. plates, cm 24,5x34.
(L'Oro Bianco. Straordinari Dimenticati. The White Gold Forgotten Masters).
cover price: € 160.00
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Books included in the offer:
Felice Palma. Massa 1583-1625. Collezione / Collection.
Texts by Claudio Casini, Andrei Cristina, Ciarlo Nicola, Federici Fabrizio and Sara Ragni.
Italian and English Text.
Pontedera, 2024; bound in a case, pp. 289, b/w and col. ill., b/w and col. plates, cm 24,5x34.
(L'Oro Bianco. Straordinari Dimenticati. The White Gold Forgotten Masters).
FREE (cover price: € 160.00)
Le botteghe del marmo
Italian and English Text.
Ospedaletto, 1992; bound, pp. 153, 10 b/w ill., 60 col. ill., cm 24x29.
(Immagine).
FREE (cover price: € 34.49)
Museo Stefano Bardini. I Bronzetti e gli Oggetti d'Uso in Bronzo
Edited by Nesi A.
Firenze, 2009; paperback, pp. 191, 102 b/w ill., 7 col. ill., cm 17x24,5.
(Museo Stefano Bardini).
FREE (cover price: € 30.00)
Bronzetti e Rilievi dal XV al XVIII Secolo
Bologna, 2015; 2 vols., bound in a case, pp. 729, ill., col. plates, cm 21,5x30,5.
FREE (cover price: € 90.00)
Venetian and Ottoman Heritage in the Aegean. The Bailo House in Chalcis, Greece
Brepols Publishers
Edited by Nikos D. Kontogiannis and Stefania S. Skartsis.
English Text.
Turnhout, 2019; paperback, pp. 280, 140 b/w ill., 30 col. ill., cm 22x28.
ISBN: 2-503-58409-8 - EAN13: 9782503584096
Subject: Civil Architecture/Art
Languages:
Weight: 0.65 kg
This book tells the astonishing story of a secular building and its inhabitants over six centuries and four successive civilizations. The Bailo House was constructed as a public loggia in the 14th century by Venetian offi cials in their Aegean colony of Negroponte on the Byzantine island of Euripos.
Italian designs were followed and copied in the style of the lagoon's palaces, digging the foundations through the earlier Byzantine layers. It later became seat of an Ottoman offi cial, also housing his apothecary. It subsequently passed into the hands of a local Ottoman dignitary, who completely transformed it into a typical Middle Eastern mansion. In the early 19th century it was reshaped once again with a neoclassical façade to conform to the European models promoted by the Modern Greek state.
Extensive study, excavations and restorations over a ten-year period revealed remarkable evidence for one of the few remaining examples of secular architecture in the Eastern Mediterranean, as well as abundant and rare information about urban planning, material culture, economic and cultural exchanges, art and aesthetics, etc. It is the tale of a harbor town that was always cosmopolitan, a port of call along the Silk Road, the winter base of the Ottoman fl eet, a European enclave in the East.










