Caracciolo Tomb

A piece of the strategy of family celebration

The tomb of Giovanni and Battista Caracciolo, counts of Gerace in the first half of the fifteenth century, was constructed much later,  on the mandate of Ferdinando Caracciolo, duke of Airola and count of Biccheri, in a broader context of his commissions that were aimed at celebrating the family pantheon in a monumental way. 

In order to give a worthy burial to the two counts of Gerace, his distant ancestors whose remains were previously found in the crypt, he asked the bishop in charge, Ottaviano Pasqua, to sponsor the creation of a funerary monument. It is currently located near the chapel of the Santissimo Sacramento, formerly dedicated to the Baptist, built on Caterina Concublet’s initiative and the two counts in the 1420s and 1430s. 

In the letter sent by Pasqua to Duke Caracciolo in 1575, reference is made to the artist who designed the work, Giovan Domenico Manni, defined by the bishop as an "excellent sculptor". 

From the letters it is possible to deduce how the epitaph was shortened in order to place it in the slab designated for the inscription. 

While the tomb reflects the stylistic trends widespread in the second half of the sixteenth century, it is however more modest than the Polizzi monument, in front of which it is located, both for the quality of the material and the refinement of the workmanship.

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