The Sack of Chios. Salerno, Ferrante Sanseverino Literary Cenacle Podcast By  cover art

The Sack of Chios. Salerno, Ferrante Sanseverino Literary Cenacle

The Sack of Chios. Salerno, Ferrante Sanseverino Literary Cenacle

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This podcast traces the rich and tormented history of the island of **Chios** (Scio), a crossroads of cultures in the Aegean Sea, from the Byzantine period until its fall to Ottoman rule in 1566.
It illustrates how Chios, with its iconic **Nea Moni Monastery** (founded in the 11th century after the miraculous discovery of an icon of the Virgin), was a cultural and spiritual jewel, fortified over time by the Byzantines, Genoese and Ottomans, witness to a glorious past and a more modest present.
The narrative then shifts to a broader context, that of the clash between Christian Europe and Islam in the modern age, culminating in the **Battle of Lepanto in 1571**. The role of **Salerno** as a crossroads and the figure of **Ferrante Sanseverino**, Prince of Salerno and founder of a literary circle, persecuted for having opposed the Inquisition, are highlighted. There is also mention of the connection with the family of the poet **Torquato Tasso**, singer of the clash between Christians and Muslims.
A particular focus is dedicated to the **Maona dei Giustiniani** in Chios. In 1347, the Republic of Genoa entrusted this society of merchants, a consortium of families (the Albergo dei Giustiniani), with the administration and commercial exploitation of the island, making the surname Giustiniani highly representative of Mediterranean history. The maona made profits from the extraction of mastic and the trade of alum.
Finally, the relationship culminates in the **martyrdom of the Giustiniani of Chios** in 1566. With the Ottoman advance and the capture of Chios by Pialì Pasha, the leaders of the Maona and the bishop were imprisoned, the churches destroyed, and 200 young people were kidnapped and taken to Constantinople. Among them, twenty-one young Giustiniani, eighteen of whom were martyred on September 6, 1566 for refusing to renounce their Christian faith. This tragic event was one of the catalysts that pushed Pope Pius V to promote the Holy League that led to the decisive victory of Lepanto.
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