On Today’s Date in 1809 ~

Maria Michela Sabatino was born at Strada Napolitano in Sirico, Campania, Italy to Santa Di Conza and Gioacchino Sabatino at the 6:00 in the morning. Sirico is about 5 miles away from Mount Vesuvius. Maria Michela was the mother of Filomena Napolitano, my immigrant second great grandmother.

At the time of her birth, Gioacchino was a tailor. Her mother was not from Sirico. She came from San Valentino di Sarno, which may be San Valentino Torio in Salerno. Unfortunately, I can not confirm that because neither San Valentino Torio nor Sarno have the Di Conza surname in their registers on Antenati, and her birth occurred before civil records started. When Santa Di Conza died in 1829 at the age of 44, her mother’s surname was listed as Petillo. That surname is also not in the registers for San Valentino Torio or Sarno.

Below is the heavily damaged birth record of my third great grandmother, who was born on August 8, 1809. She was a Leo.

Sirico Nati 1809:

Do you have any edits, additions, or are we related? Feel free to email me: cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net

My Campania, Italy Surnames and Places Lists

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UPDATED 9/16/23

Present-day Province of Naples

  • Montecalvario (Quartieri Spagnoli), Metropolitan City of Naples: Ferraro
  • Nola:  Napolitano, Marotta, Notaro, Criscuolo, Sepe, Trocciola, Stellato 
  • Nola Collateral Lines: Morisco, Tortora, Vecchione, Castiello, Manna, Cassese, Della Marca, Dell’Anno
  • Sirico (now part of Saviano): Sabatino, Di Conza, Di Falco, Di Sena, Sierpico
  • Sirico Collateral Lines: Subbrizzi, D’Avella, Vardolo, Ambruscino, Franzese
  • Roccarainola: Barbarino, Nicolino
  • Saviano: Zingariello

Romani/Zingari surnames:  Napolitano, Marotta, Criscuolo

Possible Romani/Zingari surnames:  Trocciola, Sepe, Stellato, Notaro, Parziale

Province of Salerno

  • San Valentino di Sarno: Petillo, Di Conza – note 9/2023 – I cannot prove either surname was from this town.  I am exploring the possibility they were Romani.

Province of Caserta

  • Marcianise: Ferraro
  • Grazzanise: Ferraro
  • San Prisco: Ferraro, Delle Cave
  • San Prisco Collateral Lines: Vitale, Pitrillo, Iannotta, Ferrara, Mincione
  • San Felice a Cancello (Fraziones : Ferraro, Delle Cave, Fruggieri/Fruggiero, Librera, De Lardo, Gammella, Zingariello, Dragone, Iaderosa, Barbarino, Papa, Bonillo/Bionillo/Ionillo, Capobianco, D’Ambrosio, Benardo, Piscitella, Cioffi, Ventura, Nicolino, Paciello, Bucciero, Magliulo, Vocciero, Formale, Affenita/D’Affenita, Gianino/Ianino, Diodato, Marletta, Litieri, Secondina, Paoluccio, Perrotta, Carfora, Girardo, Porrino, Ferriello, Martenisi, D’Addico, Petillo

Links:

  • Nola records are now online on Antenati under the Archives of Caserta as part of the old region of Terra di Lavoro.
  • Marcianise, Grazzanise, and San Prisco are partially loaded on Antenati, also under the Archives of Caserta.
  • San Felice a Cancello records have been partially loaded on Antenati at the same Archives of Caserta link I have used above.  They are under the headings Sei Casali d’Arienzo and San Felice a Cancello.
  • Church records for San Felice a Cancello are available on Family Search for anyone to view in the comfort of their own homes.  Some of the church records go back to the 1500s.

Thank you for visiting!

-cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net

If Vito Barbarino and Angela Nicolino Are In Your Tree Twice It Means…Uh Oh

Talanico, San Felice a Cancello, Caserta, Campania – When Vito Barbarino and Angela Nicolino are appearing in your pedigree twice as your forebears, you know two people in your Ferraro ancestry must’ve been related.  It turns out that great great grandfather Immigrant #3 ~ Retired Army Captain and Merchant Angelo Ferraro‘s parents were related because Vito Barbarino and Angela Nicolino from Roccarainola are in his ancestry on both sides of his family.  They were his great great grandparents twice through their daughter Giulia Barbarino – the ancestress of Angelo’s mother Angela Maria Delle Cave and Giovanna Barbarino – the ancestress of Angelo’s father Francesco Antonio Ferraro.

Giulia and Giovanna Barbarino were sisters, both daughters of Vito Barbarino and Angela Nicolino.

 

GiuliaBarbarinop.33.1259SPA.1696Bapt
Baptism of Giulia Barbarino, 1696, San Pietro Apostolo, Talanico, San Felice a Cancello

 

This all makes the parents of Angelo Ferraro third cousins.

Vito Barbarino and Angela Nicolino began to appear in the Talanico, San Felice a Cancello’s San Pietro Apostolo’s church records around 1690, with the notation that they were from a parish of Roccarainola, which is about 5 miles from the ancestral town of Angelo’s parents, San Felice a Cancello.

What can be gleaned from the online church records from the Diocese of Acerra concerning the Barbarinos is that their son Giacomo Antonio was at one point contributing the largest amount of tomolo of grain in tithes to the parish of San Leonardo in San Felice a Cancello.  Tomolo is an old Southern Italian measurement.

You can see the from pedigree of both parents of Angelo that, yep Barbarino and Nicolino are indeed in each one.

AMDelleCavePedigreeFAFerraropedigree

Giulia Barbarino married Lorenzo Delle Cave in 1721.  Giovanna Barbarino married Leonardo De Lardo in 1716.  Descendants of both sisters married approximately 100 years later and had Angelo Ferraro.

So.  They were related.  At least they weren’t 1st cousins HA!

Sources:

San Pietro Apostolo, Diocese of Acerra

San Leonardo, Diocese of Acerra

San Felice a Cancello, Civil Records

cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net

Back to the immigrants.  #26.

Immigrant #25 Great Great Grandmother Filomena Napolitano Ferraro

PLEASE SEE THE FOLLOWING POST FOR AN UPDATE ON THE ANCESTRY OF THIS IMMIGRANT: 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: Week #2 “Challenge” ~ Second Great Grandmother Filomena Napolitano – Proving, Disproving, or Accepting the Existence of Romani Relatives in Her Immediate Family ~

Filomena Napolitano was born in 1845 in Nola, Campania and immigrated to the United States, through Ellis Island in 1904 with her daughters and second son, my great grandfather Carmine Ferraro.  The title of this posting uses her husband’s last name after Napolitano because it was used on her death record in Columbus.  Had she stayed in Italy, she would have always been known as Filomena “Napolitano” because Italian women never change their surnames. In fact, Filomena arrived at Ellis Island as Napolitano as you can see on the Lombardia’s passenger manifest from April 28,1904.  manifestamferraro

I have written in the past on Filomena, Nola, and anything I could find on her father’s side: Carmine Ferraro’s Mother Filomena Napolitano from Nola, Napoli, Campania.

A post about the two headstones associated with her in the Mount Calvary Cemetery is here.  In case you are wondering, the cemetery still has no explanation on why she has two and why they are in separate places in the cemetery. This is her Find-a-Grave Memorial.

The following posts have already been written on her immigrant children:

Immigrant #5 ~ The Disappearing Antonio Ferraro

The Gift of a Genealogy Goldmine (An update on Antonio)

Immigrant #2: Angela Maria Ferraro Valerioti – Mother of a Renowned NYC Investigator and a NYC Refuse Company President

Immigrant #9 ~ Carmine A. Ferraro, Priest and Maestro

Immigrant #23 ~ Great Grand Aunt Elena Ferraro Scarnecchia

Two more immigrant children, Giovanina, and Gelsomina Ferraro Ciocco will be featured in upcoming weeks.

The post detailing her immigrant husband Angelo can be found here.

An earlier posting about her parents’ wedding is here:  On this day in 1842…

For approximately the past six months I have been researching Filomena’s mother’s interesting family, the Sabatinos from Sirico (now Saviano), Napoli, Campania, Italy.  They have been extremely easy to research, especially because Sirico was such a small town and appeared to have some money.  I literally have binders and files and piles of records from the microfilmed Sirico records from the Naples State Archives.  Filomena’s mother was Maria Michela Sabatino, born in 1809 in Sirico on Strada Napolitano, and at the time of her birth, her father Giaocchino was a sartore or tailor and was literate.  No, there is likely no connection between the Strada Napolitano and Maria Michela’s future husband – a Napolitano.  The surname is incredibly common in Campania.  Maria Michela’s mother was Santa di Conza and she was from Salerno.  I am patiently waiting for Salerno records to be put on Antenati.  Maria Michela appears to be the oldest of their eight children.

In the 1810s Giaocchino moved to being a vendittore di Piazza (seller on the Piazza), a tavernaro (tavernkeeper), and a bottegaro (shopkeeper).*  By 1822, Maria Michela’s father Giaocchino was a possidente or wealthy property owner.  He always seemed to be hanging around weddings in the town too signing as a witness where I found out about his wealthiest profession – possidente.  The signature of the man Giaocchino Sabatino was the same signature on his 1810s children’s birth.  I have an entire file of records that contain his signature.  One more thing I noticed in Sirico, all the literate Sabatinos of Sirico, too, spelled their surname with ONLY ONE ‘b’ when they signed their names.  ANNNNDDDDD, at one point in Sirico’s history, there was a Strada Sabatino according to the records.

possidente

Giaocchino Sabatino’s parents were Bartolomeo, a maestro sartore or master tailor, and Cecilia di Falco, an ostetrice or midwife.  That makes Filomena’s great grandmother from Sirico a midwife.  Giaocchino’s younger brother Lorenzo Sabatino was also a possidente and was Il Sindaco or mayor of Sirico from 1860-1861. 

From what I could find, Giaocchino only had brothers and from what I can surmise from viewing the town records, they were literate and educated like Giaocchino.  Their names and professions are as follows:

Federigo-calzolaio-shoemaker, vendittore di vino, industriante-trader m. Maria Felicia Ambruscino

Allesandro-sartore m. Domenica Vardolo

Giuseppe-sartore m. Marta D’Avella

Lorenzo-sartore, industriante, possidente, Il Sindaco m. Maria Giuseppa Tuzzolli

Giaocchino Sabatino died in 1847 in Ospedale degli Incurabili in Naples.  This is the Wikipedia link to this historical hospital with photos.  I found a reference to his death in that hospital on his son’s wedding record which I then located on Antenati.  Follow this link to his death record from the San Lorenzo quartiere of Napoli on Antenati.

As for Cecilia di Falco, she was born around 1763 in Sirico and I found many records about her and the babies she delivered.  She is the first midwife on my mother’s side.  Therefore, there will be more on the Midwife of Sirico as a later date…

Sources:

Ellis Island

Nola:  These microfilms

Sirico: All of these films

Antenati

I used this Roots Web link to help with older Italian occupations I found on microfilm.

*Some of the occupations found on the microfilms in Sirico were in the Neapolitan dialect. 

cinziarosagenealogy@comcast.net