Biblia

Campanile (2)

Campanile (2)

campanile

(L.L.: campana, bell )

The form of bell tower which was developed by Lombard architects and has prevailed in Italy ; usually a tall slender tower, more or less detached from the church, without buttresses and crowned with a turret containing the belfry chamber. The town hall of Siena is an example of civic building with campanile. The same general proportions were preserved at the Renaissance. Celebrated campaniles are found in Cremona, Florence, Pisa, and Venice.

Fuente: New Catholic Dictionary

Campanile

a name adopted from the Itlalian for a bell-tower. SEE CAMPANARIUM.

Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature

Campanile (2)

an Italian missionary, was born at San Antonio, near Naples, in 1762. He early became a member of the Dominican order, was consecrated priest, and, being charged with the duties of teaching, he acquitted himself to the satisfaction of his superiors. He joined the College of the Propagandists at Rome, and, on account of his knowledge of the Arabic language, was sent, in 1802, into the East as prefect of the missions of Mesopotaniia and Kurdistan. Returning to Naples after thirteen years of successful labor, Campanile became preacher, and soon after assistant professor of Arabic, at the University of Naples, where he died, March 2,1835. He wrote a History of Kurdistan. See Hoefer, Nouv. Biog. Generale, s.v.

Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature