Late Gothic architecture in the stately palaces of Sardinia between the fifteenth and early seventeenth century The essay analyzes the architectural characteristics of the stately palaces of Sardinia between the fifteenth and seventeenth century, in order to demonstrate the integration into the cultural landscape of the Late Mediterranean Gothic. The affinities with the civil buildings of the Iberian Levant are so deeply rooted in the region that they persist until the first decades of the seventeenth century. This confirm the link between local élites and the stately tradition of the Crown of Aragon, then of the Kingdom (and Empire) of Spain, in a common perspective to the other ter- ritories of southern Italy, both peninsular and island. The archival sources, of which precise details are conveyed, show the application of these consolidated models in the building of mansions inside the city walls or interesting residences immersed in the suburb
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