Notes On Contributors xxix
Aragon and in 2007 she became a member of the Board of the Graduate School
faculty in historical, political, geographical and geo-political studies. Her major
fields of interest are the Italo-Iberian history of the late Middle Ages between
the thirteenth and sixteenth century, political documents (Chancellery), eco-
nomic (Royal Patrimony) and procedural (Royal Audience) which are pre-
served in the Archives of the Crown of Aragon in Barcelona. She did research
on the institutions and norms regulations of the Realms of the Crown of
Aragon, as editor for the Series Acta Curiarum Kingdoms Sardiniae (the Acts of
the Parliaments of the Kingdom of Sardinia during the fifteenth century). She
is currently editing for the Italian Historical Institute of the Middle Ages, the
edition of the “Royal letters” of the Crown of Aragon to the city of Cagliari and
finally the census of the Christian sanctuaries of Sardinia between the sixth
and the sixteenth century.
Cecilia Tasca
has a number of key positions within the University of Cagliari. These
include: Professor in Archival Studies, director of the Archivio Storico, and
Deputy Director of the Department of History, Cultural Heritage, Science and
Territory, member of the scientific board for the doctoral programs in Written
Sources of the Mediterranean and Cultural Heritage and International Studies,
referee and expert for the “University Quality Projects.” Her major publications
focus on Judaica studies in Sardinia for the medieval and modern periods,
and include Ebrei e società in Sardegna nel XV secolo. Fonti archivistiche e nuovi
spunti di ricerca (Firenze: Giuntina, 2008); Bosa Città regia. Capitoli di Corte,
Leggi e regolamenti (1412–1826) (Roma: Carocci, 2012); Bosa nel Tardomedioevo.
Fonti per lo studio di una città mediterranea (Cagliari: AM&D, 2013); Gli ebrei
nella Sardegna catalana. Arxiu de textos catalans antic (Barcelona : Institut
d’Estudis Catalans i Facultat de Teologia de Catalunya, 2014), pp. 173–207;
with Mariangela Rapetti, “Les medecins Juifs dans la Sardaigne Médiévale,”
SeferYuhasin. Review for the History of the Jews in Southern Italy / Rivista per la
storia degli ebrei nell’ Italia meridionale n.s., n. 3 (2015), pp. 31–54.
Raimondo Turtas
is Professor of Ecclesiastical History and has taught for more than 30 years at
the University of Sassari. He completed his doctorate in Rome at the Pontifical
Gregorian University in 1969, and has produced more than a hundred publi-
cations mostly focused on Sardinia. Turtas has dedicated his life to studying
archives and often unedited primary sources about the History of the Church
in Sardinia (briefly summarized here for this volume) from its origins to the
second millennium. Particular attention has been given to two popes, Gregory