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AR6170382 
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Graffiti drawn on a cell wall by a prisoner of the Inquisition, in the Sala delle Udienze in the Palazzo Chiaramonte-Steri, a 14th century palace built for Manfredi III Chiaramont, which became a jail during the Spanish Inquisition, in Palermo, Sicily, Italy. The palace is now a museum and during restoration led by Antonino Catalano at Palermo University, plaster was removed to reveal the poems, words and drawings of inmates incarcerated during the building during its time as a tribunal and prison from 1600 to 1782. Palermo's Arab and Norman centre is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen 
Unique Identifier AR6170383 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 7087px × 4518px 
Photo Credit Manuel Cohen / Art Resource, NY 
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Tags
14TH CENTURY
17th century
18th century
COLOR IMAGE
colour image
CULTURE
detail
Drawing
EUROPE
EUROPEAN
Graffiti
HERITAGE
History
HORIZONTAL
INDOORS
Inquisition
INSIDE
interior
Island
Italian
Mediterranean
Mediterranean Sea
MUSEUM
PALERMO
Prison
Prisoner
RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION
Sicilian
SICILY
Sketch
Southern Europe
Southern European
SPANISH INQUISITION
UNESCO
UNESCO WORLD HERITAGE SITE
Wall