
On your right, look for the long pale-stone monastery wing with its tall rectangular doorway, rows of high windows, and the solemn, oversized scale of the old Benedictine complex.
This final stop feels less like a building and more like a promise Catania kept with its own memory. The Biblioteche Riunite, the combined Civic Library and the A. Ursino Recupero Library, took shape in nineteen thirty-one, when the city joined two great collections under one roof. But their roots reach much deeper... into the life of the Benedictine monastery around you.
The oldest heart of this place began in fifteen seventy-eight, when the monks moved down from Nicolosi on Mount Etna and carried their books with them, along with a relic called the Holy Nail, in a solemn procession into the city. For Benedictines, collecting books was not a hobby. It was part of their calling: to preserve learning, to copy texts by hand, to keep memory alive when memory could so easily vanish.
And vanish it nearly did. In the earthquake of sixteen ninety-three, part of the collection was lost. Yet only fifteen days later, the monks built a wooden shelter for the rescued books and opened a place for surviving scholars to read. I love that image... a wounded city, and in the middle of it, people making room for books.
In the eighteenth century, the library grew grand again. The image shows the Sala Vaccarini, the great historic library hall designed by Giovan Battista Vaccarini, with painted ceilings, warm wood shelving, and those graceful curved corners that guide your eye from wall to wall. It is one of the few rooms in the monastery that still keeps its original character almost intact.

This library also carries the lives of fiercely human people. Federico De Roberto, the novelist who wrote I Viceré, worked here from a small writing desk that still survives in the Sala Guttadauro. He did not treat the job as an honorific title. He wrote letters, pushed the city, demanded funds, and fought to reopen the library after it had remained inaccessible for more than twenty years. If you want a face to go with that stubborn devotion, the app shows his desk.

Then there is the poet Mario Rapisardi. After his death, the city preserved not just his books, but his chair, his desk, his letters, even the private atmosphere of his study. There is a quiet irony here: Rapisardi argued bitterly against the Church, yet his personal library found its permanent home inside a former Benedictine monastery.
The Ursino Recupero collection added another voice, with Sicilian books, local newspapers, manuscripts, opera librettos, and hundreds of rare sixteenth-century editions. Together, these libraries now hold more than two hundred seventy thousand volumes, including illuminated manuscripts, early printed books from the first age of printing, and even herbals, books of dried or painted plants. Their most precious treasure may be a Latin Bible from the thirteenth or fourteenth century, attributed to Pietro Cavallini, often counted among the most beautiful illuminated Bibles in the world.
And this story did not end in the past. After two thousand nine, when funding nearly collapsed, director Rita Angela Carbonaro kept the library alive almost alone, for years, sometimes without pay, rather than let this inheritance die.
If you want to return inside, the library generally opens Monday through Friday from nine in the morning to noon, and it closes on weekends.














