Dialta Alliata di Montereale

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Villa La Pietra, Florence

Princess Dialta Alliata di Montereale is an Italian aristocrat who is involved in a 25-year court battle to claim a half-share of Arthur Acton's $1 billion art collection, and DNA testing has confirmed that she is his granddaughter.[1]

When Acton's son Sir Harold Acton died in 1994, his father's vast art collection housed in the Villa La Pietra in Florence, Italy, was left to New York University (NYU), and now forms their overseas campus NYU Florence.[2] Acton's alma mater, the University of Oxford, turned down the opportunity to take on Villa La Pietra, and NYU won the right to do so, and in 1996 were converting it into a conference and study centre based around the Actons' art collection.[2]

The legal battle was started by Alliata's mother (1917–2000), then aged 78, who claimed that Arthur Acton was her biological father, the result of an "illicit liaison" between Arthur Acton and his secretary, Ersilia Beacci, Liana Beacci's mother, who died in 1953.[2][3] DNA testing proved that Liana Beacci was Acton's daughter; although Beacci and Acton never married, under Italian law children born out of wedlock have inheritance rights.[4]

A spokesman for NYU has stated that the court ruling "does not in any way, shape, or form settle the issue of inheritance, on which there has been no ruling."[4] Alliata has said, "I have five beautiful children, I have a fabulous husband. I'm happy. The fact is that it's a question of honour and principle."[4]

Personal life[]

She is married to Prince Vittorio di Montereale, they have five children, and live in Honolulu, Hawaii.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ Hornall, Thomas; Allen, Nick (27 July 2019). "Italian princesses's claim for share of British art collector's £800m fortune backed by DNA". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Gumbel, Andrew (13 April 1996). "Shadow of the Last Aesthete". The Independent. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  3. ^ Bohlen, Celestine (9 June 1996). "A Tale of Love, Art and Money;A Collector, His Secretary, Their Children, and More". New York Times. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d Mendoza, Jim. "Italian princess who lives in Hawaii wins partial victory in court fight over priceless art". HawaiiNewsNow. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
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