CAV. VINCENZO GIURA
Via Roma 328, Napoli

Cav. Vincenzo Giura - Napoli - 1909
Vincenzo Giura ( Roccanova , December 14, 1847 - Naples , February 9, 1926 ) was an Italian goldsmith , jeweler and politician .
Born to Raffaele and Angiola Continanza; he moved with his parents to Naples in his adolescence, devoting himself to goldsmithing, a long tradition of his family. He opened a small artisan workshop, quickly establishing himself in the city, despite the strong competition from both domestic and foreign products. In 1883 , the Casanova Institute of Arts and Crafts offered him the opportunity to set up a goldsmith's workshop within its walls, on condition that he taught the trade to the students of the school.
Subsequently, Giura opened a store in via Roma , an important street in the center of Naples, which became a coveted place for high society, including members of the royal family such as Umberto I and his wife Margherita , Vittorio Emanuele III and his wife Elena and the Dukes of Aosta . In 1889 , Umberto I granted him the Patent of the Royal House . Jura also participated in various international exhibitions such as in Turin ( 1884 ), Antwerp ( 1885 ), Naples ( 1890), Palermo ( 1892 ), receiving important awards.
Having reached the top of the luxury trade, Giura had the opportunity to enter the Chamber of Commerce of Naples, assuming the position of councilor which he held for about 20 years. He was also nominated by Enrico Arlotta as president of the Traders and Industrialists Association , founded by Arlotta in 1883 and which Jura directed for 15 years. From 1904 to 1907 he was elected councilor in the municipality of Naples and in 1911 he was one of the proponents of the first congress of the knights of work, held in Turin, in the same year in which the celebrations for the fiftieth anniversary of the unification of Italy took place.
Source:
https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vincenzo_Giura
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