According to Eugenio Gamurrini, the Neapolitan branch of the Sacchetti family originated in the 12th century from Florentine members of the family who entered royal service in the Kingdom of Naples. The earliest recorded figures are Avellino Sacchetti and Lancillotto Sacchetti, sons of Sacchetto. Avellino received royal privileges from Roger II of Sicily in 1146, while Lancillotto was the father of Cesare Sacchetti, who became Bishop of Melfi. Avellino’s son Simone Sacchetti is documented in a notarial procuration dated 1161. Simone’s son Gezzolino Sacchetti was created Baron of Alessano by William II of Sicily in 1173 and is recorded as holding additional baronial lordships in Apulia, including Ceglie, Ginosa, Castrignano, Leverano, Oria, and Squinzano. Royal privileges confirmed his feudal possessions and the aggregation of the Sacchetti family into the Neapolitan nobility, with hereditary succession of titles and rights. In the early 13th century, Alberico Sacchetti received an imperial diploma from Emperor Frederick II in 1224 confirming his lands, jurisdictions, and feudal rights, and associating him with imperial administration connected to Tusculum. Under the Angevin kings of Naples, members of the family held royal offices. Angelo Sacchetti and Giovanni Pietro Sacchetti were appointed castellans and governors of Gaeta by royal provision. Pietro Antonio Sacchetti later served as Governor of L’Aquila under Charles II of Anjou. The Neapolitan branch also produced several high-ranking ecclesiastics, including Cesare Sacchetti, Bishop of Melfi; Ottone Sacchetti, Latin Patriarch of Antioch (1238) during the period when the Latin Patriarchate functioned largely in exile following the loss of Antioch to Muslim forces.; Ludovico Sacchetti, Archbishop of Melfi; and Alessandro Sacchetti, Abbot of San Benedetto of Manfredonia. Francesco Antonio Sacchetti (1595-1662) Bishop of San Severo and Troia in the Ecclesiastical province of Foggia-Bovino in Puglia. His Principal Consecrator was Cardinal Giulio Cesare Sacchetti. Gamurrini notes that by the late 15th century certain lines of the Neapolitan Sacchetti had become extinct, with their genealogy reconstructed from surviving royal, imperial, and ecclesiastical records.
Roman branch (1586–1663). His election as Pope to succeed
Urban VIII, was vetoed by Philip IV, King of Spain.The Roman branch is descended from Giovanni Battista Sacchetti, the son of Matteo Sacchetti and Nanna Carducci. He was a trading partner of the Barberini family of Pope Urban VIII and married Francesca Altoviti, the daughter of Alessandro Altoviti. The marriage had the effect of transferring to the Sacchetti financial resources, property, profitable links with the curia and client relations already established by the
Altoviti. They move to Rome from Florence and together they had nine children Matteo (died young), Bindo, Vincenzo, Clarice, Sandrina, Marcello, Alessandro, Ottavia, Matteo, Gianfrancesco and Giulio Cesare.
Giulio Cesare became an influential cardinal, and in 1644 and 1655 included in the French Court's list of acceptable candidates for the Papacy. had been named by Pope Urban VIII as the Depositary General and Secret Treasurer of the Apostolic Chamber, as well as assigning him the lucrative lease of the alum mines of Tolfa. Collection Galleria Borghese. Gianfrancesco was the Commissary General of the Papal troops in Valtellina in 1623 and 1626; and was created Marquis of Rigattini in 1632 and a Marquis of the Baldachin in 1633 giving him the rank of Prince at the papal court. The current Roman branch is descendant from Matteo and his wife Cassandra Ricasoli-Rucellai. Their son Don Giovanni Battista and Caterina Acciaioli inherited his uncle's title and their son Matteo who married Chiara Orsini exchanged the Marquisate of Castel Rigattini for the Marquisate of Castel Romano. Their son Giulio married Maddalena Azzan. Their son Scipione became the Chief Quartermaster of the Apostolic Palaces in 1794, a title held by the family until the dissolution of the papal court in the 1968. Scipione married Eleonora Cenci Bolognetti daughter of Girolamo Prince of Vicovaro. Their son Urbano married Beatrice Orsini, daughter of Domenico Duke of Gravina and Principe of Solofra and Maria Luisa Torlonia of the Dukes of Poli and Guadagnolo. Their younger son Luigi married Maria Colonna-Barberini, Princess and heiress of Palestrina and with a decree from the Italian state Luigi assumed his wife's titles and assumed the surname Barberini. The eldest son of Urbano and Beatrice Orsini, Giulio married Teresa, the daughter of the Marquis Antonio Gerini and his wife Anna Maria Borghese. Their son Giovanni Battista was a Councilor to the State of the Vatican and married Matilda Lante Montefeltro della Rovere. Their son Giulio, the last Chief Quartermaster of the Vatican, married Giovannella Emo Capodilista, the daughter of the Count Alvise and Maria Henriqueta Alvares Pereira de Mello of the Dukes of Cadaval. Giulio and Giovannella had five children. The current head of the family is their son Urbano. File:Palazzo sacchetti.jpg|thumb|Palazzo Sacchetti, via Giulia, Rome begun by Antonio da Sangallo, the younger for himself. The palace houses some of the most significant cycles of Mannerism, with works by Francesco Salviati, to which the splendid frescoes of the Audience Hall (1553–1555), Pietro da Cortona and Jacopino del Conte. Palazzo Sacchetti was used for the 2013 film, La Grande Bellezza (The Great Beauty): "Viola, a rich and depressed friend, lives alone with her psychopathic son at Palazzo Sacchetti, in Via Giulia, where she organises a lunch where no one will be present [1]. == Sacchetti-Barberini-Colonna, Princes of Palestrina ==