in Rome (1583), established for the training of the Arbëreshë Byzantine-Catholic clergy, where Matranga was educated.|239x239px in
Piana degli Albanesi,
Sicily Matranga was born in
Piana degli Albanesi, the largest and most populous Arbëreshë colony in Sicily. He attended the
College of St. Athanasius in Rome. There, he was ordained as a priest in 1591 at the
Sant'Atanasio church. After his studies in Rome and his ordination as a priest, he returned to his hometown of Piana degli Albanesi in 1601 to become a priest at
Cathedral of St. Demetrius the Great Martyr, also known as the Piana degli Albanesi Cathedral. He founded the first school in his hometown to preserve the ethnic and linguistic characteristics of the community. A writer of noble personality and a priest of the Byzantine rite, he is best known for the first ever creation in the Albanian language, in the Tosk dialect common in southern Albania and among Arbëreshë communities in Italy, of the Christian Doctrine (E Mbësuame e Krështerë) by Spanish Jesuit P. Ledesma. Dedicated to the Archbishop of Monreale, Mons. Ludovico de Torres II, it was published in 1592 with necessary adaptations for the local rite. Matranga used the Albanian speech of Piana degli Albanesi, modifying some phonetic peculiarities to be understood by other Albanian colonies. The probable autograph, where Matranga's version is interspersed with the Italian text of Ledesma's work, is contained in Barb. lat. 3454. == Main works ==