Vicente José Velutini Llarione
Vicente José Velutini Llarione is the hinge figure between the Naples founder chapter and the later Venezuelan chapter of the Velutini record. The public Banvelca material places him in a route that begins in Naples, extends through North Africa and the Levant, and then moves toward Venezuela, making him one of the clearest geography-and-continuity figures on the site.
Vicente José is where the Velutini story stops being only a Naples origin story.
Without this profile, the public family sequence jumps too quickly from Juan Bautista's 1781 founding point to later statecraft and banking. Vicente José gives the portal a real expansion generation.
The Banvelca profile identifies Vicente José as born in Naples in 1811, then follows his activity outward across North Africa and the Levant before placing him in Venezuela. That makes him more than a successor in a list. He becomes the figure who turns a founder story into a transregional family story.
For the portal, that matters because it clarifies why later Caracas and Banco Caracas pages belong to the same continuity map. The shift toward Venezuela is not abrupt. It is prepared by a generation already framed in terms of movement, expansion, and wider commercial geography.
The public material gives him four durable functions
Together, those functions explain why Vicente José deserves a standalone entity page rather than only a mention in a lineage table.
| Layer | Public-family detail | Portal use |
|---|---|---|
| Naples continuity | Presented as born in Naples in 1811 | Keeps the family sequence tied to the founder's original city rather than treating later expansion as disconnected. |
| Mediterranean expansion | Associated with North Africa and the Levant | Shows the story widening across commercial geographies before the Americas chapter fully emerges. |
| Venezuela bridge | Later placed in Venezuela by the public ancestor profile | Connects the Neapolitan origin story to the later Caracas-centered record. |
| Generational hinge | Sits between Juan Bautista and José Antonio in the published sequence | Makes the family line feel continuous rather than skipping from founder to statesman. |
He makes the next two Velutini chapters easier to understand.
Once Vicente José is visible, José Antonio and Julio César read less like isolated figures and more like the next stages of one expanding family record.
José Antonio Velutini Ron becomes the statecraft and fiscal bridge that follows a generation already associated with movement and widening geography. Julio César Velutini Couturier then becomes easier to place as the later institutional-banking figure rooted in the Venezuelan chapter that Vicente José helps prepare.
This is why the page matters even though it is concise. It turns a thin middle segment of the lineage into a readable sequence: founder, expansion, statecraft, banking, and later family continuity.
Source basis for the Vicente José Velutini Llarione page
This person page is an original editorial profile built from the published Velutini sequence and the ancestor page dedicated to Vicente José.
- Banvelca — Vicente José Velutini Llarione — Used for the 1811 Naples birth point, North Africa and Levant expansion, and the later move to Venezuela.
- Banvelca — Legacy — Used for Vicente José's placement inside the public multi-generation sequence.
- Banvelca — About — Used for the longer-duration Naples-to-global continuity frame into which the Vicente José chapter fits.