FamilySearch Family Tree profile GXX2-BQ4 reports Nicola Iacofano, male, born about 1673. The only visible attached source in the user-supplied excerpt is a San Emidio parish stato d'anime source for Agnone Casa 32, taken across 1745-1750, where Giacomo Iacofano is reportedly recorded as a married household head with spouse Isabella Frezza and parents Nicola Iacofano and Vittoria Ferrone. A public Agnone GEDCOM extract independently shows Nicola Iacofano `GXX2-BQ4` and Vittoria Ferrone `GXXL-CJV` as parents of Giacomo Iaciofano `GH6G-GYQ` in family `F8930`, but this is still compiled evidence. If the original San Emidio parish census image verifies the entry, Nicola and Vittoria may be parents of Giacomo in an Agnone Iacofano branch, but no bridge currently connects this branch to Tony Iacofano's Cleveland line or to the Busso comparison leads.
Still checking
Why this is not settled yet
1673 –
Can the original San Emidio parish stato d'anime image for Vol. 1726-1762, Anni 1745-1750, Casa 32 / RAA 224 be viewed and transcribed directly?
Does the original image actually name Giacomo Iacofano's parents as Nicola Iacofano and Vittoria Ferrone, and does it state or imply Nicola's age or death status?
Are there earlier or later San Emidio parish census, baptism, marriage, or death entries that establish Nicola, Vittoria Ferrone, Giacomo, and Isabella Frezza as one family?
Is this Agnone branch related to any documented Busso, Toro, or Cleveland Iacofano/Iaciofano line, or is it a separate same-surname branch?
Notes
Notes
Lead created 24 April 2026 from a user-supplied FamilySearch Family Tree source-detail excerpt.
Public Agnone GEDCOM extract added 24 April 2026 as a second compiled-source clue for the same family group.
Treat this as clue-only until the San Emidio parish image or a reliable transcription is reviewed directly.
The source detail is principally about Giacomo Iacofano; Nicola appears as Giacomo's reported father.
Do not update canonical person records or merge this Agnone branch into Tony Iacofano's line without original-record evidence and a generation-by-generation bridge.