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An Armchair Traveller's History of Apulia

Page 29

by Seward, Desmond


  William of Malmesbury: Gesta Regum Anglorum

  Other works

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  De Cesare, R.: La Fine di un Regno, Citta di Castello 1909

  Dell’Aquila, Franco & Massina, Aldo: Le Chiese Rupestri di Puglia e Basilicata, Bari 1998

  De Sivo, G.: Storia delle Due Sicilie del 1847 al 1861, Trieste 1868

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  —— Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Rome 1960

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  Dunrobin, J.: The Western Greeks, Oxford 1948

  Fagiolo, M. and Cazzolo, V.: Lecce, Bari 1984

  Farase-Sperken, C.: La pittura dell’ Ottocento in Puglia: i protagonisti, le spere, i luoghi, Bari 1996

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  Frazer, J.G.: The Golden Bough, London 1907–13

  Fronda Michael P.: Between Rome and Carthage; Southern Italy during the Second Punic War, C.U.P 2010

  Galanti, G.M.: Relazione sull’Italia Meridionale, Milan 1791

  Galiano,A.: Il Guercio delle Puglia, Mian 1967

  Gattini, M.: I priorati, i baliagi e le commende del Sovrano Militare Ordine di San Giovanni nelle provincie meridionali d’Italia, Rome 1928

  Gay, J.: L’Italie méridionale et l’Empire byzantin, Paris 1904

  Gelao, Clara & Tragni, Bianca: Il Presepe Pugliese, Bari 2000

  Gianfreda, G.: Basilica Cattedrale di Otranto, Galatina 1987

  —— Il Monachesimo Italo-Greco in Otranto, Galatina 1977

  Ginsborg, P.: A History of Contemporary Italy, London 1990

  Gorze, H.: Castel del Monte, geometric manual of the Middle Ages, Munich 1998

  Guillou, A: Studies in Byzantine Italy, London 1970

  Kantorowicz, E.: Frederick II 1194–1250, New York 1957

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  —— Il Brigantaggio politico delle Puglie doppo 1860: Il Sergente Romano, Bari 1946

  Lucarelli, A.: La Puglia nella rivoluzione napolitana del 1799, Manduria 1998

  —— La Puglia nel Risorgimento, Bari 1931–53

  Lumley, R. and Morris, J.: The New History of the Italian South, Exeter 1997

  Maffei, A.: Brigand Life in Italy: a history of Bourbonist reaction, London 1865

  Merlino, F.S.: L’Italie telle qu’elle est, Paris 1890

  Mola, M. de, and Palasciano, G.: Le chiese rurali del territorio di Fasano, Fasano 1987

  Mommsen, T., The History of Rome, London 1894

  Mongiello, L.: Le masserie di Puglia: organismi, architettonici ed ambiente territoriale, Bari 1996

  Monnier, M.: Histoire du Brigandage dans l’Italie méridionale, Paris 1862

  Norwich, J.J.: The Normans in the South, London 1967

  —— The Kingdom in the Sun, London 1970

  Palasciano, I.: Alberobello nel sette e ottocento, Fasano 1987

  Paone, N.: La Transumanza, Isernia 1987

  Pasculli Ferrara, M.: Arte napoletana in Puglia del XVI al XVIII secolo, Fasano 1983

  Patrunio, L.: Puglia e Basilicata: mura, castelli e dimorre, Milan 1995

  Patrunio, L.: Puglia e Basilicata: l’uomo e le sue tradizioni, Milan 1997

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  —— Uomini e vicende di Martina, Fasano 1986

  Potter, T.W.: Roman Italy, London 1987

  Prandi, A.: In terra di Tàranto, Milan 1970

  Reumont, A von.: Die Carafa von Maddaloni, Berlin 1851

  Ripabottoni, A.: Padre Pio of Pietrelcina, San Giovanni Rotondo 1987

  Ruotolo, G.: La Quarta mafia: storie di mafia in Puglia, Naples 1994

  Ruppi, C.F.: Alla scoperta di un angolo di Puglia, Conversano 1971

  Simone, L. De: Lecce e I suoi monumenti, Lecce 1964

  Smith, Sir W.: A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography, London 1904

  —— A Smaller Classical Dictionary, London 1910

  Snowdon, F.M.: Violence and Great Estates in Southern Italy: Apulia 1900–1922, C.U.P. 1986

  Tancredi, G.: Il Gargano nel Risorgimento, Foggia 1948

  Touring Club Italiano: Puglia, Milan 1978

  Villari, R.: Il Sud nella storia d’Italia, Bari 1966

  —— La rivolta antispagnola a Napoli, Rome 1967

  Wuillermier, P.: Tarente des origine a la conquete romaine, Paris 1939

  Short Chronology

  708 BC Spartans arrive at Tàranto

  c.400 BC Archytas governor of Tàranto

  281 BC Pyrrhus’s first victory

  272 BC Tàranto falls to Romans

  244 BC Brìndisi becomes Roman colony

  216 BC Victory of Hannibal at Cannae

  65 BC Birth of Horace at Venosa

  49 BC Seige of Brìndisi by Julius Caesar

  552 AD Goths defeated by Byzantium near Tàranto

  c.590 Lombards from Benevento occupy Daunia

  847–71 Saracen Emirate of Bari

  975 Bari becomes seat of Catapan

  1016 Norman pilgrims meet Melo at Monte Sant’Angelo

  1056 Pope Nicholas 11 recognises Robert Guiscard Duke of Apulia, Calabria and Sicily

  1071 Bari, Byzantine capital, falls to Normans

  1087 Bones of St Nicholas brought from Myra to Bari

  1130 Roger II founds Kingdom of Sicily

  1194 E
mperor Henry VI of Hohenstaufen makes himself king of Sicily

  1199 Frederick II of Hohenstaufen becomes king of Sicily

  1231 Constitutions of Melfi

  1250 Death of Frederick II

  1266 Defeat and death of Manfred at Benevento

  1343–82 Reign of Giovanna I – almost every city on the coast becomes a feudal fief

  1480 Capture of Òtranto by Turks

  1503 French defeated by Spaniards at Cerignola Disfida di Barletta

  1528 Apulia invaded by French army under Lautrec

  1656 Plague

  1714 Austrian rule over Apulia recognised at Peace of Rastadt

  1734 Austrians defeated by Spaniards under Charles of Bourbon at Bitonto

  1799 Foundation of Parthenopean (Neapolitan) Republic and campaign of Sanfedisti

  1801 French garrisons admitted to Apulian ports

  1806–15 French occupation

  1815 Restoration of Borboni

  1860 Garibaldi overthrows Borbone regime, Unification of Italy

  1861–5 Brigands’ War

  1865 Tavoliere opened up to cultivation; new era of latifondismo

  1906 Work begins on construction of Apulian Aqueduct

  1920 Workers rising in Bari

  1939 Completion of Aqueduct

  1940–5 Second World War

  1943 In September King Victor Emanuel III establishes seat of government at Brìndisi

  Rulers of Apulia from Norman Times

  The Hautevilles

  1042–46 William, Count of Apulia

  1046–51 Drogo, Count of Apulia

  1051–57 Humphrey, Count of Apulia

  1057–85 Robert Guiscard, Count and Duke of Apulia

  1085–1111 Roger Borsa, Duke of Apulia

  1111–27 William, Duke of Apulia

  1127–30 Roger, the Great Count of Sicily

  1130–54 Roger II, King of Sicily

  1154–66 William I – ‘The Bad’ – King of Sicily

  1166–89 William II – ‘The Good’ – King of Sicily

  1189–94 Tancred, King of Sicily

  1194 William III

  Tancred had been illegitimate and the Emperor Henry VI claimed the throne as husband of the rightful heir Constance, daughter of Roger II, deposing and murdering Tancred’s son, the infant William III.

  The Hohenstaufen

  1042–46 William, Count of Apulia

  1194–97 Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor

  1197–1250 Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor

  1250–54 Conrad IV, Holy Roman Emperor

  1254–66 Manfred, King of Sicily

  The Pope offered the Kingdom of Sicily to Charles of Anjou (bro-ther of Louis IX of France) who defeated and killed Manfred, taking his throne. In 1282 the Sicilians rose against him in the Sicilian Vespers, choosing as their king Pedro III of Aragon who had married Manfred’s daughter. There were two kingdoms of Sicily – that on the mainland (including Apulia) ruled from Naples and that on the island ruled from Palermo.

  The Angevin Kings

  1266–85 Charles I – ‘Charles of Anjou’

  1285–1309 Charles II – ‘The Lame’

  1309–43 Robert – ‘The Wise’

  1343–81 Giovanna

  11381–66 Charles III – of Durazzo

  1386–1414 Ladislao

  1414–35 Giovanna II

  1435–42 Réné of Anjou

  In 1442 Alfonso King of Aragon and Sicily conquered Naples from Réné of Anjou (father-in-law of Henry VI of England) and styled himself ‘King of the Two Sicilies’. He left Naples to his bastard son Ferrante, his descendants ruling it until the Spanish conquest in the sixteenth century.

  The Aragonese Kings

  1442–58 Alfonso I – ‘The Magnaminous’

  1458–94 Ferdinand I – ‘Ferrante’

  1494–95 Alfonso II

  1495–96 Ferdinand II – ‘Ferrantino’

  1496–1501 Federigo

  In 1501 Federigo was deposed by his cousin King Ferdinand of Spain and for over 200 years the kingdom was governed by Spanish viceroys. In 1713 it passed to the Emperor Charles VI, being governed by Austrian viceroys. In 1738 Charles of Bourbon (technically Charles VII but generally called Charles III) drove out the Austrians, re-established the Two Sicilies as an independent monarchy and founded the ‘Borbone’ dynasty. On becoming King of Spain he abdicated in favour of his third son, Ferdinand IV, who in 1816 become known as Ferdinand I to mark the administrative reunion of the Two Sicilies.

  The Borbone Kings

  1734–59 Charles III

  1759–99 Ferdinand IV

  1799 The Parthenopean Republic

  1799–1806 Ferdinand IV

  1806–8 Joseph Napoleon (Bonaparte)

  1808–15 Joachim Napoleon (Murat)

  1815–25 Ferdinand IV and I (from 1816)

  1825–30 Francis I

  1830–59 Ferdinand II – ‘Bomba’

  1859–60 Francis II – ‘Franceschiello’

  Since 1860 the kingdom of the Two Sicilies has been part of united Italy (although the Holy See recognised its exiled kings until 1902).

  Historical Gazetteer

  Alberobello

  One of the most visited towns in Apulia, it is unique in that the old centre is comprised entirely of trulli. The trullo church of Sant’Antonio was built in the twentieth century.

  Altamura

  In 1999 over 3000 footprints of five types of dinosaur were discovered in the area, the largest collection in Europe. The area was widely inhabited since Neolithic times but the discovery in 1993 of Altamura Man, the only complete fossilised skeleton from the Middle Lower Paleolithic era (200,000 BC), suggests its occupation by man started much earlier. (There is a conducted tour to this and the Pulo di Altamura – an impressive karst sink-hole north of the city). The city was one of the most important Peucetian settlements from at least the fifth century BC, surrounded by 6 metre high walls which ran for 4 kms. With the advent of the Via Traiana and the decline of the Via Appia it lost its importance. Destroyed by the Saracens who came from Metaponto up the Bradano valley it remained uninhabited until 1230 when Frederick II founded the modern town on the site of the old acropolis. The previous inhabitants had fled to the gravine – as they were to do again – and there are several rupestrian churches with traces of frescoes. The cathedral, one of the four palatine basilicas of Puglia, was founded by Frederick II in 1232 but considerably altered after the earthquake of 1316; the late fourteenth century portal with its bas relief of the Annunciation is particularly fine, as is the rose window from the thirteeth century.

  Andria

  Frederick II’s most loved city although now, with a population of 100,000, one of the largest in Apulia is still an attractive town and a good base from which to explore the cathedral cities of Trani, Barletta, Giovinazzo and Bisceglie. It is also the nearest town to the unmissable Castel del Monte.

  The first inhabitants of the area lived in the grottoes but in the Iron Age they built round houses very similar to the trulli, many of which have been discovered between Andria and Castel del Monte Apulo from 1000 BC. it became a Peucetian settlement from the seventh century and then the Greek Netium. The inhabitants of Cannae fled here after the battle and destruction of their village in 216 BC. Under the Romans the town became a station on the Via Traiana. In 44 AD, on their way to Rome, St Peter and St Andrew evangelised the city which became a See in about 492. Basilian monks, fleeing from the iconoclast Byzantine emperors, settled in the surrounding grottoes and created their churches – Santa Croce still has frescoes. From 1064, under the Normans, the town was walled and fortified. The Emperor Frederick II regarded it as one of his most loyal cities and two of his wives had mausolea, destroyed by Charles of Anjou, in the cathedral crypt, the former seventh century Church of San Pietro. The cathedral also contains relics of San Riccardo and a thorn from Christ’s crown of thorns. Under the Angevines it became a duchy and was given in fee to Charles II’s daughter Beatrice on
her marriage to Bertrando Del Balzo. Given to Gonsalvo de Cordoba in 1507 by the Spanish King Ferdinand the Catholic, in 1552 it was sold by his nephew to the Carafa family to whom it belonged until 1806. Fabrizio Carafa built the basilica of Santa Maria dei Miracoli just outside the city. Andria was the birthplace of the famous eighteenth century castrato Farinelli, but he does not seem to have performed publicly in his native city after he was castrated on the suggestion of his brother and sent to Naples to study singing.

  Bari

  Bari is now a thriving town and a very interesting place to visit for a couple of days. In the new town the Petruzzelli Theatre has been restored and is staging world class operas and nearby Via Sparano and the streets off it are full of internationally renowned shops. But the real reason to go to the city is to visit Old Bari, a tangle of very narrow streets opening out into squares containing the wonderful Romanesque Cathedral of San Sabino, the Basilica di San Nicola and the castle built by Fredrick II.

  Barletta

  Inhabited from at least the fourth century BC it was the port for Canosa in Roman times. The Lombard invasion in the sixth century AD caused the inhabitants of Canosa to seek refuge in Barletta, as did the Norman Robert Guiscard’s sack of Cannae. The Normans built the church of San Sepolcro in front of which stands the statue of Eraclio/Are. The church has been heavily restored after falling out of use in the nineteenth century. Following the Muslim conquest of the Holy Land, the Archbishop of Nazareth took refuge in Barletta and the diocesan offices moved permanently there in 1327. Under the Anjou dynasty the city enjoyed its most prosperous period; the Romanesque cathedral was extended to the east in Gothic style by Pierre d’Angicourt, who also built the cathedral at Lucera and restored the castle at Canosa. But in 1456 an earthquake caused extensive damage. The Aragonese rebuilt the Norman castle to withstand Turkish bombardment but it was badly damaged by the Austrians in the First World War; it has been re-stored and is one of the most impressive in Puglia. From the baroque period very few palazzi of note have survived, one of which – the Palazzo della Marra – now houses the Pinecoteca De Nittis. An interesting modern monument is the Ossario Commemorativo dei Caduti Slavi – memorial and ossuary for the Yugoslavian partisans who, wounded in the Balkans during the war and brought across the Adriatic to hospitals in Puglia, died of their wounds.

 

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