Agropoli
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Comune di Agropoli | |
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Municipal coat of arms |
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Country | Italy |
Region | Campania |
Province | Salerno (SA) |
Mayor | Vacant (since October 2006) |
Elevation | 30 m |
Area | 39 km² |
Population | |
- Total (as of December 31, 2004) | 20,246 |
- Density | 620/km² |
Time zone | CET, UTC+1 |
Coordinates | |
Gentilic | Agropolesi |
Dialing code | 0974 |
Postal code | 84043 |
Frazioni | Fuonti, Moio, Mattine, Frascinelle, Madonna del Carmine, Marrota |
Patron | Sts. Peter and Paul |
- Day | June 29 |
Website: www.comune.agropoli.sa.it |
Agropoli is the capital city and commercial heart of the pristine area called Cilento in the province of Salerno, in the Campania region of Italy, located at the beginning of the Cilento coast, on the Tyrrhenian Sea. It is the most important city in the Cilento area and offers all beauties of a town during every season.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Pre-medieval period
The promontory on which Agropoli stands has been inhabited since Neolithic times. It seems, however, that it was not until the later Bronze and Iron Ages that it came to be continuously inhabited by a stable, indigenous population, which lived of hunting and fishing.
To the east of the promontory, at the mouth of the River Testene, there is a natural sheltered bay, called "Foce" in ancient times, but which is now almost completely silted up. Before and after the foundation of nearby Poseidonia (c. 625 BC), the Greeks used it for trading with the local people. They gave the promontory the Greek name, Petra ("rocky hill"), and built a temple on it, dedicated to Artemis, the Goddess of Hunting.
It has been established that in Roman times, on the coastal stretch, now known as San Marco, east of the promontory, and to the right of the Testene, a seaside town called "Ercula" developed and flourished between the 1st century BCE, and the 5th century CE. Meanwhile, the harbour of neighbouring Poseidonia (by then, renamed Paestum by the Romans) became progressively silted up by the process of coastal bradyseism.
[edit] Medieval period
During the 5th century, when the Vandals from Africa made life difficult in Ercula, its inhabitants retreated to the overlooking promontory, which offered better prospects for defence. Then, in the 6th century CE, during the Greco-Gothic war (535-553), the Byzantines needed a secure, well-protected harbour, south of Salerno, so they fortified it, and called it Akropolis, meaning "high town".
Towards the end of the 6th century, the Longobard invasion forced the Bishop of Paestum to take refuge in Agropoli, which then became not only the episcopal see, but the main centre of the surviving Byzantine territories in Tyrrhenian Lucania.
Agropoli remained in the hands of the Byzantines until 882, when the town fell to the Saracens, who turned it into a formidable stronghold (Arabic: rabat). From this base, they set out to plunder and terrorise the surrounding areas, right up to the walls of Salerno. Eventually, in 915, they were driven out from their trenched camp at Garigliano. Agropoli was also liberated, and came back under the jurisdiction of the bishops, who had established their see in (old) Capaccio during this period.
For the rest of the medieval period, the area remained under the protection of the bishops, who also possessed huge territories, including the inhabited areas of Eredita and Ogliastro, as well as the former villages of Lucolo, Mandrolle, Pastina, San Marco in Agropoli and San Pietro in Eredita. This vast area constituted the feudal district of Agropoli which had been ceded to the bishops of Capaccio in Norman times and, except for brief periods, was possessed by them until the early decades of the 15th century. In fact, in 1412, Pope Gregory XII ceded the feudal territories of Agropoli and Castellabate to King Ladislas of Durazzo (1386-1414) in partial payment of some war debts. However, the Crown did not formally take possession until 1443, and before this, on 20 July 1436, King Alfonso V of Naples granted the fiefs of Agropoli and Castellabate to Giovanni Sanseverino, Count of Marsico and Baron of Cilento, requiring him to pay the Bishop of Capaccio, 12 ounces of gold annually.
[edit] Modern period
The first statistics on Agropoli were compiled in 1445, when the town, including its dependent villages, had a total of 202 homes and, therefore, a similar number of families. Apart from a few changes, such as the temporary transfer to Rodrigo d'Avalos, Marquis of Vasto, from 1505 to 1507, Agropoli and its feudal lands were held by the Sanseverino family until 1552, when Prince Ferrante was accused of treason, and forced to give up all his possessions. After that, Agropoli passed to various families in succession:
- D'Ayerbo of Aragon (1553)
- Grimaldi (after 1564)
- Arcella Caracciolo (1597)
- Mendoza (1607)
- the Filomarino princes of Roccadaspide (1626)
- Mastrillo (1650)
- Zattara
- the Sanfelice, Dukes of Laureana (1660), who possessed the town until the abolition of feudalism in 1806.
Agropoli was a particular target of raids from North Africa in the 16th and 17th centuries, and the population dwindled to only a few hundred inhabitants. Among these raids, two are particularly noteworthy:
- On 21 April 1544, the town was sacked, and about 100 people were taken prisoner.
- On 30 June 1630, a strong band of men from the surrounding Cilento helped the citizens of Agropoli to repel an attack by 700 Turkish pirates. The pirates managed to escape in their ships with a substantial amount of booty and many prisoners, but were nevertheless heavily defeated, and left many dead behind them.
During the 19th century, Agropoli began to expand outside the medieval walls, but the old town has remained intact, together with most of the surrounding defensive walls, and the 7th-century entrance gate. The Angevin-Aragonese castle, which was built on the 6th century Byzantine foundations, still stands on top of the promontory. To the west of the modern tourist harbour, there is another small promontory, on which the coastal tower of San Francesco (16th century) stands next to the much altered remains of the convent of the same name.
Agropoli today:
It remains a fact that the Italians have kept the Cilento area too long for themselves. Agropoli is the main gate to this pristine area and is considererd the spot-on location to discover the whole Campania area with no big efforts. From the SS18 it is possible to reach North and South all major attracions of the whole Region.
[edit] Main sights
The town, where some tombs predating the Byzantine period were recently found, also houses the medieval ruins of San Francesco's monastery, and the Churches of the Holy Mary of Constantinople (16th century), San Marco, and San Francesco. The beaches of Trentova Bay contribute to make Agropoli an important seaside resort.
In the Municipal Antiquarian, there is a sizeable collection of archaeological finds, representing life in the area from prehistoric to medieval times.