Calcata

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Calcata
Coat of arms of Calcata
Municipal coat of arms

Location of Calcata in Italy
Country Flag of Italy Italy
Region Latium
Province Province of Viterbo (VT)
Mayor Luciano Sestili
Elevation 172 m (564 ft)
Area 7.7 km² (3 sq mi)
Population (as of Dec. 2004)
 - Total 895
 - Density 116/km² (300/sq mi)
Time zone CET, UTC+1
Coordinates 42°13′N, 12°25′E
Gentilic calcatesi
Dialing code 0761
Postal code 01030
Website: www.comunecalcata.it/
Not to be confused with Kolkata (formerly Calcutta), a city in West Bengal, India.
The Medieval hilltop village of Calcata
The Medieval hilltop village of Calcata

Calcata is a comune and town in the Province of Viterbo in the Italian region Latium, located 47 km north of Rome by car]. As of 31 December 2004, it had a population of 895 and an area of 7.7 km.

In the 1930s, the hill towns's fortified historic center was condemned by the government for fear that the volcanic cliffs the ancient community was built upon would collapse. Local residents moved to nearby Calcata Nuova. In the 1960s, the emptied centro storico began to be repopulated by artists and hippies who squatted in its medieval stone and masonry structures. Many of the squatters eventually purchased their homes, the government reversed its copndemnation order, and the residents of what had become an artistic community began restoring the ancient town. This trend has continued so that today that town boasts a thriving artistic community described in the New York Times as what "may be the grooviest village in Italy, home to a wacky community of about 100 artists, bohemians, aging hippies and New Age types." The centro storico now includes restaurants, cafes, and art galleries.

Calcata borders the following municipalities: Faleria, Magliano Romano, Mazzano Romano, Rignano Flaminio.

Contents

[edit] Demographic evolution

[edit] Holy Prepuce of Calcata

According to legends of the village of Calcata, in 1527 a soldier in the German army sacking Rome looted the Sancta Sanctorum; when he was eventually captured in the village, he hid the jeweled reliquary containing the Holy Prepuce in his cell, where it was discovered in 1557 and officially venerated by the Catholic Church since that time, offering a ten year indulgence to pilgrims. Calcata thus became a popular site for pilgrimage.[1]

In 1856, however, the abbey of Charoux rediscovered what it considered to be the true Holy Prepuce, which it claimed to have received from Charlemagne but which had been lost for centuries. The rediscovery led to a theological clash with the established Holy Prepuce of Calcata, which had been officially venerated by the Church for hundreds of years; in 1900, the Church solved the dilemma by ruling that anyone thenceforward writing or speaking of the Holy Prepuce would be excommunicated. In 1954, after much debate, the punishment was changed to the harsher degree of excommunication, vitandi (shunned); the Second Vatican Council then removed the Day of the Holy Circumcision from the church calendar .[2]

Nevertheless, the village continued to stage an annual procession on the Day of the Holy Circumsion to honor the relic. In 1983, however, parish priest Dario Magnoni announced that "This year, the holy relic will not be exposed to the devotion of the faithful. It has vanished. Sacrilegious thieves have taken it from my home", where it had reportedly been kept in a shoebox in the back of a wardrobe. Citing the Vatican's decree of excommunication, Magnoni refuses to further discuss the event, as does the Vatican. As a result, villagers' theories of the crime vary from theft for lucrative resale to an effort by the Vatican to quietly put an end to the practice it had attempted to end by excommunication years ago; some going so far as to speculate that Magnoni himself may have been the culprit.[2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Who stole Jesus' foreskin? - By David Farley - Slate Magazine
  2. ^ a b "Fore Shame", David Farley, Slate.com, Tuesday, Dec. 19, 2006

[edit] External links