Comune di Sassari | |
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Country | Italy |
Region | Sardinia |
Province | Sassari (SS) |
Mayor | Gianfranco Ganau (since May 2005) |
Elevation | 225 m (738 ft) |
Area | 546.08 km² (210.8 sq mi) |
Population (as of December 31, 2007) | |
- Total | 129,072 |
- Density | 236/km² (611/sq mi) |
Time zone | CET, UTC+1 |
Coordinates | |
Gentilic | Sassaresi |
Dialing code | 079 |
Postal code | 07100 |
Frazioni | Bancali, Li Punti, La Landrigga, Caniga, Campanedda |
Patron | Saint Nicholas |
- Day | December 6 |
Website: www.comune.sassari.it |
Sassari (in Italian and Sassarese, Tàthari in Sardinian), is a town in the province of Sassari in Sardinia, Italy. The second-largest town on the island in terms of population, Sassari is one of the most ancient Sardinian towns, and contains a considerable collection of Sardinian art.
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Sassari was probably founded in the early Middle Ages by the inhabitants of the ancient Roman port of Turris Lybisonis (current Porto Torres) who sought refuge in the mainland to escape the Saracen attacks from the sea. The oldest mention of a village called Tathari is in an 1113 document in the archive of the Monastery of St. Peter in Silki. Sassari was sacked by the Genoese in 1166. Immigration continued until, in the early 13th century, Sassari was the most populous city in the giudicato of Torres. After the assassination of the latter's last judge (1274), Sassari was subject to the Republic of Pisa with a semi-independent status.
In 1294 the Pisans were annihilated by the Genoese fleet at the Battle of Meloria, and the city could free itself: it became the first and only free commune of Sardinia, with statutes of its own, allied with Genoa, which was pleased to see it thus withdrawn from the control of the Pisans. Its statutes of 1316 are remarkable for the leniency of the penalties imposed when compared with the penal laws of the Middle Ages.
From 1323 it was submitted to the Aragonese, under which it remained in the following centuries, but it revolted at least three times. Attempts of conquest by Genoa failed. In 1391 it was conquered by Brancaleone Doria and Marianus V of Arborea to the Giudicato of Arborea, of which it became the capital, but in 1420 it fell into the hands of the Aragonese. The Aragonese were replaced by the Spanish in 1479. In 1527 it was sacked by the French. During Catalan and then Spanish domination the city was known as Sàsser. The city suffered for the economical exploitment and the political corruption of its rulers and for two plagues in 1528 and 1652.
Austrian rule (1708–1717) was succeeded by Piedmontese (1720–1861), after which Sassari became part of the newly created Kingdom of Italy.
Sassari's University is the oldest in Sardinia (founded by the Jesuits in 1562-1627), and has a high reputation, especially in jurisprudence studies; its libraries contain a number of ancient documents, among them the Condaghes, Sardinia's first legal codes and the first documents written in the Sardinian language (11th century) and the famous Carta de Logu (the constitution issued by Mariano IV d'Arborea and updated later by his daughter in 14th century the Giudichessa Eleanor of Arborea).
The Sassarese diasystem (Sassaresu or Turritanu) is not very similar to sardinian language however, but is closest to corsican language; although this fact has been causing a deep controversy. It is based on a mixture of different languages, namely Corsican, Pisano and Genoan (due to long medieval contacts with the maritime republics of Pisa and Genoa in the age of Giudicati), Spanish, catalan but a strong Logudorese influence can be felt in its phonetics, syntax, and vocabulary. Sassarese is spoken in Sassari and in the neighbourhood, approximately by 120,000 people, in a total population of 175,000 inhabitants; large speaking communities are present also in Stintino, Sorso and Porto Torres; its transition varieties towards Gallurese, known as the castellanesi dialects, can be heard in Castelsardo, Tergu e Sedini).
Other attractions include:
Notable people born here include the former presidents of the Italian Republic, Antonio Segni and Francesco Cossiga, and the national secretary in the 1970s and leader of the most important Communist party in Western Europe Enrico Berlinguer.
Sassari is also the birthplace of Domenico Alberto Azuni, a jurist expert in commercial law.
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