Lentini

For other uses, see Lentini (disambiguation).
Lentini
Comune
Comune di Lentini

Coat of arms
Lentini

Location of Lentini in Italy

Coordinates: 37°17′N 15°00′E / 37.283°N 15.000°E / 37.283; 15.000
Country Italy
Region Sicily
Province Syracuse (SR)
Government
  Mayor Alfio Mangiameli (PD)
Area
  Total 215.75 km2 (83.30 sq mi)
Elevation 53 m (174 ft)
Population (February 2015)
  Total 24,250
  Density 110/km2 (290/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Lentinesi
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 96016
Dialing code 095
Patron saint Sant'Alfio
Saint day May 10
Website Official website
Mother Church.

Lentini (Sicilian: Lintini), historically Leontini, Leontinoi (Ancient Greek: Λεοντῖνοι), or Leontium, is a town and comune in the Province of Syracuse, southeast Sicily (southern Italy).

History

The ancient city was founded as Leontini by colonists from Naxos in 729 BC, itself a Chalcidian colony established five years earlier.

It is virtually the only Greek settlement in Sicily not located on the coast, being some 6 miles inland. The site, originally held by the Sicels, was seized by the Greeks owing to its command of the fertile plain to the north. The city was reduced to subject status in 494 BC by Hippocrates of Gela,[1] who made his ally Aenesidemus its tyrant.[2] In 476 BC, Hieron of Syracuse moved the inhabitants from Catana and Naxos to Leontini.[1]

Later on, the city of Leontini regained its independence.[1] However, as part of the inhabitants' efforts to retain that independence, they sought the intervention of Athens. It was mainly the eloquence of Gorgias of Leontini which led to the abortive Athenian expedition of 427 BC.[1]

In 422 BC, Syracuse supported the oligarchs against the people and received the oligarchs as citizens, the city of Leontini itself being forsaken. This led to renewed Athenian intervention, at first mainly diplomatic; but the exiles of Leontini joined the envoys of Segesta, in persuading Athens to undertake the great Sicilian Expedition of 415 BC.

After the failure of the Expedition, Leontini became subject to Syracuse once more.[3] The city's independence was guaranteed by the treaty of 405 BC between Dionysius and the Carthaginians, but lost again shortly after. The city was finally stormed by Marcus Claudius Marcellus in 214 BC.

By Roman times it seems to have been of little importance.[1] It was destroyed by the Saracens in 847 AD,[1] and almost totally ruined by the earthquake of 1693.[1] From the earthquake to about the middle of the 20th century, Lentini was regarded by travel writers as a malarial stop-over to Syracuse of minor historical importance.[4]

The ancient city is described by Polybius as lying in a valley between two hills, and facing north.[3] On the western side of this valley ran a river with a row of houses on its western bank under the hill. At each end was a gate, the northern gate leading to the plain, the southern, at the upper end, leading to Syracuse. There was an acropolis on each side of the valley, lying between precipitous hills with flat tops, over which buildings had extended. The eastern hill still has the remains of a strongly fortified medieval castle, in which some writers are inclined (though wrongly) to recognize portions of Greek masonry.

Excavations were made in 1899 in one of the ravines in a Sicel necropolis of the third period—explorations in the various Greek cemeteries resulted in the discovery of some fine bronzes, notably a fine bronze lebes, now in a Berlin museum.

Attractions

Lentini's main monuments include:

Economy

Lentini's economy is mostly based on agriculture, with also a rather flourishing woodcraft and handicraft production.

Notable Lentinesi

See also

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Lentini: La storia". LentiniOnline.it (in Italian). Retrieved 11 August 2015.
  2. Abbott, Evelyn (1982). A History of Greece: Part 2: from the Ionian Revolt to the Thirty Years' Peace 500-445 B.C., Volume 2. New York: Putnam. p. 436-439.
  3. 1 2 Pisano Baudo, Sebastiano (1965). Storia di Lentini antica e moderna. Lentini: Tip. Scolari.
  4. Balsamo, Paolo; Vaughan, Thomas Wright (1811). A View of the Present State of Sicily: Its Rural Economy, Population, and Produce, Particularly in the County of Modica: with an Appendix, Containing Observations on Its General Character, Climate, Commerce, Resources, &c. / from a Late Survey of the Abbate Balsamo; to Which Are Added, with Notes Throughout the Work, an Axamination of the Sicilian Volunteer System, and Extracts from Letters Written in Sicily in 1809 and 1810 by Thomas Wright Vaughan. Paternoster Row: Printed for Gale and Curtis.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 "Lentini: Le chiese". LentiniOnline.it (in Italian). Retrieved 11 August 2015.

Further reading

External link

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