Mola di Bari
Mola di Bari | ||
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Comune | ||
Comune di Mola di Bari | ||
Aerial view of Mola di Bari | ||
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Mola di Bari Location of Mola di Bari in Italy | ||
Coordinates: 41°4′N 17°5′E / 41.067°N 17.083°ECoordinates: 41°4′N 17°5′E / 41.067°N 17.083°E | ||
Country | Italy | |
Region | Apulia | |
Province | Bari (BA) | |
Frazioni | Cozze, San Materno | |
Area | ||
• Total | 50 km2 (20 sq mi) | |
Elevation | 5 m (16 ft) | |
Population [1] | ||
• Total | 25,919 | |
• Density | 520/km2 (1,300/sq mi) | |
Demonym(s) | Molesi | |
Time zone | CET (UTC+1) | |
• Summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+2) | |
Postal code | 70042 | |
Dialing code | 080 | |
Patron saint | San Michele; Madonna Addolorata | |
Website | Official website |
Mola di Bari, commonly referred to simply as Mola, is a town and comune of the Metropolitan City of Bari, Apulia, southern Italy.
In recent times, the town was best known for having primarily whitewashed buildings, however, growth, modern construction, and building design have changed the image significantly, particularly in the northern (and more modern) part of the town.
Mola's city center is its main piazza, Piazza XX Settembre near the port and it also boasts a church (Chiesa Matrice, i.e. Mother Church) dating back to the thirteenth century. Bakeries in Mola are known to make some of the finest focaccia in Italy.
Until the early 1990s, there were two privately owned public ovens available to the inhabitants of Mola, one located on Via Nino Bixio, on the southern part of the town, and the other located on Via Pesce, on the opposite side of the main Piazza. These businesses served the local residents by providing a place to cook baked goods, primarily focaccia and breads. Typically, focaccia pans were quite large (some approaching half a meter in diameter) and were difficult to cook in one’s home. The tradition of sending items to be baked by the local oven has passed.
Mola is also home to a large fishing industry that supplies fresh fish throughout the southern Italian region.
History
The old settlement of Neolithic people is confirmed by some archaeological remains. The origin of the city is not known entirely because of lack of sufficient traces to assert a Greek origin (coins now dispersed, with an old emblem showing the symbol of Athens) or Roman (with a Roman villa of the imperial period close to the northern coast and the remains of a water tank). The proof of the existence of an urban settlement remains scarce and contradictory up until 1277, when Charles I of Anjou ordered the reconstruction of the city along with the building of city walls, a church, and a castle.
It came under the control of various feudal families (Macedonio, Gesualdo, Maramaldo, Toraldo, Carafa, Vaaz), until in 1670 when Mola was able to get rid of remnants of feudal power and to restore its original status within the Kingdom of Naples.
Picture gallery
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The Piazza in Mola di Bari, note preparations for "Festa Della Madonna"
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Medieval Castle, Mola di Bari
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Corso Umberto, leaving the Piazza, Mola di Bari
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People gathering in the Piazza for the annual "Festa Della Madonna"
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Rear side of the Santa Chiara Church, Mola di Bari
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Typical Street in Mola di Bari
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Typical Street in Mola di Bari
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Part of the Old Town of Mola di Bari
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Via Tasso, Mola di Bari, one of several streets in Mola too small to accommodate passenger vehicle traffic
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The Van Westerhout Theatre in Mola di Bari
Famous people
Niccolò van Westerhout (Mola di Bari, 1857 – Naples, 1898). Musician and composer
Piero Delfino Pesce (Mola di Bari, 1874–1939). Journalist and politician
Onofrio Martinelli (Mola di Bari, 1900 – Florence, 1966). Painter
Bruno Calvani (Mola di Bari, 1904–86). Sculptor
Mario Battista (Mola di Bari, 1934 – Rome, 2000). Figurative painter and portraitist. He shared his career between teaching and painting.[2]
Vito Tanzi (Mola di Bari, 1935– ) Economist
Costantino Padovano (Mola di Bari, Miami), music producer
Joseph M. Calisi (Mola di Bari, New York City) international transportation photojournalist
Main streets
Via Piero Delfino Pesce is a street running along the seafront on the north-western part of town. It is named after one of Mola's famous inhabitants listed above.
Via Giuseppe di Vagno is a street running parallel to the "lungomare", on the southeastern part of town. The street is named after Giuseppe di Vagno, a socialist politician who was killed by fascists after a political rally held in Mola di Bari in September 1921
Corso Umberto is a street that runs southwest, starting next to the church in the main Piazza, ending near Piazza degli Eroi (Piazza of the Heroes), also known as San Domenico
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mola di Bari. |
- www.comune.moladibari.ba.it - Official Municipality Site
- www.ambientemola.it - Ambient Councillor's Site and forums (update frequently)
- www.moladibari.com - News from Mola and forums (update frequently)
- "Lo Spiraglio" Local monthly newspaper
- Mola di Bari from Satellite (Google Local)
- Site on Doña Flor, van Westerhout's opera
- Article on the Mola di Bari community in the USA "The Other Mola", Tiziano Thomas Dossena, L'Idea.N.33, 2008