Cassaro, Palermo

Cassaro
Via Vittorio Emanuele II
Sicilian: u Càssaru

View of Palermo (plate n. 56) from Volume 4 of Civitates Orbis Terrarum. Cassaro appears as the long road in the middle of the city.
Former name(s) As-Simat Al-Balat, Platea Marmorea, Via Toledo
Length 1.8 km (1.1 mi)
Location Palermo, Sicily, Italy
Coordinates Quattro Canti: 38°06′57″N 13°21′41″E / 38.11583°N 13.36139°E / 38.11583; 13.36139Coordinates: 38°06′57″N 13°21′41″E / 38.11583°N 13.36139°E / 38.11583; 13.36139

The Cassaro (Sicilian: u Càssaru) is the most ancient street of Palermo. Following the unification of Italy, it has been officially renamed Via Vittorio Emanuele II, but the old and distinctive name is still in use. The street is rooted in the age of the foundation of Palermo by the Phoenicians. It provides access to a number of important sights, including the Royal Palace (also known as Palazzo dei Normanni) and the Cathedral, two UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

Underwood & Underwood, "Winter noonday on Victor Emmanuel st. - W. through the New Gate, Palermo, Sicily, Italy". 1906

Toponymy

The name "Cassaro" comes from the Arabic word "Qasr" (fortress, castle).[1] In fact, during the era of the Islamic Sicily, Panormus, called Balarm by the Saracens, became the island's capital and a large portion of the ancient city was widely fortified. In the Middle Ages, especially during the Islamic and Norman periods, the street was also called "As-Simat Al-Balat" (Arabic)[2] and "Via (Platea) Marmorea" (Latin) because it was paved with slabs of marble.[3] Even now, the Arabic word "balat(a)" is used in Sicily to indicate the marble.

In the late sixteenth century, during the age of the personal union between the crowns of Spain and Sicily, the street assumed the name of "Via Toledo" in honor of the Viceroy García de Toledo Osorio, the main architect of its rectification.[4] This denomination lasted until the unification of Italy, when the street was officially dedicated to the King Victor Emmanuel II of Italy. However, the ancient name "Cassaro" never was abandoned by the people.

History

View of Palermo Cathedral from the Cassaro

The road was created at the time of the foundation of Palermo by the Phoenicians, cutting into two parts the city and connecting the ancient port to the Punic necropolis located in the area of the current Piazza Indipendenza and Corso Calatafimi.

During the Islamic era the street confirmed its role of main axis of the city, from which various branch detached as secondary roads called "Darbi", perpendicular to the main branch, inserting in the territory and ending in "Aziqqa", blind alleys distinctive of Palermo.[5] During the Siculo-Norman age the Cassaro was richly described by the Muslim geographer Al-Idrisi in his famous "Book of Roger".[6]

Porta Felice, entrance of the Cassaro from the sea

The most important innovation to the layout of the Cassaro occurred in the second half of the sixteenth century, during the Spaniard age. The project, maybe defined from the outset but accomplished in various stages, provided for the rectification and enlargement of the street up to the Church of Santa Maria di Porto Salvo,[7] near Palazzo Chiaramonte (at that time headquarters of the Viceroy).

The works, with the permission of the Viceroy Garcia de Toledo, began in 1567. It started with the adjustment of the southern area till "Porta dei Patitelli" (current Via Roma), then with massive demolitions to reach Piazza Marina. The development of this work was actively supported by the city nobility, that contributed to the opening of Piazza Bologni and Piazza Pretoria. In 1581 The Viceroy Marcantonio Colonna prolonged the street up to the city walls by opening the sea with the monumental Porta Felice.[7]

Structure

The street is perfectly straight from Porta Nuova, near Piazza Indipendenza, to Porta Felice, near the Foro Italico. It has a slight downhill sloping towards the sea. Throughout its path there are many streets leading into it but only two crossing: Via Maqueda (also known as "Strada Nuova"), with which it forms the famous Baroque intersection known as Quattro Canti (Piazza Villena), and Via Roma, created in the late nineteenth century.

Transport

Since 2015 the street is pedestrian in the stretch from the Cathedral to Quattro Canti. A free shuttle bus, called "Free Centro Storico" or "Arancione" (Orange), crosses the historic centre from Piazza Indipendenza to Porta Felice.[8]

Places of interest

Contemporary Art Museum of Sicily, Palazzo Riso
Right side Number Number Left side
Piazza Indipendenza
Royal Palace of Palermo
(also known as "Palazzo dei Normanni")
Porta Nuova Military Quarter of San Giacomo
Piazza del Parlamento 475
Piazza della Vittoria
(Villa Bonanno)
467 Theological Faculty of Sicily
463 Seminary of Palermo
Palazzo del Castillo [9] [10] Archbishop's Palace
Palazzo Asmundo 492 Palermo Cathedral
Palazzo Imperatore 484
Palazzo Filangieri di Cutò 474
Palazzo La Grua di Carini 462
Palazzo Castrone-Santa Ninfa 452
[11] Palazzo Mango di Casalgerardo
429 Central Library of Sicily
Church of Santissimo Salvatore 417 Palazzo Colonna di Cesarò
Palazzo Natoli [12]
Palazzo Airoldi 382
Palazzo Algaria [13]
Piazza Bologni
(Monument to Charles V)
365 Palazzo Riso
(Contemporary Art Museum of Sicily)
Palazzo Pilo di Marineo 316 327 Palazzo Tarallo della Miraglia
Church of San Giuseppe dei Teatini
Via Maqueda Quattro Canti Via Maqueda
Palazzo Bordonaro [14]
Palazzo Bonocore [14]
Church of San Matteo al Cassaro
Via Roma
225 Palazzo Tramontana Roccaforte
Palazzo Termine d'Isnello 204
187 Palazzo Vannucci di Balchino
Palazzo Ventimiglia di Prades 188
157 Palazzo Santa Margherita
137 Palazzo Roccella
111 Palazzo Amari di Sant'Adriano
Palazzo Sitano 114
93 Palazzo Cammarata Testa
Piazza Marina
(Fontana del Garraffo)
Palazzo delle Finanze
Palazzo della Gran Guardia [15] Church of Santa Maria di Porto Salvo
Church of San Giovanni dei Napoletani 39 Palazzo Vassallo
Piazza Marina Church of Santa Maria della Catena
Palazzo della Zecca 31 State Archives of Palermo
Piazza Santo Spirito
(Fontana del Cavallo Marino)
Passeggiata delle Cattive Loggiato San Bartolomeo
Porta Felice
Foro Italico

Feast of Saint Rosalia

An image from the Festino 2009

The Cassaro is the scenery of the long procession of the Chariot of Saint Rosalia during the "Festino", the night between the 14th and 15th of July of each year. The feast dedicated to the patron saint of Palermo involves every year tens of thousands of people.

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Corso Vittorio Emanuele (Palermo).

References

  1. Di Giovanni, Vincenzo (1890), La topografia antica di Palermo dal secolo X al XV. p. 83, 127.
  2. Di Giovanni, Vincenzo (1890), La topografia antica di Palermo dal secolo X al XV. p. 294.
  3. Morso, Salvatore (1827), Descrizione di Palermo antico. p. 219.
  4. Palermo, Gaspare (1816), Guida istruttiva per potersi conoscere con facilità tanto dal Siciliano che dal forestiere tutte le magnificenze, e gli oggetti degni di osservazione della città di Palermo. Giornate I e II. p. 93.
  5. Gabrieli F., Scerrato U., Balog P. (1979), Gli Arabi in Italia: cultura, contatti e tradizioni. Scheiwiller Editori. p. 579.
  6. Dummett, Jeremy (2015), Palermo, City of Kings: The Heart of Sicily. I.B.Tauris. p. 42.
  7. 1 2 "Palermo: il suo passato, il suo presente, i suoi monumenti: in occasione del XII Congresso degli scienziati italiani (1875). L. Pedone Lauriel Editore. p. 46".
  8. (in Italian) News about the service - Official site of AMAT
  9. Entrance from Piazza della Vittoria.
  10. Entrance from Via Matteo Bonello.
  11. Entrance from Via delle Scuole.
  12. Entrance from Via SS. Salvatore.
  13. Entrance from Piazza Bologni.
  14. 1 2 Entrance from piazza Pretoria.
  15. Entrance from Piazza Marina.
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