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Castrovillari
is an important and suggestive city built on layers
of Pollino. Its residential part is shared into two: the “Civita”, the
ancient part with its historical monuments, located on the top of a rock
spur; while the modern part is situated on a large valley at the feet of
Pollino. The city was created during the Medieval Age, and immediately
became, due to both its strategic position and efficient links between
the coast and the land, one of the most important economical and
strategic centres of these places.
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From
the highest part of the city we can admire a breathtaking landscape. In
the city centre you can find one of the most beautiful monuments, the
Castello Aragonese which dominates, with its majesty, the valley below
it.
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most ancient testimonies of the land in Castrovillari go back to the Old
Stone Age (150,000 – 50,000 years ago). Several of the handmade lithic
object found in Contrada Celimarro belong to this Age. Some traces of the
Old Stone Age have also been found around Pollino: they prove, as the
manufactured products mentioned above, the presence of men, mainly
hunters. The Neolithic Period (VI- III Millennium b.C.) left its traces
on the hill of Santa Maria del Castello: the Civita, centre historically
more ancient, in which we can find axes in rubbed up rock. Fictile finds
let us discover a series of caves, meaning that men became sedentary,
becoming farmers and cattlemen. The first Neolithical setting it is
proven by the finding of a village during the Bronze Age (around 1600
b.C.). The presence of natives is witnessed by funeral finding in Bello
Luco and goes back to 800-700 b.C.; while Sibari, in the East coast on
the Ionio Sea, was created and became part of this great political and
economical colony around 720-721 b.C.. Into the past, in the acropolis
which would be subsequently called Castrovillari, where today lays the
Madonna’s sanctuary, there was a votive progeny, witnessed by the
discoveries, over time, of fictile statues and earthenware, symbols of
veneration of feminine Greek gods. After Sibari was destroyed by hand of
population from Crotone (510 b.C.), other populations, the Lucani and
Brettii, left signs of their culture: we should attribute to the formers
a fictile antefix and a bronze representing Hercules, both of them
datable in the V Century b.C. Vascular dowry datable to the Hellenic Age
(IV-III Century b.C.) comes both from the centre and from its territory.
Several archaeological finding (necropolis, “villa”, “mitreo”, and other
objects) have been found in the countryside, datable from the
Hellenic-Romanic Age till the end of the oldness, as it is the case for
the necropolis in the hill of Cimarro (VI-VI Century a.D.), with mainly
bronze and china dowries. Various “ville rustiche” discovered, and in
paticular villa di Camerelle in opus incertum, witness the strong
presence of the Roman Empire in these places. During the Middle Ages,
life is concentrated on the hill of S. Maria del Castello, where as the
first time the Norman beset the fortified city and get it (1064). Some
objects here found testify some depict plastering in Arabic-Norman art
(XII Century) found in the sanctuary, pieces of polychrome ceramics
revealing the dominance first and the settlement then of different
populations: Byzantines, Normans and Sweden, Angevin and Aragonese. We
also can find traces of the Longobardic language in the local dialects.
At the end of the Norman dominance, with the Sweden time, the medieval
centre welcome an Hebraic colony, who built its synagogue and gave the
name to the Giudeca (=literally “Judean”), extending at the valleys of
hill Lauro. Unfortunately, but some archive source, we do not have any
find of the Hebrew colony which laid here for three Centuries. At the top
of the hill the Franciscan majestic convent it’s the result of the
enlargements due to the creation of the first factory in 1220-1221, when
Pietro Catin was sent to Calabria by S. Francesco d’Assisi to spread the
new rule. The great castle with quadrilateral floor plan, located in the
Northen part of the medieval inner city in correspondence to porta della
Catena, was completed in 1490 by the Aragonese succeeded to the Angevin
after a very large battle; then the castle was keyed to the utilization
of fire-arms. The scratch on the main door recalls that king Ferdinando I
d’Aragona made it build ad continendo in fide cives, “to restrain
citizens”: this was done in response to the threat of revolts - whose
famous is that “of barins” (1485) – plotted by the tenacious pro-Angevin
party, which agitated the Reign of Naples during the second half of the
XV Century (Francesco di Vasto). |
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