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TOUR ITINERARIES
Discoveryng The Castles Of
Puglia
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LECCE Our itinerary
starts from Lecce, the capital of Baroque art.
It is the chief town of the Salentine peninsula and it lays over a plain
in the south-east of the heel of Italy.According to the
tradition, Lecce was founded by Malennio, King of the
Salentinians, a century before the war of Troia. |
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Some archaeologic findings, like Messapic
graves, date the origins of Lecce back to ancient times. In the
VIII cent. b.C., this city was a colony of the ancient Laconia
(Sparta),whose inhabitants founded the city of Taranto.In the
III cent. b.C. it was conquered by the Romans. They fortified it
to denfend the town from the Macedonian invasion, and they
called it Lupiae ( this name may explain why there is an image
of a she-wolf as a symbol of the city). So, this place was not a
“Municipium” anymore but, thanks to Marco Aurelio, it was turned
into a colony. After the distancing of this site from the
primitive centre (3km) the city was called Licea (or Litium). In
the II cent. b.C. the commercial activity of Lecce was improving
and so the Emperor Adriano ordered to build a road that
connected Brindisi to Lecce and then Lecce to the sea.In the
same time, they built a peculiar theatre (near S.Chiara church)
and an amphitheatre, of which there are stately remains in the
beautiful S.Oronzo square, gem of the old town centre. After the
fall of the Roman Empire the city declined because of the
Barbars’invasions and of the Byzantines’one. Then the egemony of
Lecce deteriorated because Otranto became the most important
dock of the Salento area. Things improved when the Normans
arrived and the city became again an important commercial centre
and a county and it was considered a privileged dwelling for
nobles and kings. Also some monastic orders moved here at that
time (the Benedectines) to fight against the cultural supremacy
of Costantinopoli (so many convents and churches were built,
like SS.Nicolò and Cataldo and S.Maria Cerrate). The Emperor
Ottone IV destroyed it and then it was conquered by the
Aragoneses.Thanks to Carlo V its urban structure was
re-organized and it became the seat of Courts and suburban State
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To defend the city from the continuous Turks invasions that
spread also all over the Salento coasts, Carlo V built a new
wall and a powerful castle. This building stands in the middle
of the town and it is divided into two trapezoidal structures
that were realized in different periods; they have a yard in the
centre. The external one was built by the militar architect Gian
Giacomo dell’Acaja between 1539 and 1549. Carlo V had ordered
its construction. |
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The castle has four bastions that originally
kept the most ancient structure of the Middle Age.It had
probably been built by King Tancredi at the end of the XII cent.,
but there are no remains of it because of the many revisions
that took place over the centuries. The Angevin “mastio”(male)
of the XIV cent. is the most ancient part of the building, and
it is embellished by a chapel and a big hall on the upper floor.
There are two entrances to the fortress: one from the north-west
bastion that looks to the city and has a L plan and three
defence doors; and the other one one from the opposite side,
looking to the country. At the moment the castle is the seat of
the Militar District of Lecce.The most luxurious period of Lecce
was between the XVI and the XVIII centuries, when the famous
“Baroque of Lecce” developed. This is why this city is also
called a “Baroque Florence”. |
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LATIANO Thirteen
kilometres away from Francavilla Fontana, our itineary takes us
to Latiano, a town known because of its characteristic and
picturesque windmill and of its stately castle. This is the most
ancient building of the town. It was built in the XII century
with a strategic aim on the highest point of the town , near the
ancient Via Appia. |
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In the origins it was surrounded by a ditch
full of groundwater. The story of the fortification of the
castle correspond with the town history.The nature of the castle
water is considered the toponym of the word Latiano. It comes
from the greek hara which means overflowing water, and from the
latin latex, that is humour fount. As time went by, the castle
was transformed from a fortalice into a private house. In 1724
it was restored by the Imperiali family. Latiano is also famous
for its beautiful masserie, with closed yards and courtly
buildings. |
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MESAGNE
Driving for only 8 km you can move from Latiano to Mesagne,
a town over a little hill on the last strip of the Messapic
plain. Mesagne old town centre is peculiar because of its
triangular shape and there is the Granafei castle, a stately
medieval building. |
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It was built in 1062 by Roberto il Guiscardo
and the rebuilt twice: in 1256 by Manfredi, after the Saracens’
destruction, and then in the XV cent. by the Orsini del Balzo
family. In the XVII cent., it became one of the dwellings of the
Baron. All that is left since Medieval times is a squared tower.
The loggia instead, was built in the XVI century.
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ITINERARIES « « « « « « « « « «
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