Wednesday, February 5, 2025

NORMAN SICILY (1061-1194)

The following are excerpts from the interesting essay "Study of the Norman State in Sicily, 1061-1194" (written by Jonathan Hoffman & others). It is a follow-up of the essay I have written about "Longobard Salerno" last month.

THE NORMANS IN SICILY & SOUTHERN ITALY

Map in italian language showing the years when happened the Norman conquest of all southern Italy, completed in 1091 AD
The Worlds the Normans Found

Southern Italy in the centuries leading up to the Norman invasion was a polarizing place. Throughout Southern Italy were a number of communities with distinct identities. We are going to be taking a closer look at three of the more important communities in Southern Italy in the time leading up to the Norman conquest of the region (after the yer 1000 AD). They are Lombards (called also "Longobards"), Byzantines, and Muslims, all of whom played a significant role in shaping the Southern Italy that the Normans would invade and unify.

We will be looking at Southern Italy and its autonomous nature from 6th century AD to when the Normans imposed their authority on the region at the end of the 11th century. Many believed that this region was underdeveloped and not being used, which just is not the case. In Southern Italy after the invasion of the Lombards, power would be divided by areas belonging to the Byzantine and the Southern Lombards. The Muslim conquest of Sicily in the 9th century would have a large and similar impact to the roles of the Byzantine and Lombards in shaping the Italy that the Normans would go on to conquer.

Longobards and Southern Italy

The Lombards were a Germanic people who found a home in Southern Italy by the 6th century. Their invasion of the region began in 568 and within decades they established a strong kingdom in the territories north of the River Po, Tuscany, and in the two duchies of Spoleto and Benevento. The biggest rival to the Lombards in Southern Italy at the time of their invasion was the Byzantines who already had a lot invested in the region. There would be some tension between the two autonomous regions but by 680 AD the Byzantine empire had concluded a treaty with the Lombards, which seems to have involved a formal recognition of their presence in the region.

Throughout the 8th and 9th centuries, the Lombards would keep their eyes set on maintaining control of territory in Southern Italy. Internal conflicts would pose a threat to their power and a civil war occurred in the 9^th^ century between factions in Benevento and Salerno. The conflict would go on to shape Southern Italy as it had a direct link to an increase in the number of Muslims in the region during the 9th century. Both sides employed Arab mercenaries and hired them to fight on their side during the civil war. Word spread of work in southern Italy because of the conflict and a rise in Arab population ensued. This was one of the most significant consequences of the open hostilities.

Louis II, king of Italy and Holy Roman Emperor, took great interest in the conflict because of its attraction to Arab mercenaries. He most likely would have never paid any attention to this conflict otherwise. In the year 849, Louis helped bring an end to the conflict by dividing the Lombard duchy between the two sides while establishing some degree of stability.2 The end of the conflict meant that Arab mercenaries would no longer be in demand.

The end of civil war suggested a brighter future for the region. The Byzantines had been losing interest in Southern Italy and the two factions that were previously at war were satisfied. For a short period of time, the Lombards were seemingly in control of most of southern Italy. Unfortunately for the Lombards in Benevento, however, the Byzantines had rediscovered interest in territories that had once controlled in Southern Italy. From the end of the 9th century into the 10^th^ century, conflicts ensued and the Lombards began to lose territory to the Byzantines.

By the early 10th century, Benevento would become Capua-Benevento and would be ruled as a single entity. The newly formed unit of Capua-Benevento found it difficult to resist the Byzantines. Salerno, on the other hand, seemed to benefit from the conflict. As the Byzantines were by their campaigns to regain their former territories in Capua-Benevento, Salerno flourished. Interestingly, both Salerno and Capua-Benevento managed to maintain stable governments throughout this period, even if many elections were rigged to ensure that the Lombards would retain power.

From the 6th century until the start of the 11th century, the Lombards exercised significant power in Southern Italy and strongly influenced the region the Normans would ultimately take over. Salerno was a town that was well-bonded with traditional structures and it remained prosperous during Southern Italy’s feud with Emperor Otto I. The Lombards had their own system of law; in fact, in Southern Italy it was one of the two major legal systems – the other being Roman Law. In short, the lands the Lombards ruled were politically sound and represented one of the strongest of the autonomous regions in Southern Italy on the eve of the Normans’ arrival.

The end of Lombard rule in Southern Italy signified the end of autonomous rule in the region. By the 11th century, the Normans had arrived and began taking over Southern Italy. When the Normans captured the principality of Salerno, they brought an end to the last Lombard stronghold and an end to area’s autonomous regions.

Byzantine Sicily and Southern Italy

Byzantium's grip on Italy grew stronger during the seventh, eighth, and ninth centuries. The Byzantines had to restructure their control over the remaining holdings in the Italian peninsula after the Lombard invasion of the region. The years from 876-1000 were turbulent due to succession problems and Muslim raids, which aggravated internal divisions. This led to the fall of Byzantine Sicily as the island became dominated by Muslim rulers with ties to North Africa. The chaos that persisted in much of Italy culminated with the arrival of the Normans. The effect of the Norman Conquest on Byzantine Italy resulted in its separation from the Byzantine heartland. This led to the eventual decline of Byzantine culture and influence in Italy.

By the end of the seventh century, the Byzantine regions of Italy had been through an entire century of turmoil. Following the Lombard invasions, the Byzantines militarized their remaining territories, concentrating land in the military and handing it to the Exarch of Ravenna and his dukes. This was accomplished at the local and regional levels, with the final phase being the establishment of military strongholds.3 With the inclusion of eastern clerics and artists throughout the kingdom of Italy, rather than just in Rome, Byzantine influence grew after the Lombards were formally recognized in 680. Eight of the nine pontiffs who sat in St. Peter between 676 and 715 were Greek, Syrian, or Sicilian. The emperor sought the assistance of the pope because political and religious stability depended on it. Since that meant imperial authority in Rome, Rome enjoyed further prestige from this association. Resistance against the Lombards was successful and was accomplished by placing power in the hands of local elites from imperial garrison units. Threats from the Arabs, Bulgars, and Slavs weakened the empire, making the role of the eastern exarch less important. The conversion of the Lombards from barbarians to Romanized Catholics weakened the loyalty given to the empire.

The Duchy of Naples included the Bay of Naples' coasts and islands, as well as the inland Terra di Lavoro and the towns of Sorrento, Amalfi, and Gaeta. Its institutions followed the traditional Italian model, with power and wealth concentrated in a military-based elite. Naples' allegiance to the empire was greater than that of the northern provinces. The need for imperial help was due to its maritime relations with the east and the need for imperial protection against the ever-present threat of Lombard Benevento. The fall of Ravenna in 751 had little impact on the duchy since it had fallen under the authority of the strategos of the theme of Sicily. The Arab invasion of Sicily in 827 was the turning point in the detachment of Naples from the empire. In 835, Duke Andrew employed Muslim mercenaries to battle Prince Sicard of Benevento (833-839), and in 842 and 843, he assisted the Muslims in capturing Messina from the empire. This alliance strengthened Naples, allowing them to sign a crucial treaty with the Lombards in 836. Later, in order to prevent attacks from Muslim strongholds such as Taranto, the Neapolitans strengthened their relations with the Saracens. Byzantium's cultural and economic presence was enormous, according to evidence, and included imports of eastern pottery. Gaeta grew in importance as a communication hub in the north. Gaeta occasionally operated independently of Naples and was forced to change its policies toward Muslims. To the south was the non-Roman city of Amalfi, which was populated by Lombard refugees. It was a naval base by the eighth century, and it was used in wars with the Lombards, Franks, and Arabs. Following a raid by Prince Sicard of Benevento in 839, Amalfi gained independence from Naples under its own leaders. Despite the fact that the Greek aspect was not as strong as Naples' and that its foreign policy was independent of the empire, its trade relations with the east became increasingly important.

Calabria was the name given to a late Roman civilian province that bordered on the Terra d'Otranto. The imperial territory faced a crisis in the middle of the seventh century, with the civilian government dispersing and breaking down as the Lombard dukes of Benevento seized vast regions. This resulted in a late seventh-century institutional reorganization. Due to immigration from Greece and Sicily, this time marked a turning point in both areas' Hellenization. From written history, little is known about the duchy during this time period. The position of the duchy became clearer only after Nikeophoros Phokas conquered Lombard Calabria in 885-886.

In contrast to the upheaval evident in most Byzantine areas on the Italian peninsula, Sicily occupied a more prominent position within the imperial plans beginning in the seventh century. The island of Sicily rose to prominence as a naval base for countering Muslim advances from North Africa. In the early 690s, Justinian III turned it into a theme. Its strategos came to rule over imperial territories in southern Italy, and after the exarchal government fell in 751, he became a key figure in negotiations with the Franks, Lombards, and the papacy. The influx of officials and soldiers from the east quickened the Hellenization process. Emperor Leo III was able to realize the island's economic, political, and military importance. Sicily was one of the regions that was transferred to the patriarchal authority of Constantinople. Due to this, the Latin element disappeared and the process of Hellenization was reinforced. Nonetheless, by the eighth century, unrest was on the rise. One reason for this was the downturn in the economy. The increasing number of Arab raids had a detrimental impact on the island’s prosperity.

Sicily, unlike its mainland counterparts such as Ravenna, Rome, and Naples, lacked a central power base and an independent military elite. As a result, the populace's response to the upheavals of the 820s was varied and, in some respects, passive. A largely Arab army landed in the western port of Mazara in June 827 and defeated the Byzantine strategos Plato soon after. After defeating Palermo in 831, Cefalù in 857, and Enna in 859, the Arabs gradually expanded their influence over the island. The critical misfortune occurred when the capital Syracuse collapsed after a nine-month siege, and the city's population was massacred.

Byzantium's status in Italy had shifted dramatically over two centuries, from a precarious position in 680 to the verge of a new era of power and influence in the late ninth century. Traditional imperial rule only worked with the aid of a coherent Hellenization mechanism in the theme of Sicily and associated duchies of Calabria and Otranto. However, in every region, developments were shaped by the decentralization that began in the seventh century, and distinguishing practices and institutions that were more often Roman than strictly Byzantine remained influential. The destruction caused by Arab raids, as well as Frankish political and military failures, bolstered Byzantium's status. The reconquest of most of the Lombard territory in Apulia, Calabria, and Lucania, including Bari and Taranto, retaken in 876 and 880, began a new period of Byzantine dominance in southern Italy.

Around the year 900, there was a significant shift in terms of southern Italy's security and independence from external powers. This transition was brought about for three main reasons. The resurgence of Byzantine influence in the late ninth century, under the governorship of Nikephoros Phokas in the 880s, was the most notable. The Byzantines had retaken most of northern Calabria and consolidated their control over southern Apulia. The second reason was that the areas of southern Italy not under Byzantium's rule were more stable. Third, following the Arab capture of Taormina, the last major Byzantine stronghold in Sicily, in 902, Arab leader Ibrahim ‘Abd-Allah died the same year, effectively ending any Arab advance from Sicily. The system of southern Italy remained largely in a state of equilibrium from 900 onwards. The main problem for the Byzantine government in Calabria and Apulia following 915 was local disillusionment.10 While there was some back-and-forth between the Byzantines and the Lombards, the Byzantines were able to keep much of the territory they had reclaimed in the 880s. Unlike the autonomous factions in southern Italy, Byzantium was the dominant power. They had more pressing concerns in Asia Minor, so the protection of their Italian possessions was left to the locals. Since neither the Lombards nor the Byzantines were able to make permanent encroachments, the south was mostly at a standstill.

Amalfi, Naples, and Gaeta, the three duchies off the west coast, were quite different from the Lombard territories. These three duchies' economies were based on trade. Amalfi was the most affluent of the three coastal cities in southern Italy. In the ninth and early tenth centuries, they refrained from military confrontations with the Arabs because trade was so important to them. In certain cases, they even helped the Arabs. Due to their proximity to the Lombard territories, these three territories were almost always under the patronage of the Byzantine Empire.12 In the 980s and 990s, the Arab attacks resumed. These Muslim raids reached all the way to Apulia. According to legend, Prince Guiamar III welcomed a party of pilgrims from Normandy after this series of raids. He allowed them to stay because he was impressed by their military prowess, and this marked the beginning of the Norman presence in southern Italy.

The Normans left much of the Byzantine infrastructure in place when they first conquered southern Italy. The religious activities of Greek churches were permitted to continue. In the territories, the Normans encountered a Byzantine Italy with a combination of Latin and Byzantine influences. The influx of newcomers from the north into Calabria and Sicily had a major effect on southern Italy, as Hellenic influences were gradually choked. The loss of relations between Byzantine Italy and the Byzantine heartland harmed Byzantine culture. This occurred gradually because the Normans didn't have a strategy of eradicating Byzantine influence; rather, it happened as a result of their invasion.

The "Cappella Palatina" was built in 1143 by the Normans in Palermo, the capital of their "Kingdom of Sicily".It is the most wonderful of the Norman Roger's churches, with Norman doors, Saracenic arches, Byzantine dome, and roof adorned with Arabic scripts; and it is perhaps the most striking product of the brilliant and mixed civilization over which the grandson of the Norman Trancred ruled. 1911 British Encyclopedia.


Islamic Sicily

After the prophet Muhammad passed away in 632, the Muslim umma began their campaign to spread both the message of Islam and to conquer land. By 731, the Arabs had successfully reached the Iberian Peninsula by moving westward from Egypt through the Maghreb and conquering much of the land. By this point, the Arabs controlled most, if not all of, North Africa. Towards the beginning of the ninth century (third Islamic century), all of the conquered lands had united and become one empire underneath one universally accepted authority. While each land was still ruled by its individual rulers, they had all agreed upon serving the caliph and every major decision including war had to receive his blessing before they entered or started a war. However, the Islamic nation or umma was both politically and religiously divided with many viewing the caliph in Baghdad as no longer the legitimate ruler.15 This caused the umma to divide and separate based on their own inner religious issues. Ultimately, this led to many of these territories appointing their own caliphs and pledging allegiance to them instead of the one in Baghdad.

Leading Up to the Invasion

In the Middle Ages, during the 8th to 12th centuries, Sicily was viewed as a coveted possession of Islam and was no stranger to invasions and conquests. Its position in the Mediterranean Sea was seen as a strategic one and it was sought after by many civilizations during the classical period and the Middle Ages. During the ninth century, the Aghlabids (a dynasty of Arab princes ruling the Ifriqiya province) had set their sights on Sicily. During this time, the province ruled by the Aghlabids faced a series of domestic problems including a violent insurrection.16 While this insurrection was put down by the princes, it created a feeling of residual resentment towards the royals among the army factions. With this feeling of resentment growing, many took advantage of it including the Berbers who felt as though there were clear social and economic inequalities between the governors and the governed.

In 827, Ziyat Allah had been contacted by Euphemius, a rogue admiral in the Byzantine empire, who told him that Byzantine forces were holding some Arab soldiers hostage. If this were true, it would break the peace treaty the Aghlabids and Byzantines had signed together. The only catch was that Ziyat Allah had to help Euphemius overthrow his enemies within the Byzantine forces. When presented with this idea, he had to keep in mind the host of domestic issues happening around it, especially the feeling of resentment towards the elite in society. But he understood that engaging in war with the Byzantines would help shift the focus away from the slew of domestic problems he had going on. Ziyat Allah also understood that Sicily would bring some exciting new prospects including a renewed commercial success as well as military ventures. By invading Sicily, it would give the army some work to do and keep them away from the rebellion that was growing. Keeping all of this in mind, Ziyat Allah decided to invade the island.

The Invasion

Sicily was heavily guarded and considered a prized possession by its current rulers, so it was understandable that the invasion met with strong resistance. In fact, in the beginning, Muslim forces lost the majority of the battles that they had fought in. However, when they did enter battle, they were able to patch up lingering differences which led to Constantinople sending reinforcements to help the Arabs invade Sicily. Without these reinforcements, their conquest wouldn’t have been as successful as it was. In short, internal dissention in the Byzantine Empire played an important role in the Arab conquest of Sicily.

During the invasion, there were definitely visible differences in both independence and leadership within the armies. These differences would lead to a strained relationship between the Muslims in Sicily versus the ones in North Africa. Death was often common in these conquests and many military leaders would die in battle. When these leaders died, the army selected their successors, which the leaders in North Africa didn’t like. This practice became a point of contention between the two groups. If a military leader was chosen and sent by the leaders in North Africa, there was a chance that the new leader would be rejected, which speaks to the growing independent thinking among the troops.

During the invasion of Sicily, the Muslim troops were able to capture territories that were key to the Byzantine Empire, which led to their ultimate victory. The first key city the Muslims were able to capture was Palermo. The capture of Palermo led to the establishment of a Muslim capital in Sicily and its vicinity to the ocean helped it gradually develop into an urban center along with the other already established Muslim centers. Another key city the Muslims were able to capture was Castrogiovanni. This city was where Byzantine headquarters were located. Once it had been captured, Muslim armies had pressed on eastward, a path that eventually led to the downfall of Byzantine Sicily.

Muslim Sicily

There was a growing divide between the Muslims living in Sicily and the rulers in the Ifriqiyan province. Many groups tried to take advantage of this, including the Fatimids. The Fatimids were a group of Shiites who claimed to be descendants of Fatima and Ali. The Fatimids called for economic, social, and religious reform and addressed concerns regarding Aghalbid rule.17 Understanding the current political climate they were in, they were able to use the Aghlabids’ corruption and abuse of power to their advantage and succeeded in stifling the Aghlabids’ last attempt at reform.

Once they were thrust into power, the Fatimids were able to maintain the Aghalbid-Sicilian jihad conquest and used this to their advantage. They were also able to manipulate the use of jihad in order to serve their own interests. They were able to accomplish this in three ways. Since the Fatimids were ruling a majority Sunni area, they were conscious enough to give credit to the Sunni caliph whenever there was a Muslim victory in Sicily.

They had also praised the Sicilian Muslims and promised to continue supporting their campaign in Sicily. This made sure that they kept the Sicilian Muslims happy, which allowed the Fatimids to stay in power. Finally, they appealed to the Sicilians due to their anti-Aghlabid campaign. By doing so, it allowed the Sicilian Muslims to see that the Fatimids were the opposite of their previous rulers, which helped the Fatimids establish a Shi’ite caliph. While their rule was not illegitimate, it had an impact on Sicily’s Muslim community, who in response held elections to select their own rulers.

In 912, Sicilian Muslims did just that when they elected Ibn Qurhub as their ruler. Ibn Qurhab was initially hesitant to accept the position to rule and only did so when he received the full support of both the Fatimids and the Aghlabids. During his rule, he raided Christian towns and even created tensions between the Fatimids and the Aghlabids by swearing allegiance to the caliph in Baghdad. This conflict resulted in his death in 914.

During the Kalbid period in Sicily (948-1053), Muslims succeeded in completing a jihad campaign and this provided some political and social stability. During this period, there was evidence of a shift in focus from a jihadist campaign to active support for culture and learning. This is evident from the Sicilian works of Islamic jurisprudence which helped confirm the island’s connection to North Africa. There were also works focusing on the Arabic language and its subfields, opening up the possibility for language studies. It also led to the field of poetry coming in at a rapid pace.

After this growth and stability came a decline with the rule of Jafar Ibn Yusuf in 1014. During his rule, his own brother rebelled with the help of slaves and Berbers, which led to the expulsion of all Berbers from the island. There were rumors of misconduct surrounding Ibn Yusuf and, seeing the chaos that ensued during this rule, the Zirid princes decided that it was an opportunity to rip control away from the Fatimids.18 Under their rule, Sicily was able to thrive once again. The Zirid princes helped bring military and political prestige both in Sicily and their own court. They also allowed for co-existence and interdependence between the province and the motherland which was not an option with other rules. By ruling Sicily, they were also given ample opportunity of wealth in terms of both land and resources it provided. It also opened up new trading avenues and routes to gain more capital.

Final Days of Arab Sicily

The Arabs contributed much to the formation of Sicily and, thanks to them, Sicily became powerful in that era. The Arabs came to Sicily and, in the beginning, there was a great deal of prosperity and a relatively peaceful coexistence with other religions and ethnic groups. The Normans initiated campaigns of destabilization and took advantage of political fissures that had appeared in the Muslim world. These strategies had a destabilizing effect and enabled them to conquer the island during thirty years of brutal campaigns.

The Arabs brought their innovations and knowledge to Sicily and it shaped it to be a prosperous peaceful era. The island of Sicily was fully conquered by Arabs in the 9^th^century and, with the notable exception of the Orthodox Christian population in the northeast of the island, many Sicilians converted to Islam. Just like the Moors - the Arabs who conquered Spain - they brought an intellectual tradition to Sicily.

Sicily under the Arabs witnessed a growing influence of Islamic culture that emanated from Qayrawān (a town in modern-day Tunisia). The Arabs who became the majority in Sicily wanted to expand their religion into the people and their government. Their control of seaports was critical to communication and trade. They played a vital role in Sicily’s economic prosperity.

The division and resentments between Christians and the Muslim authorities would resume. First the Byzantines failed many times to take back Sicily with many Arab military victories over them. Ultimately, however, the Christians again became the majority and the Muslims community declined. The hostilities with the Byzantine Empire were costly and this helps explain why the island was able to be conquered again in the eleventh century, this time by western European Christians.

The Arab Muslims who ruled Sicily for two centuries would lose control of the island to a group of warlords from Normandy. The Normans were skilled soldiers who were Christians and they would promote the spread of their religion while taking control of the trade routes and communications that had been under Muslim control. As the Normans came to dominate the island, however, an Arabic-speaking Muslim population would continue to exist on the island until 1220, when Emperor Frederick II exiled them to a colony at Lucera, located on the mainland in what today is Puglia.

Statue of Roger II, creator of the "Kingdom of Sicily". This famous norman warrior was King of Sicily and Africa, son of Roger I of Sicily and successor to his brother Simon. He began his rule as Prince of Salerno & Count of Sicily in 1105, became Duke of Apulia and Calabria in 1127, then King of Sicily in 1130 and King of Africa in 1148.
Conclusion

Each of the three societies discussed in this essay had a significant impact on Sicily and Southern Italy well before the Normans’ arrival.

The Lombards were able to create a stronghold on the island and were also able to overcome a civil war that, at least temporarily, resulted in a larger Arab population in the region. The Lombards also enabled certain areas under their control to flourish.

The Byzantines, on the other hand, had a huge impact Sicilian culture, which should not surprise us since they ruled the area for a long period of time. One of the most important relationships created at this time was the one between the Byzantine Empire and the papacy. This relationship helped the Byzantines with the invasions from other empires while the pope was able to gain greater influence. The Byzantines also militarized their territories - including Sicily - creating a much stronger island.

The Arabs, too, left an important legacy to Sicily by bringing with them, among other things, a rich cultural and intellectual heritage - a tradition that included art, architecture, poetry, language and even farming techniques. the Muslim population but also growing poetry and language studies at a rapid pace.

To conclude, when the Normans arrived in Sicily and Southern Italy, they were fortunate to be able to draw on the experience and knowledge of accomplished societies that had come before them as they created a new state in a diverse, multicultural landscape.

Thursday, January 2, 2025

LONGOBARD SALERNO

History of Salerno (in southern Italy) when was under the Longobards during the Middle Ages

The "Longobard Salerno" was the historical period of Lombards (or Longobards) domination in the city of San Matteo (as is often called Salerno), which lasted from the seventh century to a few years before the thirteenth century.

Image showing the longobard castle "Terracena" of Salerno. The palace (destroyed by a very strong earthquake in the thirteenth century) is shown as it appears in a miniature of the Canon of Avicenna. The image represents the story (perhaps legendary) of Robert, Duke of Normandy. Mortally wounded by an arrow, he was heroically saved by his Lombard wife (Sichelgaita of Salerno) who sucked the poison as prescribed by the doctors of the "Schola Medica Salernitana"


INTRODUCTION

«"It is known that the city of Salerno was, in this era, the Athens of Italy."...a phrase written by the famous numismatist Giulio Cordero di San Quintino (1778-1857) way back in 1841, but which still retains all its relevance today: "On sait que la ville de Salerne étoit, à cette époque, l’Athènes de l’Italie" Raffaele Lula»


Salerno was conquered for the first time by the Longobards of Prince Arechi I in 620 AD and from then for five centuries until 1077 the city of San Matteo was dominated by a minority of Germanic origin, which left an indelible mark on it. With the Principality of Salerno of Guaimario IV, Salerno became "de facto"[3] the capital of the entire southern Italian continent, unified for the first time since the end of the Roman Empire.

Furthermore, Longobard Salerno had the first "university" of medicine in Europe, the famous "Salerno Medical School", where for the first time women participated as the Mulieres Salernitanae: among the prominent personalities of the mulieres Salernitanae are handed down the names of the Lombards Trotula de Ruggiero, Rebecca Guarna and Abella Salernitana.

Salerno was also the only Longobard territory in Italy to develop a fleet for trade in the Mediterranean: in 1058 a "privilegium mercaturae" granted by Prince Gisulfo II of Salerno also attests to the birth of a free market connected with maritime activities. It should also be remembered that ships from Salerno took part in the capture of Mahdia, in present-day Tunisia: in the second half of the year 1000, Mahdia, then governed by the Zirid vassals of the Fatimids, was repeatedly attacked, and briefly conquered, by Genoa and Pisa with the help of Salerno, Amalfi and Gaeta, but the attack did not have lasting effects

The longobard prince of Salerno Guaimario IV (1027-1047) in his 20 years of rule was able to dominate all continental southern Italy

HISTORY

Salerno - despite being in the coastal center of the Campania region - has always had northern "origins" in its History: it was founded by the Romans in an Etruscan territory

Unlike nearby Naples which was founded by the Greeks and then dominated by the Byzantines, "Roman" Salerno became "Longobard" in the seventh century, having a Romanized population with a large Germanic minority when Arechi II founded the Principality of Salerno in 774 AD.

Scholars such as Ajello estimate that in the eighth century in Salerno over a third of the population still spoke the Longobard language mixed considerably with neo-Latin words and phrases. Professor Ajello states that in Salerno in that century out of a population of about 6,000 inhabitants, over 2,500 were Lombards. And they were concentrated in the upper district of the historic center of Salerno, on the hill where the Castle of Arechi was located.

It should also be remembered that many Lombard refugees took refuge in Salerno and its surroundings - perhaps a thousand, according to Ajello, but other scholars (such as D'Ambrosio) believe there were double - who, with their families, fled from northern Italy conquered by Charlemagne's Franks.

«Arechi II welcomed the Lombard refugees coming from the north (conquered by the Franks) giving them lands in these two areas (around his castrum of Salerno). In these territories there are rural churches dedicated to Saints whose cult was very widespread in Langobardia Maior and foreign to the southern regions: in the Giffoni countryside, about ten km from Salerno, we find Sant’Ambrogio, San Vittore and Santa Tecla; in Nocera another church of Sant’Ambrogio and a small chapel dedicated to Saints Nazario and Celso in Bracigliano near Rota (Mercato San Severino), probable evidence of the colonizing activity developed in these areas G.L>>


After a long struggle between the Byzantines and the Lombards that began around 620 AD, in 646 the city finally fell into the hands of the latter as part of the Duchy of Benevento, although the evidence of Lombard presence, already starting from the 6th century, is confirmed by the discovery of a tomb, in the archaeological complex of San Pietro a Corte, of a little girl named Teodonanda, who died on 27 September 566.
With the advent of Lombard domination, the city experienced the richest and most famous period of its history, which lasted more than five centuries.

In 774 the prince of Benevento Arechi II decided to move his court to Salerno, which was populated by many Lombard families. The city gained importance and numerous works were built, including the sumptuous palace, of which traces remain scattered throughout the historic center. This palace (now almost completely disappeared) was a building next to the "Palatine Chapel" (Church of San Pietro a Corte).

A few decades later, in 849, the Principality of Salerno became independent from Benevento, acquiring the territories of the Principality of Capua, northern Calabria and Puglia up to Taranto.

«Ludovico II, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, sponsored the agreement to divide the Lombard Mezzogiorno into two distinct principalities, with Benevento and Salerno as capitals. The text of the agreement, dated between 12 May 848 and December 849, recalls the imperial authority......Siconolfo obtained a series of "loca et gastaldata", which outline an area coinciding with the Tyrrhenian and southern strip of the ancient Benevento duchy, from Cosenza, Cassano and Taranto in the South to Sora in the North Treccani»


Furthermore, the mint of Salerno began minting coins around 851, the year of the foundation of the principality following the struggles for succession to the throne of Benevento between Siconolfo and Radelchi[11]. The minting of coins in the city continued uninterruptedly even in the Norman era until the mint was suppressed in 1198 by order of Constance of Altavilla.

DOMINION OF THE CONTINENTAL SOUTH OF ITALY

Starting with Prince Siconolfo, who titled himself "Langobardorum gentis princeps", Salerno became the capital of a principality that came to control with Guaimatio III and Guaimario IV all of continental southern Italy.

In fact, with Prince Guaimario III (who ruled from 994 to 1027), Salerno entered a phase of great splendor, as evidenced by the inscription Opulenta Salernum engraved on the coins of the time. He was responsible for reducing the cities of Amalfi, Gaeta and Sorrento to vassals of the Principality of Salerno and for the annexation of many of the Byzantine possessions in Puglia and Calabria.

But it was his successor, Guaimar IV, who achieved the greatest dominion by occupying the Aspromonte of southern Calabria and building a Lombard fort at Squillace, thus driving the Byzantines from the Italian peninsula for the first time since the Gothic Wars.

He also became Duke of Puglia and Calabria in 1042, but in 1047 Emperor Henry III officially disauthorized him, starting the crisis that would lead to his death and the end of the Principality of Salerno a few decades later.

However, Guaimar's legacy included dominions over Salerno, Amalfi, Gaeta, Melfi, Puglia, Calabria and alternately over Capua. Furthermore, John V, Duke of Naples, declared himself a "vassal" of Prince Guaimar in 1039 and remained faithful to him throughout his reign.

Map showing the Principate of Salerno under Guaimario IV, when reached the biggest extention
He was undoubtedly the last great Lombard prince of southern Italy and according to some historians the best ever.

What earned him so much favour was above all his character, which the historian John Julius Norwich sums up by writing that "throughout his life he had to fight against the unscrupulous ambitions [of his rivals], and he did so without ever breaking his word or failing in his commitments. Until his death, his honour and his good faith were never tarnished". Other reasons were his political intelligence, the papal favour and initially the imperial favour of the West, but especially the sword of his faithful Norman mercenaries.

In 1077 the last Lombard prince, Gisulfo II son of Guaimar IV, was forced to surrender Salerno to the Normans of Robert Guiscard and with his death in 1091 (after having been "Duke of Amalfi" for only one year in 1089) the Lombard era in Italy definitively ended.

THE LONGOBARD - NORMAN SALERNO

The population of Salerno - which had about 35,000 inhabitants at the end of the 11th century, according to De Simone - remained under the dominion of the large Lombard-Salerno minority even after 1077. In fact, Guiscard's wife was the Lombard Sichelgaita, who had a lot of influence on her husband.

«Between 1058 and 1072 Sichelgaita accompanied her husband (Robert Guiscard) on his repeated trips to Calabria, Puglia and Sicily, where she accompanied him during the capture of Palermo, torn from the Arabs. On January 14, 1072, after entering the city, she attended the mass celebrated in the church of S. Maria. In the winter of 1076-77, after breaking the alliance with Gisulfo, Guiscard laid siege to Salerno, which was finally conquered. In this situation, which saw her husband opposing his brother, Sichelgaita found herself in a situation of evident tension and perhaps played, at least according to the sources, a role of mediator between the contenders.... She wrested from her husband the promise - later revealed to be impossible to keep - to leave Salerno to Gisulfo, entrusting Amalfi to their firstborn son Ruggero. During the siege - again according to Amato's account - Sichelgaita received requests for help from her fellow citizens of Salerno and from her own relatives, making sure that food and drink reached them.... Sichelgaita also participated in the battle of Durazzo (in Albania) on 18 October 1081 and in the victorious siege of the city of Treccani»


It should also be noted that the Normans were not a people like the Lombards, but a group of mercenary warriors from Northern Europe, who on a few occasions moved to southern Italy with their respective families. And in many cases they married Lombard girls in Salerno (as in the case of Guiscardo with Sichelgaita): for this reason many scholars affirm that from 1077 there was still a "Lombard" Salerno, at least partially and for another century until the thirteenth century.

After the end of the Principality of Salerno, many Salernitans of Lombard origin joined the Normans in their conquests: Salerno became the capital of the unified southern Italy under the Normans, who also conquered Muslim Sicily.

Siege of the Salernitans to the Empress Costanza in the Castel Terracena. Note that all the civilians have brown-blond hair, a sign that those in favor of the Norman Tancred were of Lombard descent<>br/>
Salerno grew in importance in the 12th century thanks to the construction of its cathedral and the growth in international fame of its "Medical School", which also had the Garden of Minerva considered the forerunner of European botanical gardens by UNESCO.

In the years 1105-1110 the English philosopher-scientist Adelard of Bath, author of the "Quaestiones naturales", visited the school, where we have the greatest flowering of treatises and authors. The physician Constantine the African (born in the Arab Ifrīqiya) also arrived in Salerno and lived in the city for several years and translated many texts from Arabic such as the Aphorisma and the Prognostica of Hippocrates

«There are four cities that excel above the others: Paris in the sciences, Salerno in medicine, Bologna in law and Orleans in the acting arts. Thomas Aquinas in "De virtutibus et vitiis"»


The Regimen Sanitatis Salernitanum is internationally considered the most famous treatise produced by the School; the work, in Latin verse, is a collection of hygienic rules, placed at the foundation of its doctrine elaborated entirely in Lombard Salerno

Although it is commonly dated around the 12th century, some sources claim that the "Regimen" dates back to 1050. The work, dedicated to an unidentified Rex Anglorum (probably Robert II, Duke of Normandy and pretender to the throne of England, who was in Salerno in 1099, returning from the first crusade), sets out the indications of the School for everything concerning hygiene rules, food, herbs and their therapeutic indications. The author is unknown and it is probably a collective work even if some attribute it to the Lombard John of Milan, who was a disciple of Constantine the African.

But in 1130 the Normans of the son of Guiscard (Roger II) founded the "Kingdom of Sicily" and moved the capital of their dominions from Salerno to Palermo. This fact was much criticized by the Lombards of Salerno, by now assimilated into the population of the city. Consequently many citizens of Salerno moved to Palermo, determining the first beginning of the decline in importance of Salerno, which in a few decades completely collapsed and was even destroyed by the German emperor Henry VI in May 1194.

In fact, in 1191, Emperor Henry VI descended into Italy to block the attempt of the Norman Tancred to emancipate himself from the Holy Roman Empire. While besieging Naples, he fell ill (probably from malaria) along with his wife Constance of Hauteville whom he sent to Salerno (until then faithful to him) to be treated by the famous doctors of the "Schola medica". Henry himself fell seriously ill; then Henry of Welf, who was also participating in the siege of Naples, deserted to Germany, and falsely claimed that the emperor was dead and passed himself off as a possible successor. Although Henry VI recovered, the imperial army was forced to withdraw entirely from Italy. Constance remained in Salerno with a small garrison as a sign that Henry VI would soon return

Once Henry had withdrawn with most of the imperial army, the cities that had fallen to the Empire immediately declared their allegiance to Tancred, most now fearing his retribution. The Salernitan Nicholas of Ajello, former archbishop of Salerno, who was helping to defend Naples, wrote letters about the events to his friends and relatives in Salerno. So the people of Salerno saw an opportunity to gain some favors from Tancred (possibly even making Salerno the "capital" again) by taunting and besieging the defenseless Constance at Castel Terracena. Constance appeared on a balcony and spoke to them in a tone of mild remonstrance and admonition, trying to tell them that the situation could improve and that Henry VI's defeat could be exaggerated by Nicholas, but the people of Salerno were determined to capture her for Tancred, and so they continued the siege. Constance locked herself in her room, locked the windows, and prayed to God for help and vengeance. After a quick negotiation with Elia di Gesualdo, a distant relative of Tancred, Constance voluntarily left on the condition that her German guards were allowed to leave unharmed. She was then arrested by Elia (and some barons of Puglia who were related to her) and handed over to Tancred in Messina

But the revenge of Henry VI, when he returned to Salerno in the spring of 1194, was terrible and cruel: he destroyed the city without mercy for all the citizens, especially massacring the supporters of the Norman Tancred who were almost all of Lombard origin in Salerno.

«the real beginning of the decline of Salerno can be traced back to a precise date: May 17, 1194, when the emperor Henry VI, to take revenge on the inhabitants of the city who had imprisoned and handed over to his rival Tancredi, two years earlier, his wife, the empress Constance of Sicily, besieged it: the attempts of the archdeacon Aldrico[19] to convince the inhabitants to ask for the emperor's forgiveness were useless, the people of Salerno resisted. At that point, the fate of the city was sealed: Henry had it stormed by his troops, had it sacked and its inhabitants massacred. Pietro da Eboli described the scene in dramatic tones: "the women were raped and the men were shot, the survivors were exiled and all their goods confiscated".....The emperor had the Lombard walls razed to the ground, and a good part of the city was destroyed. The consequences of those devastations will continue for a long time, as the documents show: in the deeds of sale and purchase of houses owned in the first half of the thirteenth century, the word “dirutum“, “in ruins”, is often found. The palace of Sichelgaita>>


Furthermore, it should be remembered that Salerno in the 11th and 12th centuries had a notable Jewish community in the area called "Giudecca" around the current Church of Santa Lucia de Judaica, which was the largest in southern Italy (having over six hundred members around 1167, according to Benjamin of Tudela and which was badly hit on this occasion. This presence had grown during the years of the "Opulenta Salernum" but practically disappeared in the decades following the attack of Henry VI, even if some Jews remained in the Ghetto of Salerno until 1541 when Charles V ordered the end of the Jewish presence in southern Italy dominated by the Spanish of the Inquisition).

LEGACY IN TODAY'S SALERNO

Something remains of the Lombard centuries in today's Salerno, from simple geographical terms such as "Lama", the name of a stream that runs through the historic center and which takes its name from the Lombard word "lama" which means "stream" in Italian to architectural structures of great importance such as the original Cathedrale and the Castle of Arechi (which takes its name from the Lombard prince of the same name

Moreover, there are more than a dozen churches in Salerno of Lombard origin, the most famous being those of San Massimo and Sant'Andrea de Lavina. And there are the best (and fragmentary) testimonies of Lombard painting present in Salerno in the church of Santa Maria de Lama.

The remains of Castel Terracena and the Lombard archaeological complex of San Pietro a Corte are, in absolute terms, the only archaeological testimony of palatial architecture from the Lombard era remaining in central-southern Italy.

Panel of the Salerno Ivories -preserved at the Diocesan Museum of Salerno- depicting "The Nativity" and "The Flight into Egypt"
In Salerno there are currently two masterpieces of art of international level, according to Professor Ajello: the "Crypt" of San Matteo of the Cathedral and the Salerno Ivories. These ivories were most likely commissioned by the Lombard archbishop Alfano during the consecration of the Cathedral of Salerno in 1084. Due to their almost completeness and excellent state of preservation, they represent the most important ivory decorative cycle in the world. And they are exhibited for the most part in the local Diocesan Museum, but unfortunately some are scattered around the world (in the Louvre in Paris, the Metropolitan Museum in New York, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the State Museums of Berlin (Staatlichen Museen zu Berlin) and the Hermitage in St. Petersburg

Finally, it should be remembered that the current Salernitans (especially those living in the historic center) are known for their somewhat "northern" mentality - being orderly and entrepreneurial, which differentiates them from the rest of the inhabitants of Campania. When there was the Covid 19 epidemic, for example, Salerno was the only southern city not to have problems with urban cleanliness.

Thursday, December 5, 2024

ITALIAN TRIPOLI (LIBYA)

This month I am going to research the "Italian Tripoli", capital of Italian Libya from 1911 to 1947. Italian Tripoli was the capital of "Italian Libya". During the early XX century the city of Tripoli was under Italian control for 3 decades, that lasted from 1911 until January 1943. Italians conquered the town of less than 20,000 inhabitants from the Ottoman empire and enlarged it in 1943 to a big city of nearly 120,000 "Tripolini" (more than half Italians), creating a vibrant and modern capital in north Africa.

The census of 1939 showed this population in Tripoli:
Town...... Italians....... Arabs........ Jews........ Total
Tripoli... 47,442......... 47,123...... 18,467......113,212

Italian Tripoli was at the center of Italian NorthAfrica in the "Greater Italy" during WW2 (borders in orange color).With Decree of 9 January 1939 the four provinces of Tripoli, Misurata, Benghazi and Derna were aggregated to the Kingdom of Italy, becoming an integral part of the Italian metropolitan territory.

History

During the Italo-Turkish War of 1911 Tripoli was conquered by the Italian Kingdom. The Italian fleet appeared off Ottoman Tripoli in the evening of September 28, 1911: the city was quickly conquered by 1,500 Italian sailors, welcomed by the population (https://archive.org/details/tripoliitalianal00mart/page/36/mode/2upTripoli inhabitants welcomed the Italians; p. 36-40). The huge jewish community of Tripoli was very supportived of the Italian occupation (http://archive.diarna.org/site/detail/public/1784/).

TRIPOLI ITALIANA: The Grand Hotel, built in the early 1930

With the 1912 treaty signed in Ouchy, Italian sovereignty was acknowledged by the Ottomans, although the local Caliph was permitted to exercise religious authority. Italy officially granted autonomy after the war, but gradually occupied the region of Tripolitania. Originally administered as part of a single colony, Tripoli and its surrounding province were a separate colony from 26 June 1927 to 3 December 1934, when all Italian possessions in North Africa were merged into one colony called ''Libia''.

Since 1937 the governor Italo Balbo started a policy of immigration of Italians (mainly farmers) who were called the Ventimilli and some of them settled in the area of Italian Tripoli (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N_jA9rzM1MsVideo of Italian settlers arriving in the port of Tripoli).

Fiat train "Littorina" at Tripoli station

So, by the end of 1937, the city had 108,240 inhabitants, including 39,096 Italians (according to The Statesman's Yearbook 1948. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 1040). At the start of WWII Italian Tripoli had 111,124 inhabitants of which the Italians were 41,304: 37% of the city's inhabitants. Additionally there were nearly 18,000 Jews in the Tripoli area. Indeed after the Italian occupation of Libya in 1911, the Jews made great strides in education and economic conditions: at that time, there were about 21,000 Jews in the country, the majority in Tripoli. In the late 1930s, Fascist anti-Jewish laws were gradually enforced, and Jews were subject to moderate repression: still, by late 1940 -due even to the partial rejection of those laws by governor Italo Balbo- the Jews accounted for a fifth of the population of Tripoli and maintained 44 synagogues.

In 1942 Tripoli -according to estimates of the Italian government (Istituto Agricolo Coloniale (Firenze); Ministero degli Esteri, 1946)- reached a temporary population of nearly 150,000 inhabitants, due to the arrival of many Italians from Benghazi and Cyrenaica who took refuge from the British army attacks during WWII. As a consequence Tripoli was in that year -for the first time since the Arab conquest in 643 AD- a city mostly Christian.

Fiera internazionale di Tripoli ("Tripoli International Fair") in 1939

Architectural and Urbanistic improvement of Italian Tripoli

Tripoli underwent a huge architectural and urbanistic improvement under Italian rule (http://www.fedoa.unina.it/1881/1/Santoianni_Progettazione_Architettonica.pdf Tripoli section: p. 54-59). The first thing the Italians did was to create in the early 1920s a sewage system (that until then lacked) with water & electrical facilities to all the city and a modern hospital. Also was started the creation of the modern port.

Furthermore, in the western section of Tripoli was created an industrial area in the 1930s, around a huge tobacco factory (called "Manufattura Tabacchi di Tripoli"), with railway workshops, Fiat Motor works, various food processing plants, electrical engineering workshops, ironworks, water plants, agricultural machinery factories, breweries, distilleries, biscuit factories, tanneries, bakeries, lime, brick and cement works.

Governor Balbo used to say that "We Italians found in 1911 a big village of approximately 20,000 inhabitants called Tripoli and now we have in 1940 a modern capital nearly ten times bigger and one of the most developed and vibrant cities of Africa". (photos of Tripoli: http://www.paolocason.eu/Viaggio%20a%20Tripoli.htm ).

In the coast of the province was built in 1937-1938 a section of the Litoranea Balbia, a road that went from Tripoli and Tunisia's frontier to the border of Egypt. The car tag for the Italian province of Tripoli was "TL" (Berionne, Michele. "Libia (1937-1943)" Italian car tags )

Furthermore the Italians - in order to promote Tripoli's economy - founded in 1927 the "Tripoli International Fair", which is considered to be the oldest Trade Fair in Africa (http://tripolifair.com/tripoli-international-fair/ Tripoli International Fair brief history). The so-called Fiera internazionale di Tripoli was one of the main international "Fairs" in the colonial world in the 1930s, and was internationally promoted together with the Tripoli Grand Prix as a showcase of Italian Libya(http://cronologia.leonardo.it/storia/a1937f.htm Filippo Giannini: Colonial Italy and Islam (in Italian).


Italian Tripoli's Via Generale De Bono in 1933

Indeed the Italians even created the "Tripoli Grand Prix", an international motor racing event first held in 1925 on a racing circuit outside Tripoli that lasted until 1940 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KEtz-wzbs9YVideo of Tripoli Grand Prix).Tripoli during the Grand Prix was visited by the elite tourism of the world and had even some "fashion" shops (https://www.pinterest.com/pin/187040190754209597/ Italian women walking near the Tripoli Castle in 1939).

The first airport in Libya, the "Mellaha Air Base" was built by the Italian Air Force in 1923 near the Tripoli racing circuit (actually is called "Mitiga International Airport"). The regular air services (with postal services) in Libya began in November 1928 with the first Rome-Syracuse-Tripoli air route, three times a week in winter, daily in summer, of the "Societa Anonima Navigazione Aerea (SANA)" airplanes. In the December of 1931 the "Società Nord Africa Aviazione (NAA)" inaugurated the Benghazi-Agedabia-Sirte-Tripoli line, which followed the coast line. With the absorption of the two companies from the ''Ala Littoria'' in 1935 the service continued on the same routes. From 4 April 1937 the Rome-Tunis line of Ala Littoria was extended to Tripoli; in 1938 the Air France opened a Marseilles-Tripoli line, then extended to Benghazi and Damascus. (www.academia.edu/2326842/ Le Poste italiane fuori dI'talia).

Tripoli had even a modern railway station with some small railway connections to nearby cities, when in August 1941 the Italians started to build a new 1,040 kilometres (646 miles) railway (with a 1,435 mm (56.5 in) gauge, like the one used in Egypt and Tunisia) between Tripoli and Benghazi. But the war -with the defeat of the Italian Army- stopped the construction the next year: only one hundred miles were created, but it was done also the project to connect this new railway with the borders of Tunisia & Egypt.


Banca d'Italia in 1932

Tripoli was controlled by Italy until 1943 when the provinces of Tripolitania and Cyrenaica were captured by Allied forces. The city fell to troops of the British Eighth Army on 23 January 1943 and the Italian colonists since then started to diminish (the following photo shows a family of farm colonists with British soldiers).

Tripoli was then governed by the British until independence in 1951. Under the terms of the 1947 peace treaty with the Allies, Italy relinquished all claims to Libya.

After WWII the era of international decolonization fostered a huge exodus of Italians from Tripoli (http://intranet.istoreto.it/esodo/parola.asp?id_parola=25https://books.google.com/books?id=ax0EpcZqeMkC&pg=PA12&lpg=PA12&dq=gheddafi+expulsion+of+italians&source=bl&ots=OYfkJX6Gd-&sig=7jgJ5We-toLe59m-eIyoYaBjjik&hl=en&sa=X&ei=PMEyVJnpE9C8ggSbzYGIBg#v=onepage&q=gheddafi%20expulsion%20of%20italians&f=false. Gaddafi expulsion of the Italians in 1970).

At present, the Libyan Italians are organized in the Associazione Italiani Rimpatriati dalla Libia (. http://www.airl.it Associazione Italiani Rimpatriati dalla Libia). The remaining "Tripolini" struggle to get their confiscated properties (http://www.airl.it/la-nostra-storia#eventistorici History of the Italian refugees from Gheddafi Libya) and even to maintain their Italian cemetery (www.corriere.it/esteri/16_aprile_10/cimitero-italiano-tripoli-sterpaglie-croci-divelte-devastazioni-70e3480c-ff61-11e5-a032-8e8dfe3b8a86.shtml Attacks on the Tripoli Italian Cemetery)

Infrastructures

Since the first years in Italian Tripoli were made many infrastructures by the Italians, even with the participation of the local arab "elite" (Journal of Libyan Studies 3, 1 (2002) p. 59-68: "Local Elites and Italian Town Planning Procedures in Early Colonial Tripoli (1911-1912)" by Denis Bocquet and Nora Lafi). The most important were the coastal road (called "Via Balbia" in honor of Italo Balbo after his death in 1940) between Tripoli and Benghazi and the railways Tripoli-Zuara, Tripoli-Garian and Tripoli-Tagiura.


The Cathedral of Tripoli (in the 1960s.

Other important infrastructures were the enlargement of the port of Tripoli with the addition of a seaplane facility and the creation of the Tripoli airport (later in the 1930s was added another "international" airport in nearby Castel Benito).

The first modern hospital in Tripoli was created by the Italians: the "Tripoli Central Hospital" main buildings that are standing now were built during the Italian administration of Libya in the 1910s. It was known then as L'Ospedale Coloniale di Vittorio Emanuele III (or Vittorio Emanuele III Colonial Hospital). The service during those days used to be headed by Italian doctors: notable among them was Tomaso Casoni (1880–1933) who practiced there from 1912 to 1932. He described there a test for diagnosing hydatid disease based on "dermal hypersensitivity", known internationally after him as the Casoni test. The original building is still standing and is occupied by the hospital's surgery department.

Since 1912 the Italian authorities started creating a "city plan", that was one of the first in the world to respect the ancient medieval city called "medina" (without demolitions of old buildings): it was decided to create a new modern city outside the Ottoman walls (http://www.fedoa.unina.it/1881/1/Santoianni_Progettazione_Architettonica.pdf Section: Tripoli, un centro di sperimentazione urbanistica e architettonica, p. 104). Tripoli city plan and architectural development by Italy). The city of Tripoli underwent a huge transformation in those years, with the creation of new avenues, squares, sea promenades and modern buildings like -to name a few worldwide famous- the modern "Palazzo delle Poste" and the "Palazzo Previdenza Sociale".

Lungomare Badoglio in 1940

From the central square "Piazza Italia", located just south of the old castle and medina, were created huge boulevards, like Corso Sicilia and Lungomare Badoglio (above is the photo of Lungomarfe Baxoglio in 1940), Corso Vittorio Emanuele III, Via Roma, Via Lazio, Via Piemonte and Via Lombardia around which new Italian-style modern buildings were developed. The buildings of the "Cassa di risparmio della Tripolitania" and of the "Banca d'Italia" were created as masterpieces of rationalist style (and are still used by the Central Bank of Libya).

In Tripoli was built in 1928 the biggest catholic cathedral of north Africa: the "Tripoli Cathedral". Italian government even restructured the ancient "Arch of Marcus Aurelius".

Indeed immediately after the Italian conquest, this Roman monument (related to M. Aurelius) received conservation and restoration work from the Italian administration, while the zone around the arch was reorganized by the Italian architect Florestano Di Fausto in the early 1930s. Governor Balbo gave Di Fausto in 1938 the task of designing the city plan of Italian Tripoli, and Di Fausto, nominated by Balbo chef of the "Commission for Urban Protection and Esthetics", with the main task of designing Tripoli's city plan, started to produce a stream of projects for Libya's capital: there the architect outlined the plan of Piazza Castello (the area around the Red Castle) and of the square around the Arch of Marcus Aurelius, in the Medina. Moreover, he erected public buildings, churches, markets, hotels, totaling fifteen works in few years(http://www.artefascista.it/tripoli__fascismo__architettu.htm Architecture in Tripoli created during Fascism Architecture in Tripoli created during Fascism).

"Piazza Italia" with Italian Renaissance style fountain and buildings

His masterpiece in Tripoli was the multifunctional center "Al Waddan" (hotel, swimming pools, casino, theater), characterized by a long row of arches parallel to today's Sharia al Fatah promenade: it was one of the predecessors of "modern malls". Indeed the actual Al Waddan opened in 1936 as the "Uaddan Hotel & Casino", just east of the Grand Hotel Tripoli (now destroyed as it was when originally built in 1925). Historically it was the grandest hotel in Tripoli and was referenced by an American journalist as being "the Waldorf Astoria of Tripoli" and was also named "a jewel of modern African architecture" (Segrè, Claudio G. Italo Balbo: A Fascist Life. University of California Press. p. 303. ISBN 978-0-520-07199-5). It contained a casino and a 500 seat theatre. Di Fausto also created the famous "Hotel Del Mehari", built in 1935 at the same time as the nearby Hotel Casinò Uaddan. According to Brian McLaren in his book Architecture and tourism in Italian colonial Libya (https://books.google.com/books?id=_lrYlxdX7DIC&pg=PA194#v=onepage&q&f=false), the (destroyed after WW2) Mehari hotel "provided a fusion of the indigenous architecture of Tripoli with a modern aesthetic that responded to the demand for a metropolitan standard of comfort, typical to colonial tourism" In all these works, the architect Di Fausto resumed his Romano-Greek experience, mixing with great virtuosity arabisant and novecento elements.

Even the modern futuristic "Church of Saint Francis" in downtown Tripoli was another work of art of him. The same residence of Governor Balbo was to become after WWII the "Royal Palace" of the Libya's king. Balbo even promoted the creation of an international airport at "Castel Benito" (now called Tripoli International Airport), connected by the first international flights in Africa to Italy and to Ethiopia's Addis Abeba. The Red Castle Museum was established in 1919, when the colonial Italians in Libya converted a section of the Tripoli's ancient castle to a museum to house many of the archaeological artifacts scattered across the country since prehistoric times. The square around the castle was designed in the thirties by architect Di Fausto as "Piazza Castello" and was integrated with nearby "Piazza Italia" and the disappeared "Lungomare Conte Volpi".

In 1939 was created the '7 October Stadium', a grass football stadium called initially "Stadio Comunale di Tripoli" and based in the center of the city. The stadium was initially made for 5,000 people and was used even for athletism and cyclism sports. It was the only football stadium in Tripoli before the June 11 Stadium was built in the 1970s.

The "Palazzo del Governatore" of Balbo, remodeled as Royal Palace in the 1950s

The Piazza Italia (now called Martyr's Square) featured on one side a wide avenue leading towards the seafront with two tall pillars. On top of the pillars still there are an iron-cast, miniature wooden ship on the norther corner, while the other one features a horseback rider. On the Piazza's other side there was the Teatro Miramare, called later Royal Miramare Theatre: it used to be located across from the Red Castle Museum, but it was demolished by Gaddafi's government after the 1960s to create space for large demonstrations. Another important building demolished by dictator Gheddafi was the Tripoli railway station, built in 1937. It was the only railway station in Africa served by the state-of-the-art "Littorina" (an Italian passenger train that obtained the world record of speed in 1939 with the model FS Class ETR 200).

Additionally, a group of villages for Italians and Libyans were created on the coastal tripolitania around Italian Tripoli during the 1930s. They were like satellite towns and interacted with Tripoli (http://www.qattara.it/balbia_files/Opere%20italiane%20in%20Africa.pdf Photos of Italian works in Libya and of the new villages created for Italians and Libyans). In 1939 the most important created and populated only by native arabs and berbers (who received by governor Italo Balbo the Italian citizenship in the newly created "Quarta Sponda" or "Fourth Shore of Italy") were: "El Fager" (al-Fajr, Alba in Italian language), "Nahima" (Deliziosa), "Azizia" (‘Aziziyya, Meravigliosa), "Nahiba" (Risorta), "Mansura" (Vittoriosa), "Chadra" (khadra, Verde), "Zahara" (Zahra, Fiorita), "Gedida" (Jadida, Nuova), "Mamhura" (Fiorente).

All the villages in the outskirts of Tripoli since 1939 were connected daily by bus service to the "Stazione centrale autobus" (one of the first central bus stations in north Africa), located in the square of the Tripoli Railway Station.


Corso Vittorio Emanuele in 1936

LINKS

1)"Atlante delle colonie italiane". Detailed Atlas of Italian colonies, written by Baratta Mario and Visintin Luigi in 1928 (https://historica.unibo.it/explore?bitstream_id=767002&handle=20.500.14008/78925&provider=iiif-image&viewer=mirador)
2)Italian senate photo archive: Tripoli (https://patrimonio.archivioluce.com/luce-web/search/result.html?query=&jsonVal=%7B%22jsonVal%22%3A%7B%22query%22%3A%5B%22tripoli+%22%5D%2C%22fieldDate%22%3A%22dataNormal%22%2C%22_perPage%22%3A20%7D%7D&activeFilter=temi&luoghi=%22Tripoli%22&activeFilter=luoghi)
3)Italo Balbo: LA COLONIZZAZIONE DEMOGRAFICA IN LIBIA (1939) ( http://epa.oszk.hu/02500/02510/00033/pdf/EPA02510_corvina_1939_04_281-291.pdfhttp://epa.oszk.hu/02500/02510/00033/pdf/EPA02510_corvina_1939_04_281-291.pdf )
4)Video of Tripoli in 1936 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7kU8WsW2Eiw)
5)Video of "Fiera di Tripoli" in 1939 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RTFIvuUb9eo)

Saturday, November 2, 2024

ITALIAN RODI

THe Kingdom of Italy conquered the Dodecanese islands during the 1911/1912 war against the Ottoman Empire.The main island of this Aegean sea's archipelago was the island of Rodi (called also "Rhodes" in english) with the capital (or main city) "citta' di Rodi". Here it is my research about this city and its island:

Surrender of the Turkish garrison in Rhodes near Psithos to the Italian general Giovanni Ameglio on 16 May 1912 (as appeared in the magazine "Domenica del Corriere" on June 1912)


The island of Rodi gradually declined during the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance centuries, as the result of pestilence, emigration, wars with harsh Turkish administration and also because later suffering severely during the War of Greek Independence (1821–29).

The Italians conquered an island in very bad conditions, without sewages and hospitals. But soon started to improve the island, mainly the capital.

With the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923 the Dodecanese (with Rodi) was officially annexed by Italy, as the ''Possedimenti Italiani dell'Egeo''.

The landing of Itaian troops in 1911 Rodi
In the 1930s Mussolini embarked on a program of "Italianization", hoping to make the island od Rodi a modern transportation hub that would serve as a focal point for the spread of Italian culture in Greece and Levant. The Fascist program did have some positive effects in its attempts to modernize the islands, resulting in the eradication of malaria, the construction of hospitals, aqueducts, a power plant to provide Rhodes' capital with electric lighting and the establishment of the Dodecanese Cadastre.

The main castle of the Knights of St. John was also rebuilt in Rodi city. The concrete-dominated Fascist architectural style integrated significantly with the islands' picturesque scenery (and also reminded the inhabitants of Italian rule), but has consequently been largely demolished or remodeled, apart from the famous example of the Leros town of Lakki, which remains a prime example of this architecture.

From 1923 to 1936 governor Mario Lago was able to integrate the Greek, Turkish and Ladino Jewish communities of the island of Rhodes with the Italian colonists, obtaining a so called "Golden Period" in the Italian Dodecanese with the economy and the society enjoying huge developments and harmony (https://www.dodecaneso.org/content/storia-egeo-1912-1943/ The "golden years" of governor Lago, in Italian).

From 1936 to 1940 Cesare Maria De Vecchi acted as governor of the Italian Aegean Islands promoting the official use of the Italian language and favoring a process of italianization, interrupted by the beginning of WWII.
In the 1936 Italian census of the Dodecanese islands, the total population was 129,135, of which 7,015 were Italians. Nearly 80% of the Italian colonists lived in the island of Rhodes, where there was an important Italian naval base. Aproximately 40,000 Italian soldiers and sailors were on military duty in the Dodecanese islands in 1940.

During World War II, Italy joined the Axis Powers, and used the Dodecanese as a naval staging area for its invasion of Crete in 1940. After the Armistice in September 1943, the islands briefly became a battleground between the Nazi Germans and the Italians. The Germans prevailed and although they were driven out of mainland Greece in 1944, the Dodecanese remained occupied until the end of the war in 1945, during which time nearly the entire Jewish population of 6,000 was deported and killed. Only 1200 of these Ladino speaking Jews survived, thanks to their lucky escape to the nearby coast of Turkey with some help from the Italian colonists of Rhodes.

There were 3 periods of the Italian presence in Rhodes: the first after the occupation in 1911 and until the treaty with the official annexation & Turkish renounce to the Dodecanese islands.; the second under Mario Lago rule and the third under the one of De Vecchi until the beginning of WW2.

Map of italian Dodecaneso in 1936
Three years later (1943), after the fall of Mussolini and the capitulation of Badolio, the Germans would take over the islands ending formally the Italian presence & rule on the islands after more than thirty years.

Actually the citadel of Rhodes city is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, thanks in great part to the large-scale restoration work done by the Italian authorities in what was "Rodi italiana" from 1912 to 1943.

Here there it is a resumen of two periods -under Lago & De Vecchi- when the Italian presence was very strong and noteworthy:

MARIO LAGO PERIOD (1923-1936)

During this period, there was a radical change in the nature of the Italian domination in the Dodecanese owing to the Italian de jure occupation and the ascend of Mussolini to power. We should also mention that the identification of this period with one person is nothing but coincidental. The governor had very broad legislative, administrative and judicatory jurisdiction.

This period is characterized by the attempt to Italianize the islanders. In fact, with the Royal Decree of December 15, 1925, the islanders were considered Italian citizens with Dodecanesian nationality and were not required to do military service. With the 1926 school regulation, the educational system changed: communal schools were no longer under the superintendence of the Orthodox Church, teaching the Italian language became mandatory and a School for teacher training would also be founded. In 1929, studying – or post-graduate studies – at the University of Pisa became mandatory for the exercise of a profession requiring university studies. That was also accompanied by scholarships for Dodecanesian students. Similarly, they intervened in Church affairs with an unsuccessful attempt to found an autonomous Church of the Dodecanese and reinforce the position of the Roman Catholic Church. The Italians introduced in the Dodecanese the fascist youth organizations, while they intended to Italianize names. To a great extent, those measures were aimed at forming and imposing an Italian Dodecanesian identity in juxtaposition to the Greek.

A series of legislative regulations dealt a crushing blow to the traditional agricultural economy (still in the Middle Ages!) of the islands, such as the 1924 forestall law, which imposed numerous restraints on cultivation privileges and made appropriating land from the State easier. This deteriorated farmers’ position and often led to their proletarianization.

Save rebuilding the economy with the invasion of Italian businesses, Italian planning was mostly aimed at developing tourism. In 1933, 200,000 brochures and 30,000 tourist guides were printed in four languages. At the same time, 11 shipping companies connected the Dodecanese (mostly Rhodes) with the entire Mediterranean Sea.

Rodi's famous "Grande Albergo delle Rose" in 1930
Though the numbers reported by several sources differ greatly from each other, there is no doubt that the migratory wave increased immensely during the Italian Rule. Migration was caused mainly by socio-economic factors, but it was encouraged by the favorable stance of the Italian authorities intending to establish Italian colonists in the place of emigrants. Their efforts had mixed results, since in 1936 Italians in the Dodecanese were no more than 16,711, most of whom had settled on Rhodes and Leros. Italians of Rhodes and Kos were farmers and had settled at new settlements organized as farming businesses. Those of Leros generally worked for the army and lived at the facilities of the city of Porto Lago at Lakki.

What marked the Italian Rule in the Dodecanese though was their activity in town planning. Besides, Lago himself would call this remarkable zoning, planning and building activity aimed at the colonization of places “stone policy

Their interference in town planning was not of the same extent on all islands. On Rhodes, Kos and Leros it was quite significant, defining up to now the character of these islands. On the rest of the islands, they only constructed middle-sized command posts and public service buildings dominating the ports. In May 1923, architect Florestano di Fausto was called from Rome in order to design anew the city of Rhodes. After the 1933 earthquake, the city of Kos was designed anew by Rodolfo Petracco. He also designed Porto Lago at Lakki of Leros, the only newly founded city. All of this interference in town planning was followed by the construction of imposing buildings and significantly improved the urban net. It was all based on extended practically inexpensive mandatory expropriations of building plots and residences.

Colonization policy was not limited in cities. A series of controversial decrees also changed the uses of land and its forms. Characteristic examples are the 1924 forestall law and the establishment of land register. The first one benefited impressively the environment but also damaged the agricultural economy. The latter organized and rationalized the uses of land but also became the medium for extensive changes of ownership.

Bank of Italy building (now Bank of Greece), created by Di Fausto
DE VECCHI PERIOD (1936-1940)

As the fascist regime became harsher with the declaration of the empire (imperio), Lago was substituted for tetrarch fascist Cesare de Vecchi. He became governor and had both political and military power. De Vecchi’s main goal was radical italianization and institutional modernization of the islands. Therefore, he imposed radical changes in education with the new school regulation (July 21 1937), which practically established the total domination of the Italian language at schools (teaching Greek was only optional and with no books in the first classes of primary school).

Moreover, the system of administration, balancing between the traditional “ communal” system and the modernizing expectations of Italian fascism, altered significantly in 1937, when new mayors were appointed, the podesta, directly depended from the governor. The racist law for the preservation of the purity of the Italian race was also introduced in 1938. At the same time, a series of decrees imposed absolute equalization with the Italian law.
Rodi was linked to Italy by a regular air service since the mid 1930s. The "Aero Espresso Italiana" (AEI) had flight from Brindisi to Athens and Rodi with flying boats (AEI used mainly the "Savoia 55", but also the "Macchi 24bis"), as can be seen in the following propaganda poster:
Mixed courts of orthodox, muslim and Jews were abolished and their cases were heard in modern civil courts. Concluding contracts and issuing certificates came from religious communities under State services.

De Vecchi didn’t make any new development plans; he just carried out those of his predecessor, whom he accused of being “ orientalist” among others. His loathing for what he thought was of “orientalist style” made him change the exterior of buildings. Their façades were covered with pietra finta lime-cast (Italian for “fake stone” ). It was a mixture of cement with sinter powder, similar in color and texture to the sinter of the buildings of the Knights’ era. Such examples are the Hotel of the Roses and the Court House, which were radically changed.

The few buildings constructed were characterized by the monumental fascist architecture aiming to inspire awe and respect among residents. This period ended when Italy entered the war.

Rodi's Teatro Puccini, when just built in 1937
ITALIAN ARCHITECTURE IN RODI

Although the Italians landed on the island of Rodi in 1912 during their conflict with the Ottoman Empire, most of their architectural works on Rhodes were carried out during the era of Mussolini (who took power a decade later) and reflect the attitude of his fascist regime toward urban space. The past – the ancient past as much ass the Middle Ages & the Renaissance – became raw material for fascist rhetoric, as Dr. Medina Lasansky pointed out in her book “The Renaissance Perfected: Architecture, Spectacle & Tourism in Fascist Italy.”

In the 1920s and 30s many leading architects, archaeologists, historians and city planners of Rome collaborated to showcase ancient monuments and historic sites of the former Roman Empire in the light of the Duce’s vision of modern Italy as a metropolitan power center. Public spaces, commercial facilities, churches, theaters, bridges, schools, sports facilities, villages and entire cities were either built or restored in Italy, as well as in the Italian territories in the Aegean and northern and eastern Africa. The central motif for this extensive building program was antiquity, both on a theoretical and practical level, and its apparent aim was the promotion of Fascism.

Family of an Italian "carabinieri" who was a farmer colonist in the outskirts of Rodi in 1941
The aesthetics of this movement were not uniform, as the ruling Italians appointed to their ranks and glorified, on a case by case basis, ultra-modernists, rationalists, neo-historians and representatives of the "Novecento". However, the main thrust of everyone involved was the “cleansing” (or “liberation,” as they called it) of the past. < Thus, the restoration and/or reconstruction of the traces of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance included their redesign – their selective representation carried out according to a specific viewpoint, one that fit the regime and its values. Whether in Rome, Tuscany, Rhodes or Libya, the regime’s architects were summoned to create a “purified version" of the past that would extol the present. The first civilian governor of the Italian Islands of the Aegean, and the one who left the most lasting impression on Rhodes, was the diplomat Mario Lago (1924-1936), who led his country’s efforts to impose Italian culture and to alter the ethnic make-up of the local population, while simultaneously attempting to banish the Greek language, culture and Orthodox religion.

Lago erected many public buildings; undertook numerous beautification projects in Rhodes’ historical center; restored medieval monuments; founded rural settlements; and adopted economic reforms – including measures to promote tourism. He was a pioneer in his time. Perhaps his most important legacy is the master plan he instituted for the city of Rhodes, which was comparable to those adopted in all the major cities of the West. During Lago’s tenure, the monuments of the "Citta' vecchia" (in English "Old Town") were identified and protected; all the land in the immediate area around the city walls was declared a “zona monumentale” (monument zone) and construction came under tight controls. Large areas (e.g., the Ottoman cemeteries) were forcibly seized for reasons of public interest, while the new town established outside the walls followed the popular Italian model of the garden city, endowed with a modern infrastructure, including roads, water and sewer systems, street lighting and administrative and military buildings.

Photo of the first Stadium in the Dodecanese islands: the "Arena del Sole", created in 1932 just outside the old walls in Rodi city.
Most of the projects completed during this period bear the stamp of Fiorestano di Fausto (1890-1965), the most important architect of fascist Italy. In the space of three years (1923-1926), and before he suffered a rift with Governor Lago, Di Fausto had designed or redesigned an astonishing fifty buildings in the Dodecanese – houses, public buildings, churches, markets, schools, barracks – of which thirty-two had been completed or were under construction in 1927.
Among the achievements that can still be admired today are the Foro Italico, the city’s new administrative center atMandraki and the Italian (formerly Ottoman) Club, a lounge for Italian officers and senior civil servants. The Courthouse was restored in a style clearly influenced by Renaissance architecture. The Roman Catholic Cathedral of Saint John (known today as the Metropolitan Church of the Annunciation), with its characteristic bell tower and its famed sarcophagi of the Great Magistrates, was built in the New Town as a replica of an older, Hospitallers-era church destroyed in 1856. Other buildings include the Maritime Administration and the "Grand Hotel of the Roses", with its distinctive dome, which continues to operate as a hotel and which constitutes one of the major landmarks of touristic Rhodes. Equally important was the Italians’ conservation work in the Old Town, especially their intervention at the "Palace of the Grand Master of the Knights of Rhodes", which they restored and turned into a museum (it remains one today). Notable, too, are the archaeological surveys, excavations and restoration works carried out by the Italians at several sites in Rhodes, mainly at Ialysos and Lindos, and elsewhere in the Dodecanese Islands.
Lago was succeeded by Cesare Maria De Vecchi (1936-1940), one of the Quadrumvirs in Mussolini’s central ruling tetrarchy. He imposed harsh rules of government, particularly as the Second World War and the Greco-Italian War approached. Wanting to further emphasize the “glory” of the Knights and their presence in Rhodes, and by association to extend that glory to the regime of which he was a founding member, De Vecchi had public buildings and new constructions cladded with "pietra finta" (faux stone),as a visual reference to the period of the Knights. Characteristic examples of this treatment include the Hotel Thermae and the Palazzo Littorio, which later became the City Hall.

Rodi's "Cattedrale Cattolica San Giovanni " in 1939


EXAMPLES OF ITALIAN ARCHITECTURE IN RODI CITY

* The ''Grande Albergo delle Rose'' (now "Casino Rodos") built by Florestano Di Fausto and Michele Platania in 1927, with a mix of Arab, Byzantine and Venetian styles.
* The ''Casa del Fascio'' of Rhodes, built in 1939 in typical fascist style. It serves now as the City Hall.
* The rebuilt of the Palace of the Grand Master of the Knights of Rhodes, destroyed under the Turks occupation by an explosion.
* The ''Catholic church of San Giovanni'' (now called "Chiesa dell' Annunciazione"), built in 1925 by Rodolfo Petracco and Florestano Di Fausto, as a reconstruction of the medieval cathedral church of the Knights of St. John.
* The ''Teatro Puccini'' of the city of Rhodes, now called "National Theater", built in 1937 with 1,200 seats.
* The ''Palazzo del Governatore'' in downtown Rhodes, built in 1927 in Venetian style by Di Fausto. It now houses the offices of the Prefecture of the Dodecanese.
* The "Palazzo di giustizia" (actually the "Capitaneria di Porto"), built by Rodolfo Petracco and Florestano Di Fausto.
* The "Palazzo delle Poste" (actually the Mail service building), built by Florestano Di Fausto.
* The new "Agora", a market of the port area (Mandraki), built by Di Fausto.
* The "Palazzo Aktaion", built in 1925 as the "Circolo d'Italia" for Italian miltary officials.
* The "Aquarium", built by architect Armando Bernabiti.
* The " Bank of Italy" building (actual "Bank of Greece") , built by Di Fausto.
* The St. Francis of Assisi catholic cathedral, built in 1939 by Bernabiti ( http://www.gcatholic.org/churches/europe/5467.htm), with famousterracotta bas-reliefs depicting the Stations of the Cross, created by sculptor Monteleone. * The rebuilt of the "Chiesa di Nostra Signora delle Vittorie", with a new façade created by Florestano Di Fausto in 1929.

Italian colonists in 1940 Rodi


THE ISLAND OF RHODES HISTORICAL ITALIAN SITES

The city of Rodi is located to the eastern side of the island of Rodi. It is the most important historical site of the island, but there are other places with importance (someone related to Italy's occupation of the island).

Detailed map of the Rodi island
Indeed historical sites on the island of Rhodes (outside of Rhodes city) include the Acropolis of Lindos, the Acropolis of Rhodes (with the Temple of Pythian Apollo and an ancient theatre and stadium), ancient Ialysos, ancient Kamiros, the ruins of the castle of Monolithos, the castle of Kritinia, St. Catherine Hospice and Rhodes Footbridge. But there are a few related to the Italian rule of the island during the first half of the XX cenrtury.

THe actual Palace of the Prefecture was the "Palazzo del Governatore" in the Italian Rodi city


Outside Rodi city, the locality with the best remains of the Italian presence & architecture is Eleousa (founded by the Italian government with the name "Campochiaro"). It is noteworthy to pinpoint that in the island were created the following "centri rurali" (farm villages) for Italian colonists: “Peveragno Rodio” (1929), “Campochiaro” (1935-36), “San Marco” (1936) and “Savona” (1936-38) -from 1938 called “San Benedetto”. Indeed during their occupation of Rhodes the Italians built these four agricultural villages that were to be populated only by Italian settlers. Three of them stood not far from the coast: San Benedetto (Kolymbia), San Marco (near Kattavia) and Peveragno (Kato Kalamata).But Profitis Ilias-Campochiaro was more inland on a huge hill.

PEVERAGNO RODIO (actual Epàno Kàlamon)
The center was named Peveragno Rodio in honor of the Governor of the Aegean Mario Lago, a native of the homonymous town in the province of Cuneo. It was elevated to a municipality on August 8, 1930. Obviously, agricultural production focused on Mediterranean crops: olive trees, vines and orchards, but there was also a livestock sector. At first 8,000 olive trees, 7,000 fruit trees and 130,000 vines were planted and 110 cattle and 800 sheep were brought in while a series of modern agro-industrial plants allowed the processing on site of the production that was mostly exported or which, as dairy products, immediately found an outlet on the market of nearby Rhodes.

Hundreds of workers with their families from Italy were brought in, excluding the involvement of Greek peasants who were present only as casual or wage workers. The settlers who were transferred there came from several Italian regions and above all from the province of Pavia: depending on the origin they were directed towards specific activities in relation to the experience gained in the places of origin: the people of Pavia took care of herbaceous and forage crops, the ones from Romagna of orchards and pastoralice those from Salerno. On balance it cannot be said that Peveragno Rodio was a success, nor with the short time in which the Italians worked it could be otherwise: the area was too vast to be quickly cultivated and fruitful, and was needed a lot of labor.

Peveragno Rodio was abandoned after WW2, but the village did not die. The most characteristic structures, including the lictorian-style buildings and the church have been transformed into an Greek army base: the area is forbidden to visit and the buildings cannot even be photographed but are still all "in service activities" to put it in military words. Even the work done by Italian farmers was not wasted. The land had already been cleared and the plants planted had grown in the meantime: the Italian company was replaced by Greek farmers, who treasured what had been left by the italian colonists.

Photo of Peveragno Rodio in 1938


The best village was Campochiaro, where there was also the so called "Casa di Mussolini" (Mussolini House). The house was built by governor Ceasre De Vecchi for Mussolini as his retirement home, though he never visited, and it was abandoned in the mid 1940's. Cesare De Vecchi (who ruled the island from 1936 to 1940), was one of the Quadrumvirs in Mussolini’s central ruling tetrarchy and strongly promoted the "italianization" of the island of Rodi in architecture, language, customs, etc...

Campochiaro (now Eleousa) dates back to 1935-1936. The village was constructed with a Roman Catholic Church, a school, a Casa del Fascio (local of the fascist party, with a now gone tower), municipal services, medical service, shops and even a cinema. All these buildings were (and are) grouped around a rectangular town square. Hydraulic works were also carried out, with a view to irrigation and power generation. For instance, there was a small hydroelectric plant that provided electricity. The round pond with fountain just outside the village is a reminder of these interventions. The settlers who came from the Trentino-Alto Adige, each received a house and a plot of land.

Image of Campochiaro in 1940


Actually the house is in bad conditions because of lack of maintenance since the 1950s, but in another "centro rurale" -named "San Marco"- the situation is different.

SAN MARCO (actual Kattavia)
In the southernmost part of the island of Rhodes, in the still almost uninhabited plain of Kattavia, there is the rural village San Marco (created circa 1936), with a clear Italian rationalist architectural matrix, with the bell tower that refers - in albeit simplified architectural terms - to the well-known one of the Serenissima Venezia, with the church dedicated to the aforementioned Saint and an entire area occupied by the elementary school classrooms (in a photo you can still see a few letters of the word "elementary"), for the children of the 200 Italian settlers who emigrated there, mostly from the regions of north east Italy (mainly Veneto and Romagna).

Actual photo of the silk factory created by the Italians in San Marco (now called Kattavia)
In "San Marco Villaggio di Rodi", until about 1942, about two hundred people lived there and worked hard there, even without the hoped-for results in agro-economic terms, since the surrounding land (obtained from a previous reclamation work of a large area stagnant) were excessively acidic/saline. The silk production was also raised and improved. In the same plain of Kattavia there was also a landing strip for Italian military aircraft, now almost indistinguishable.

After decades of oblivion and abandonment (what increasingly characterizes all the valuable built in the Italian Dodecanese of the 20-30s), for about two years private subjects have proudly restored the central body of the village (with cloister and colonnade), the church and partly the bell tower (the clock mechanisms have been stolen from time immemorial), opening a bar/restaurant there.



LINKS

* RODI ITALICA: (https://www.rodiitalica.it/ Associazione reduci e profughi dal Dodecaneso italiano)
*FARE GLI ITALIANI DELL"EGEO: (http://eprints-phd.biblio.unitn.it/2548/1/Tesi_di_dottorato_Filippo_Marco_Espinoza.pdf)
*Photos of Italian Rodi's architecture: (http://www.artefascista.it/rodi__fascismo__architettu.htm)
*L’ITALIA A RODI:
( http://dspace-roma3.caspur.it/bitstream/2307/179/3/03%20-%20capitolo%20II%20-%20Italia%20a%20Rodi.pdf)
*RHODES HISTORY & ARCHITECTURE (1912-1945): (https://iris.unipa.it/retrieve/handle/10447/40817/399300/RITORNO_DEI_CAVALIERI_RODI%20.pdf)
*FOTO E STORIA DI RODI: (http://wwwbisanzioit.blogspot.com/search/label/Rodi)

1938 Postcard showing Campochiaro (now called Fleousa)