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.