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Squillace

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Squillace
Città di Squillace
Coat of arms of Squillace
Location of Squillace
Map
CountryItaly
RegionCalabria
ProvinceCatanzaro (CZ)
FrazioniFiasco Baldaia, Squillace Lido
Government
 • MayorGuido Rhodio
Area
 • Total
33 km2 (13 sq mi)
Elevation
344 m (1,129 ft)
Population
 (May 31, 2005)[2]
 • Total
1,391
 • Density42/km2 (110/sq mi)
DemonymSquillacesi
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
88069
Dialing code0961
Patron saintSt. Agathius Martyr
Saint dayMay 7
Websitehttp://www.squillace.org

Squillace (Template:Lang-el) is an ancient seaside town and comune, in the Province of Catanzaro, part of Calabria, southern Italy, facing the Gulf of Squillace.

Squillace is situated on the east coast of Calabria, on the shores of an extensive bay, the Gulf of Squillace (Template:Lang-it), which indents the coast of Calabria on the east as deeply as that of the Gulf of Saint Eufemia (Italian: Golfo di Sant'Eufemia) does on the west, with comparatively narrow isthmus between them.

History

Squillace is known today as one of Italy's most important archaeological sites as well as a popular resort.

The name derives from the ancient city of Scylletium, the principal ruins of which are located in the nearby comune of Borgia.

The Roman statesman and writer Cassiodorus founded a monastery called Vivarium on his family estates on the shores of the Ionian Sea in the sixth century AD. This monastery was on the site of the modern Santa Maria de Vetere near Squillace.

The modern town was founded as a Byzantine fortress during the Byzantine reconquest of Italy (6th–8th c.)

During the Middle Ages it was subject to frequent raids by Saracens, whom made it for a short time a dreadfull military base.

After the brief Arab rule the city fell under Norman hegemony. Its strategic military role, already recognised by the Greeks, was also recognized by the Normans who in 1044 build a castle and transformed the settlement into a county

During the Kingdom of Sicily, with the lordship of Roger of Lauria, Squillace passed first to Robert of Anjou and to the counts of Monfort, then for one hundred and fifty years the city was ruled by the counts of Marzano.

In 1445 it reverted to the Aragonese Kings of Naples but passed by marriage to the infamous House of Borgia, who ruled the city as Princes of Squillace from 1494 to 1735.

Gioffre Borgia (1482-1516), son of Pope Alexander VI and younger brother of Cesare Borgia and Lucrezia Borgia, married Sancia (Sancha) of Aragon, daughter of Alfonso II of Naples. Gioffre thereby obtained both the Principality of Squillace (1494) and the Duchy of Alvito (1497) as his wife's dowry.

Although Gioffre was deprived of Alvito after the death of Sancia in 1506, he managed to retain Squillace. He subsequently married Maria de Mila, and passed it on to their son Francesco Borgia.

The Borgia Princes were: Gioffre, Francesco, Giovanni, Pietro and finally Anna e Donna Antonia Borgia D’Aragona on whose death, in 1735, it passed to the Bourbon Kings of the Two Sicilies. Living either in Naples or in Spain. the Borgias ruled their fief through governors.

Under the Bourbons Squillace was downgraded to Marquisate and granted in 1755 to the Marquis Leopoldo De Gregorio, a noble from Messina who was to be the last feudal Lord of Squillace.

Ceramics

Production of highly prized terra cotta has been an important part the local economy for centuries; Cassiodorus' writings make several mentions of it. Squillace is the home of the pignatari style of ceramic artistry. The name is derived from the Italian word pignata, an earthenware container used for cooking beans over an open fire.

People

References

  1. ^ "Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  2. ^ "Popolazione Residente al 1° Gennaio 2018". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.