|
The
ways of the angel, solitary itineraries
The mountain of Apulia by definition, Gargano has since the remotest
times had a sacred element to it, because of its woods of holm-oaks,
and oaks (seat of the oracles of Jove); because of the lords of the
shadows, closed in their dark caverns (places sacred to the soothsayer
Calcante and the God Mithras); the caverns oozing icy water with
therapeutic qualities, dedicated to the Homeric doctor Podaleirus
(rites of incubatio or hallucinogenics) and finally, in the Christian
Middle Ages, because of the exauguration and the banishment of the
ancient demons by the sword of Michael; because of the icons of the
black Madonnas, the Byzantine saints, monks and hermits wandering
from cave to cave, from hill top to hill top until Gargano became
a sort of “Monte Sacro”-sacred mountain (from the abbey
of the same name at Mattinata), similar to Aghios Oros (sacred mount) “par
excellence”, Mount Athos in Greece, the holy republic of the
orthodox monks.
The land of Puglia
A strip of land stretching out into the Mediterranean, an imaginary
and practical springboard to the East and its lands, since ancient
times Puglia has had a rare natural propensity to act as a bridge
between East and West, Europe and Asia, the peoples of the continent
and those on the sea.
First inhabited in Neolithic times when the native tribes saw its
numerous ravines – natural in a karst terrain such as that
of Puglia – as welcome places of refuge, numerous different
peoples have lived on this land, each one brought by new cultures
and civilisations: from the early contacts with the oldest populations
of the Aegean, Cretans and Mycenaeans, to increasingly frequent and
sometimes belligerent relationships with the Greek peoples, who established
one of their most prosperous and important colonies, Taranto, on
this soil.
There has always been an alternation of peoples from east and west:
the Greeks were succeeded by the Romans, the Romans by the Byzantines
and these by the Lombards, each dominating and being dominated. When
the Byzantines’ and the Lombards’ time had come the Normans
and Saracens took their turns; the former, fascinated by a sun denied
to them, were fervent builders of fortifications and castles for
defence and pleasure, the latter were equally fervent attackers of
the former, and not for reasons of defence. After the Normans came
the Swabians, the Angevines, the Aragonese, the Spanish again and
so on until the region was politically united with the rest of Italy.
Despite this alternation of peoples the region has not lost its distinctive
conformation which emerges original and unchanged over the centuries
and that gives it a regional character, a harsh but hospitable decidedly
southern land, - a strong sun in a bright sky, sun-drenched, parched
landscapes – where man closed in his age-old reserve cohabits
with a tradition of exchange and encounter, hospitality and warmth.
The scenery of Puglia offers such variety that its lands should be
referred to in the plural (recalling the ancient partition of the
region into Daunia, Peucezia and Messapia): from the enchanting scenery
of the Gargano promontory – the scholastic “heel” of
Italy where the lush green Mediterranean maquis and forest stand
out against white rocks shaped by water and wind and golden beaches
contrast with a deep blue sea and sky – to the low-lying cost
of the Salentine peninsula where the rock, a natural and unequalled
defence against not always welcome foreigners arriving from the sea,
alternates with sandy shores, now popular and highly frequentable
destinations for holiday-makers and bathers; from Le Murge – where
the undulating relief that rises in tiers from the coastal ledge
suddenly falls into deep swallow-holes (here called “puli”)
or in long clefts with vertical walls (called “gravine”) – to
the intensely cultivated Tavoliere plain – an eloquent image
of an active and well-organised human presence – and then to
the trulli and farms inland, bearing witness to a widespread
and dense occupation, a difficult relationship with an obstinate
land, of lives spent silent, far from the noisy bustle of the ports,
from the deafening uproar of battle, from the quietly-spoken but
insistent rumours of court. Just as history and nature have repeatedly
stamped permanent and multicoloured signs of their passage, so too
has man, with works artistic and other, perhaps aesthetically more
modest but no less important, and diversified in time and space,
offering the interested visitor an unequalled alternation of artistic
and anthropical sights, the fruit of complex combinations, mixtures
and superimpositions that produce original languages. While the numerous
natural caves that perforate the land of this region produce the
signs – in varying conditions of conservation – of something
more than scattered or isolated settlements, such to suggest talk
of a cave civilisation true and proper – where the dwellings,
in scattered groups but more often in clusters, are flanked by places
of worship, favoured by hermits or cenobites, stores and necropolises – further
evidence of far more refined civilisations, imported but well assimilated,
comes from the excavations that have uncovered the layouts of acropolises,
temples, residential areas and palaces.
And as the slowly spreading new Christian religion resulted in a
burst of religious architecture which – although based on distant
aulic models, persistently echoed in plan and decoration – used
the local substratum to elaborate highly respectable original stylistic
elements, the frequent incursions led to arming of the territory
with walls around the towns and mighty castles on the coasts. This
type is at its heights of universally recognised splendour in the
magnificent Castel del Monte, erected by Frederick II (the function
of which is not clear until now), its contained and regular structure
dominating the landscape and, ideally much more. In the 18th century
an opulent aesthetic taste, abounding in decoration and detail, of
fanciful spatial arrangement, indeed an audacious search for new
and almost inconceivable structural solutions, led to a flourishing
artistic current of great merit, the Leccese Baroque, which managed
from the town of origin to fuel fertile veins of artistic production
all over the region.
In recent times Puglia is rediscovering the natural qualities of
its territory, safeguarding them wherever their values imposes this
(in 1991 the Gargano promontory became a national park) and upgrading
them where a more dense human presence makes this necessary.
Castellana Caves
Leave the coast and travel inland taking the s.s. 377; 15 km of
rather narrow roadway surrounded by scenery typical of Le Murge and
you will come to Castellana Grotte (289 m, 18726
inhab.), famous for its speleological complex, certainly the most
spectacular and finest in Italy. The caves, created by the course
of an ancient underground river, were first entered towards the end
of the 18th century, by a group of local youths. In 1938 professor
Franco Anelli lowered himself through a open chasm (La Grave)
approximately 60 m deep, making way for subsequent explorations and
promoting its immediate opening to the public. The complex consists
in five caves (grotta Nera, salone delle Statue, sala della Civetta,
sala dell’Altare, grotta Bianca) with few ramifications
but considerable vertical development (in excess of 30 m) connected
by natural and artificial tunnels and corridors. A mid large cavities
and corridors the cave extend for kilometres on different levels.
Castellana’s underground water network has not yet been fully
investigated: at present an overall length of more than 2 km has
been explored.
Terra d’Otranto
In ancient times Terra d’Otranto was the name given to the
entire Salentine peninsula, from the Brindisi area to Santa Maria
di Leuca. Today, this name is used only for the narrow strip of coast
belonging to the eastern Salentine that overlooks the Canale d’Otranto – the
sheet of water between Italy and the Albanian coast – from
Punta della Contessa, south of Brindisi, to Capo d’Otranto.
This is a long, partly hilly, partly flat area, divided between the
provinces of Brindisi and Lecce; the masseria is a common
sight here although this type of country house is most common on
the Bari coast between Barletta and Monopoli and the Le Murge inland
area. A large farmhouse , typical expression of a peasant culture,
in Terra d’Otranto the masseria is often fortified,
being constructed on land that used to be plagued by pirates.
The coast is rocky and jagged close to Otranto, with many caves and
caverns once round Capo d’Otranto and the Porto Badisco gulf,
whereas it slopes gradually as you return towards Brindisi.
Terra d’Otranto can still be considered a Greek “island”:
those visiting it and the environs will note the characteristic Hellenic
spirit in the monuments and popular traditions. The “Greekness”of
Otranto is also present in the language: in some villages, the Salentine
people still speak Greek.
The capital of Lecce remains the base for the itinerary through the
eastern Salentine; head northwards along the fast s.s. 613 road towards
Brindisi. Stop at Surbo (40 m, 12729 inhab.), one
of the villages scattered in a half-moon around the main city. This
is in the unusual situation of an enclave on the municipal
territory of Lecce and has now been “captured” by the
city with the creation of an industrial estate centred around the
railway and dual carriageway. The village has a compound structure
with an irregular nucleus, flanked by two new geometrical districts.
Founded in the 10th or 11th century, it used to be part of the county
of Lecce. Of note is the parish church of Santa Maria del
Popolo (1590), with remains of the previous 15th century
construction. The d’Aurio church in the masseria of
the same name, is 12th century but has been somewhat spoilt.
Once past Surbo, follow the dual carriageway to Torchiarolo and San
Pietro in Vernotico. Torchiarolo (28 m, 5127 inhab.)
was founded by the inhabitants of the nearby Valesio (Messapian
centre, later Roman, and known as Valentium or Balesium),
destroyed by the Normans in 1157.
The ancient origin of the town is shown by a cabinet found in 1926,
perhaps part of the treasure of a sanctuary and containing coins
of numerous mints of Magna Graecia, coined from the second half of
the 6th century BC on. A feud of the county of Lecce, it was subjected
to bloody incursions by the Turks until the 18th century. The parish
church is of the 18th century. Three kilometres north of the
village are the remains of the megalithic walls and the necropolis
of Valesio.
At San Pietro Vernotico (36 m, 15004 inhab.) there
is a 14th century quadrangular tower but the castle,
constructed by the Normans in the 11th century, has regrettably been
lost. The village inhabitants are famous for having participated
in two uprisings against the Bourbons in 1821 and 1848. The mother
church is of the 18th century.
After leaving the dual carriageway, you come to the coast at Torre
San Gennaro, a fishing village which is fast becoming a seaside resort.
Heading south, without encountering a port for thirty kilometres
or so, you will arrive at San Cataldo, a beach popular
with the inhabitants of Lecce; it has fine sand and a pleasant pine
wood. Near the small headland that ends the village is a
stretch of water prohibited to boats for the presence of a military
firing range.
Also in the area are the ruins of Porto Adriano founded
by the Roman emperor on the Canale d’Otranto.
You now enter the woods, then come again to the coast, gradually
becoming rockier; an excursion can be made inland to admire Acaja, a
model village-fortress constructed in 1535 by the military architect
Gian Giacomo dell’Acaja and now in a pitiful state of abandon.
San Foca, Roca Vecchia and Torre dell’Orso are the principal
resorts encountered along the coast before you reach Otranto. All
are preparing themselves for tourism. The area is of considerable
archaeological importance. Constructions between San Foca and Roca
Vecchia have been identified as the remains of a coastal
installation of imperial times, closely linked to the exploitation
of marine resources: fishing, conservation of the catch and oyster
farming. By no means isolated, the installation was organically linked
to one of the rural villas inland, pivots of the farming activities
of ager lupiense. Roca Vecchia was presumably the maritime
port of Rudiae, the important native site that until the
4th century BC was the main centre in the region and which continued
to rival Lecce (Lupiae) for the supremacy of the Salentine
until the first century AD. The village of Roca Vecchia was at the
time protected by a circle of dry walls built between the 4th and
3rd centuries BC using large blocks and a ditch; there were
two gates one to the south-west, one to the north. Of the same period
is also the necropolis, consisting in rectangular graves
dug into the rock.
Before reaching Otranto, situated at the centre of a extensive pine
woods, is Lake Alimini. This is divided into two
small basins – Alimini Grande (connected to the sea) and Alimini
Piccolo, the latter also known as Fontanelle, a reference to the
springs which supply it.
Of these two small lakes only the latter provides water that can
be used for irrigation. The area was recently reclaimed and given
modern amenities.
Otranto (15 m, 5282 inhab.) takes its name from the river
Idro, now disappeared, at the mouth of which the town was founded, in a bay
on the Adriatic coast.
The area occupied today is but a part of what was the ancient Hydruntum.
The historical centre, surrounded by walls, stands on the south shore
of the port, while the new town has expanded inland.
A Greek and then a Roman town, in the Middle Ages it was one of the
most important towns of Byzantine domain in Italy, thanks to the
position of its port, a point of embarkation for the Orient. In the
9th century, before the Byzantines occupied Bari, it was their capital,
later becoming the chief town and military centre of Terra d’Otranto.
With Bari and Taranto it was the centre of Greek resistance to the
Normans; it capitulated in 1068. True to the Swabians until 1250,
it then sided with the Church. Assailed by the fleet of Mohammed
II, the town fell on 12th August 1480 after a fifteen-day siege:
the defenders were massacred and eight hundred citizens beheaded.
Freed a year later by Alfonso of Aragon it was then occupied by the
Venetians and attacked again by the Turks: this marked the start
of its decline.
Its economy is based on tourism, one of its principal sources of
income. The port activities are centred around fishing and maritime
links with Greece.
Despite the destruction worked over the centuries, the town conserves
numerous ancient buildings of interest. Of the Byzantine era is the
highly interesting church of San Pietro, built around the
year One Thousand; the interior is rich in frescoes of various periods,
regrettably much altered; the best conserved of these portray the Lavanda
dei piedi and the Ultima cena and are accompanied by
inscriptions in Greek, thus dating them between the 11th century
and the following ones. The church must then have been the cathedral
of the town, autocephalous metropolitan seat of Greek rite until
the Norman invasion. It is a classical inscribed Greek cross-shaped
building, with a small cupola at the intersection of the arms supported
on cylindrical pillars with spherical pendentive connections, three
apses with barrel vaults on the arms and corner chambers, decorated
as mentioned with frescoes. Almost of the same period (erected in
1080-1088 at the wish of the first Latin metropolitan, Guglielmo)
is the grand cathedral, the numerous “two-zone” capitals
with eagles at the four corners, or bell ones with crosses and eagles
at the centre of the trapezoid fronts or open-worked like woven wicker
baskets declaring their Constantinople origin. Not until around the
mid 12th century did the cathedral take on its presence appearance,
with the transept being divided into three according to a central-northern
model, using transversal arches contrasted by wall divisions and
the original pillars being replaced with columns, rising tall and
crowned with finely worked Romanesque capitals. Above the Baroque
portal there is a lovely rose window in 15th century Gothic-Arab
style and the left side is opened by a 16th century portal. The floor
of the nave and two aisles inside and of the presbytery is covered
with a mosaic which is one of the largest known. The work of the
bishop Pantaleone, in the years 1163-1166, it consists in a series
of pictures created in a rather rough, simple style, but captivating
for the imagination involved and variety of composition. The decoration
starts with a large tree in the nave, the branches forming volutes
that contain scenes from the Bible, Mediaeval animal figures, zodiac
signs and pictures from the stories of king Arthur and his knights.
Another two trees branch out symmetrically on the floor of the two
aisles. Below the apse is a large crypt with five aisles divided
by numerous columns. The castle built at the end of the
15th century by the Aragonese and which reveals signs of the hand
of Francesco di Giorgio Martini from Siena has a trapezoid structure,
with circular towers on three corners, the fourth corner being occupied
by a lance-shaped point.
The Salentine Peninsula
Lecce – Copertino – Nardò – Gallipoli – Ugento – Leuca – Castro
Marina – Santa Cesarea Terme – Otranto – San Foca – San
Cataldo – Lecce
This itinerary winds across the Salentine peninsula, the extreme
south-eastern part of Italy, the so-called “heel of the boot”.
It is an easy and smooth trip across a generally flat area, broken
by the odd rocky height which in the southern part takes the name
of “Murge Salentine”.
The geological panorama changes: the calcareous stone of nearly
all the rest of Puglia is replaced by fine limestone and the famous
Lecce stone which, cut and used in various decorations, has produced
a characteristic artistic style, decorative Baroque which makes
Lecce unique. The jagged coast contains numerous picturesque marine
caves.
Leave Lecce and head for Copertino, reached either via Monteroni
or San Pietro in Lama. Copertino is known mainly for its castle,
one of the best preserved of the Salentine peninsula. After 11
km on a straight road you will reach Nardò. An agricultural
and commercial town of Messapian origin, it remained for many centuries
under Byzantine rule. From Nardò go to Gallipoli, reached
inland by crossing the Galatone or with a interesting variation
along the coast, passing through Santa Maria al Bagno, a popular
seaside resort.
Gallipoli has an oriental air, all white, resembling the villages
of the Cyclades. It extends into the sea on a headland and small
island joined by a bridge. It is known for its olive oil and fish
and, in recent years, has become an icreasingly established resort.
From Gallipoli follow the Salentine road amid olive groves
and vine yards along a uniform road towards Ugento, reached after
crossing Taviano (large farming centre) and Racale.
Ugento, known today for the cultivation of tobacco, takes its
name from the ancient Ausentum, of prehistoric times,
and with a 9 km circle of walls. Repeatedly destroyed and reconstructed
(it was also devastated for an obscure vendetta worked by the Queen
of Naples Giovanna “la pazza”) it is becoming
an established farming centre thanks mainly to the work of the
reclamation consortium.
After a stop at Ugento return to the main road which becomes
gentler, accompanied by tall pine trees. Pass through Acquarica
del Capo, then Presicce, Patù, Castrignano del Capo and
lastly to Leuca and Santa Maria di Leuca where Italy ends.
Interesting excursions can be made from Leuca to the nearby
prehistoric caves (also reached by boat): the grotta del Diavolo,
the grotta del Fiume, the grotta del Presepio, the grotta dei Giganti,
the grotta della Stalla and the grotta del Ciolo. Today Leuca is
a fair-sized fishing village and a popular seaside resort with
good amenities.
The itinerary now climbs the coast and is a succession of bays,
caves and splendid natural scenery, uncontaminated by building
development.
Cross Marina di Novalgie, Marina Serra, Marina Porto to Castro
Marina, a village of almost Mediaeval appearance, in a lovely scenic
position, a base for excursions to the two most important grottoes
(after those of Castellana, of course) in Puglia: the grotta Romanelli
and the grotta Zinzulusa.
From the Castro headland a convenient road climbs slowly to
100 m amid hedges of prickly-pear cactus to Santa Cesarea Terme,
at the centre of a district hidden in wild stony ground sheer above
the sea. Of ancient origin, inhabited by Cretans, driven away by
the Barbarian invasions, this is famous spa thanks to the
sulphureous waters containing sodium chloride and sodium iodide
which flow from four springs communicating with the sea.
Leave Santa Cesarea: after a few kilometres the road leaves
the sea for Uggiano la Chiesa (recommended excursion to the nearby
Scusi dolmen) and from here, descending along an undulating coastal
terrace edged with vine-yards and olive groves, comes to Otranto,
the other large fortified town of the Salentine peninsula, the
region of which was for centuries called Terra d’Otranto.
The name derives from the river Idro (water) in Latin Hydruntum ,
which flows into the port. A well- developed Greek town it took
second place in the times of the Romans, who preferred the more
convenient port of Brindisi. Today Otranto is famous for its monuments,
as a fishing port and as a seaside resort.
Between Punta Scuru and Capo Palascia, four miles south-east
of Otranto, are the white cliffs and gulf of Porto Badisco. Here
a fantastic underground world awaits, the caves scattered along
the coast conserving geological and ethnological finds of extraordinary
interest.
Leave Otranto and the road winds between the sea and Alimini
lakes (this area has been upgraded by reclamation and the presence
of holiday villages), across a viaduct, to pass Torre dell’Orso,
busy in summer, then Roca Vecchia to San Foca, a small fishing
village. The s.s. 611 at first on the rocky coastline and then
amidst woods leads to San Cataldo, the beach of Lecce, known for
its lovely shores and equally beautiful pine woods. A fast, straight
internal road will take you back to Lecce.
Copertino: the castle, built in 1540 with a sumptuous
Renaissance portal. Nardò : cathedral dating
from the 12th century; church of San Giuseppe, Baroque. Gallipoli:
Hellenistic fountain on the eastern side of the old port; castle
extending into the port; the cathedral of Sant’Agata dating
from 17th century; church of the Purità, with a sumptuous
interior embellished with four large paintings by Liberio Riccio. Ugento:
the trapezoid-shaped castle, dating from the 13th century. Leuca:
the sanctuary of Santa Maria standing “at the end of the world” (“finimunno” as
they say in local dialect). According to popular belief a pilgrimage
to Santa Maria di Leuca is essential to gain access to Heaven. Santa
Cesarea Terme: two spas, Terme Gatulla and Terme della Sulfurea.
The season goes from 15th May to 15th November. Otranto:
cathedral of the Annunziata with a grandiose interior and a highly
original floor mosaic, a work by the talented priest Pantaleone,
telling stories from the Bible, mankind and stories of King Arthur
and of Charlemagne. To the right of the presbytery is the chapel
of the Martiri, conserving the mortal remains of many of the 800
inhabitants of the town massacred in 1480 by the Turks. Through two
stairways in the aisles you descend to the crypt with five aisles
and three apses: this is a mass of stone with 68 columns in marble
and capitals in the most varied styles.
Close Window
|