Marsica

Last updated
Monte Marsicano Il massiccio del Marsicano - Foto Angelina Iannarelli.jpg
Monte Marsicano

Marsica is a geographical and historical region in the Abruzzo, central Italy, including 37 comuni in the province of L'Aquila. It is located between the plain of the former Fucine Lake, the National Park of Abruzzo, Lazio and Molise, the plain of Carsoli and the valley of Sulmona.

Contents

The area takes its name from the Marsi, an Osco-Umbrian Italic people, and then from the Latin adjective marsicus. [1] In the center of the area there is the Fucino former lake, dried up in 1877, surrounded by parks and nature reserves. Avezzano is the most populous city of the territory. [2] Marsica has about 130,000 inhabitants as of 2019.

Comuni

The Marsica includes 37 comuni: Aielli, Avezzano, Balsorano, Bisegna, Canistro, Capistrello, Cappadocia, Carsoli, Castellafiume, Celano, Cerchio, Civitella Roveto, Civita d'Antino, Collarmele, Collelongo, Gioia dei Marsi, Lecce nei Marsi, Luco dei Marsi, Magliano de' Marsi, Massa d'Albe, Morino, Opi, Oricola, Ortona dei Marsi, Ortucchio, Ovindoli, Pereto, Pescasseroli, Pescina, Rocca di Botte, San Benedetto dei Marsi, San Vincenzo Valle Roveto, Sante Marie, Scurcola Marsicana, Tagliacozzo, Trasacco, Villavallelonga.

Geography

Mount Velino at sunset Monte Velino al calar del sole.jpg
Mount Velino at sunset

The Marsican region extends for about 1906 km2 on a heterogeneous territory; the flat areas are the Fucino basin (140 km2), the Palentini plains (60 km2) and the more contained Cavaliere plain. Mount Velino is its highest peak (2487 m) while the lower area is located in the comune of Balsorano (293 m). The greatest differences in height are recorded in Magliano dei Marsi and in Celano; on the contrary the comune of San Benedetto dei Marsi, overlooking the lake, has an excursion of 50 meters. [3] The highest municipalities are Ovindoli and Opi, respectively located at an altitude of 1 375 and 1 250 meters above sea level. [4] [5]

History

Alba Fucens Alba Fucens.jpg
Alba Fucens

Ancient

The region takes its name from the ancient Osco-Umbrian population of the Marsi. The capital of the Marsi was originally Marruvium. Other important centers were Antinum, Lucus Angitiae and, in Aequi's territory, on the border with the Marsi, Alba Fucens and Carsioli. Alba Fucens, after the Roman conquest, became a Latin colony. The region was one of the main scenarios of the social war, which is also called bellum Marsicum. With the territorial reorganization of Italy operated with the birth of the Empire, the Marsi were included within the Samnium. [6]

Middle age

After the fall of the Roman Empire, the territory was, like the rest of the Italian peninsula, part of the Ostrogothic kingdom and then conquered by the Byzantines. Following the Lombard invasion, it became part of the Longobard Duchy of Spoleto. [7]

1915 earthquake

Marsica was hit hard by the one-minute, 7.0 magnitude 1915 Avezzano earthquake, which obliterated most buildings in the valley and killed the vast majority of people in Avezzano and some other nearby villages. In spite of the demise of Avezzano in the quake, the population centres got built up and increased in population afterwards. The high number of casualties was caused by no building codes being in force with the weak houses capsizing as well as the very unusual length of the shaking and it happening in the early morning.

Parks

The Marsica territory is rich in parks and natural reserves. Apart the Abruzzo National Park, it includes the natural reserve of Zompo lo Schioppo, the Regional Natural Park of Sirente-Velino, the Monte Velino Natural Reserve, and the Monte Salviano Natural Reserve. The most characteristic animal species is the Marsican brown bear, an endemism of Marsica.

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marsi</span> Italic tribe in Ancient Italy

The Marsi were an Italic people of ancient Italy, whose chief centre was Marruvium, on the eastern shore of Lake Fucinus. The area in which they lived is now called Marsica. During the Roman Republic, the people of the region spoke a language now termed Marsian in scholarly English. It is attested by several inscriptions and a few glosses. The LINGUIST List classifies it as one of the Umbrian Group of languages.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Avezzano</span> Comune in Abruzzo, Italy

Avezzano is a city and comune with a population of 40,661 inhabitants, situated in the Abruzzo region, province of L'Aquila, Italy. It is the second most populous municipality in the province and the sixth in the region. Avezzano was documented as an existing urban center in the ninth century. The city was destroyed by the earthquake of 1915. It was rebuilt after the 1944 Allied bombing. The city was decorated with the silver medal for civil merit, an award granted by the Italian Republic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Celano</span> Comune in Abruzzo, Italy

Celano is a town and comune in the Province of L'Aquila, central Italy, 120 km (75 mi) east of Rome by rail.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Capistrello</span> Comune in Abruzzo, Italy

Capistrello is a comune and town in the province of L'Aquila in the Abruzzo region of central-southern Italy. It is located at the border between the upper Liri River valley and the Marsica. Capistrello borders the following municipalities: Avezzano, Canistro, Castellafiume, Filettino (Frosinone), Luco dei Marsi, Scurcola Marsicana and Tagliacozzo.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Canistro</span> Comune in Abruzzo, Italy

Canistro is a comune (municipality) and town in the province of L'Aquila in the Abruzzo region of central Italy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gioia dei Marsi</span> Comune in Abruzzo, Italy

Gioia dei Marsi is a comune (municipality) and town in the province of L'Aquila in the Abruzzo region of Italy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Luco dei Marsi</span> Comune in Abruzzo, Italy

Luco dei Marsi is a comune and town in the province of L'Aquila in the Abruzzo region of central-eastern Italy. It is part of the Marsica.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Massa d'Albe</span> Comune in Abruzzo, Italy

Massa d'Albe is a comune and town in the province of L'Aquila in the Abruzzo region of central Italy. It is part of the Marsica.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ortona dei Marsi</span> Comune in Abruzzo, Italy

Ortona dei Marsi is a comune and town in the province of L'Aquila in the Abruzzo region of central Italy. It is included in traditional area of Marsica. The commune is part of the National Park of Abruzzo, Lazio and Molise. Ortona dei Marsi is situated on 1000 meters above sea level and the mountains that surround the valley reach up to 1,800 meters.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pescina</span> Comune in Abruzzo, Italy

Pescina is a township and comune in the province of L'Aquila, Abruzzo, central Italy. It is a part of the mountain community Valle del Giovenco.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fucine Lake</span> Former Lake in Abruzzo, Italy

The Fucine Lake was a large endorheic lake in western Abruzzo, central Italy, stretching from Avezzano in the northwest to Ortucchio in the southeast, and touching Trasacco in the southwest. Once the third largest lake in Italy, it was drained in 1878.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tourism in Abruzzo</span> Place

Tourism in Abruzzo has become one of the most prosperous sectors in the economy of Abruzzo, and in recent years has seen a remarkable growth attracting numerous tourists from Italy and Europe. According to statistics, in 2021 arrivals totaled 1,330,887. A total of 5,197,765 arrivals were tourists, a figure that puts the region seventeenth among the Italian regions for numbers of tourists per year. A moderate support to tourism is also given to the Abruzzo Airport with many low cost and charter flights connecting the entire region with the rest of Europe.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Avezzano concentration camp</span> Italian internment camp during World War I

Avezzano concentration camp was an Italian assembly and detention camp set up in 1916 in the Abruzzo city of the same name during World War I, immediately after the 1915 Marsica earthquake that almost completely destroyed it decimating the population. The detention camp was reserved to about 15,000 prisoners from the Austro-Hungarian army, mainly of Czech–Slovak, Polish, German, and Hungarian nationalities; Romanians, who were gathered in the Romanian Legion of Italy by the end of the conflict, had a garrison and a training camp in Avezzano. Mostly abandoned in 1920, a sector was reused in World War II to house Indian, English, New Zealand, and Pakistani war prisoners.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Monte Salviano</span> Italian mountain

Monte Salviano is a massif in the Abruzzo Apennines, Central Italy. It includes the peaks of Monte d'Aria, Monte Cimarani and Monte San Felice. Since 1999 the area, falling within the municipal territory of Avezzano, has been included in the Riserva Naturale di Monte Salviano.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Piani Palentini</span> Plateau in upper Marsica, Abruzzo, Italy

The Piani Palentini are a plateau in upper Marsica, a subregion of Abruzzo, in central Italy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tunnels of Claudius</span> Italian archaeological site

The Tunnels of Claudius are a hydraulic work made up of a long underground canal, six inclined service tunnels and thirty-two wells, which Emperor Claudius had built between 41 and 52 AD to control the variable levels of the Fucine Lake in Abruzzo, thus protecting riparian villages from floods and reclaiming the Fucine lands making them cultivable. Thanks to them, the lake waters flowed out through the belly of Mount Salviano from the Avezzano side along the almost 6-kilometre-long (3.7 mi) tunnel until they flowed into the Liri River on the opposite side of the mountain, under the old town of Capistrello. The underground canal represents the longest tunnel ever built since ancient times until the inauguration of the Fréjus Rail Tunnel occurring in 1871.

<i>Fucine Inlet</i>

The Fucine Inlet is a monument built on the head of the main emissary of the Fucine Lake in Italy. It is made up of the three-arched bridge of the sluice gates and the about 7-metre-high (23 ft) statue of the Immaculate Conception rising above. It is situated in Borgo Incile, a locality south of the city of Avezzano, in the Fucine plain, Abruzzo, Central Italy. The facility necessary for the drainage of the Fucine Lake connects the outer drainage canal to the underground emissary which is served by the system of the Tunnels of Claudius in Mount Salviano. The monument was made in 1876 by architect Carlo Nicola Carnevali.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Riserva Naturale di Monte Salviano</span> Italian nature reserve

The Riserva Naturale di Monte Salviano or Riserva naturale guidata Monte Salviano is a nature reserve in Abruzzo, Italy, established in 1999. It lies in the territory of the comune (municipality) of Avezzano, in the Province of L'Aquila. The reserve is named after Monte Salviano, a massif that extends northwest to southwest dividing the Fucine basin from the Palentine Plains, in the Marsica sub-region.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Capistrello massacre</span> Mass killing made by Nazists and Fascists in Italy

The Capistrello massacre was a mass killing carried out in Capistrello, a small town in Abruzzo, Italy, on 4 June 1944 by Nazi and Fascist occupation troops during World War II. A first tragical episode occurred a few months earlier on 20 March, when a local youth was barbarically tortured and then shot. The following roundup made by Nazists and Fascists on the slopes of Mount Salviano led to the capture and torture of 33 shepherds and breeders. The shooting occurred near Capistrello railway station.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Valle Roveto</span> Apennine valley

The Valle Roveto or Val Roveto is an Apennine valley, located in the Abruzzo Apennines, in the province of L'Aquila, in Marsica, a geographical and historical central Italian region. The Valley is crossed by the river Liri and is part of the larger Valle del Liri.

References

  1. Walter Cianciusi, Profilo di storia linguistica della Marsica, Banca Popolare della Marsica, Avezzano, 1988.
  2. Bilancio demografico anno 2019 (dati provvisori) - 37 comuni della Marsica, Istat.
  3. Marsica: il territorio, Marsica Live
  4. Marsica: il territorio, Marsica Live
  5. Italia: i 100 Comuni più alti, Comuniverso
  6. Attilio Francesco Santellocco, Marsi: Storia e leggenda, Touta Marsa, Luco dei Marsi, 2004.
  7. Abruzzo, Treccani.

Coordinates: 42°02′00″N13°25′00″E / 42.0333°N 13.4167°E / 42.0333; 13.4167