Torricella Peligna

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Torricella Peligna
Comune di Torricella Peligna
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Location of Torricella Peligna
Torricella Peligna
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Torricella Peligna
Location of Torricella Peligna in Italy
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Torricella Peligna
Torricella Peligna (Abruzzo)
Coordinates: 42°1′N14°16′E / 42.017°N 14.267°E / 42.017; 14.267
Country Italy
Region Abruzzo
Province Chieti (CH)
Frazioni Colle del Ponte, Colle Zingaro, Fallascoso, Purgatoio, Riga Tre Confini, San Giusto
Area
[1]
  Total35 km2 (14 sq mi)
Elevation
910 m (2,990 ft)
Population
 (31 March 2008) [2]
  Total1,520
  Density43/km2 (110/sq mi)
Demonym Torricellani
Time zone UTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST) UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
66019
Dialing code 0872
ISTAT code 069095
Saint day10 July
Website Official website

Torricella Peligna is a comune and town in the Province of Chieti in the Abruzzo region of Italy.

Contents

Church of San Giacomo San Giacomo Torricella Peligna.jpg
Church of San Giacomo

History

The foundation of Torricella dates back according to local tradition to an exodus from the exiles of Juvanum, during the Byzantine Wars of the sixth century AD, a Roman town near the nearby municipality of Montenerodomo, however the first certain news is given since XII century when it was a fief of Orsini and, later, of Accounts of Manoppello and Marchesi Celaia of Chieti. [3] The country was destroyed during World War II. [4] The current name of the municipality is improper, as are the others of Taranta Peligna and Lama dei Peligni, as these centers rise in the eastern part of the mountain Majella, and sit rovano lapped by the Rivers Sangro and Aventine. In ancient times the centers that existed on site, were inhabited by the Samnite tribes of Carricini, and bordered with the Peligni near Field of Jupiter and the Frentani from Guardiagrele (the ancient Grele) to Lanciano (Anxanum); however, this incorrect toponym was added with the Unity of Italy in 1863.

Torricella made national headlines during World War II. The Germans, in retreat in the Gustav line, made scorched earth of the country, and were fought in '44 by Maiella brigade, in Battle of Sangro. Many were displaced and the medieval castle was destroyed. Torricella was later rebuilt and is in the twenty-first century a tourist destination for mountain excursions.

In 1744 Vincenzo Tobia Nicola Bellini, musician who died in Catania in 1829, grandfather and first master of the famous opera player Vincenzo Bellini, was born there.

The origins of Torricella

Very full-bodied are the finds of the Italic era dating back to the sixth century BC. near Torricella, in the adjacent districts, various archaeological discoveries have been made, the finds of which are preserved in the Archaeological Museum of Chieti. In Sant'Antonio a tomb with a bronze helmet was found, the decoration on the shell of a deer or goat, preserved in the Archaeological Museum of the nearby Juvanum , a dagger, a collar, a spiral bracelet, four digital rings and an iron fibula. It is claimed that near Monte Moresco, between Torricella and Pennadomo, there are remains of a Samnite fortification, built above an even older settlement, attributed to the second millennium BC, from here comes a stone dagger, preserved in the Pigorini Museum in Rome.

The area was regularly inhabited during the Samnite era, and after the Roman conquest of the tribe of Caraceni (which occupied the area of Juvanum di Montonerodomo, Trebula di Quadri and Cluviae di Casoli); this tribe bordered sangro with Frentani, to the east with the Lucani located near Mount Pallano, up with the Pentri of Bovianum Vetus (Pietrabbondante), finally with the Peligni in eastern Majella. The main city of this tribe was Juvanum , still well preserved, before reaching the center of Montenerodomo, the most practiced economic activity was agriculture along with pastoralism. The tratturo, still partly visible, developed along Colle dell'Irco, and connected to the Celano-Foggia tratturo, where a bronze of Hercules from the fourth century BC was found.

From the discovery at the Le Coste district, it is assumed that the continuity of housing between Torricella and Juvanum had continued even after the period of decadence of the Western Roman Empire. The area was occupied by barbarians during the Greek Gothic War of the sixth century AD, in fact there is the discovery of an Spangehelme ostrogoto or a helmet with bands in gilded copper and iron in the locality of Santa Lucia, well hidden inside a cellar of late Roman origin for the construction material, located in a country farmhouse. This artifact is preserved in the Museum of Early Medieval Byzantine Abruzzo in the ducal castle of Crecchio.

The castle

The phenomenon of the framing of the seventh-tenth century AD also affected Torricella. The first fortifications are located in the Monte Moresco area, next to the Roman town, which was finally abandoned in the 15th century. A castle is mentioned in some documents of Pope Nicholas II who in 1060 assigned half of it by the Benedictine Monks of the Tremiti Islands. The Middle Ages is also the era of Christian affirmation in Torricella, near Juvanum arose the Abbey of Santa Maria in Palazzo (or Monte Moresco), of which the structure is preserved near the ruins; in the tenth century there is the semi-legendary testimony of the coming of St. Raynald, of the Order of the Basilians together with the monk San Falco  [ it ], who settled at a hermitage in nearby Palena. In Fallascoso there is still in the twenty-first century the testimony of the hermitage of San Rinaldo. In the year 1173 dates back to the construction of the baronial chapel of Torricella, the mother church of San Giacomo, redone in the 19th century.

From the historical photographs, it can be seen how the castle of Torricella occupied the entire upper area of the country, where the Obelisk of the Civilian Victims of War is located, since it was blown up by the Nazis, after it was occupied as the headquarters of the war operations.

From the Middle Ages to the nineteenth century

Veduta di Torricella Torricella Peligna in autunno davanti alla Maiella - panoramio.jpg
Veduta di Torricella

Torricella in the Second World War

After the armistice of 8 September, due to its strategic position, Torricella was already occupied by the Germans in October 1943 and threatened by Allied bombing. On the one hand, anti-fascist intellectuals, such as Ettore Troilo, had already spontaneously left the country in September because they were considered insecure, on the other, already on 3 September 1943, German planes collided with the allies, but without attacking, as they were headed towards Sulmona to bomb the station. The English prisoners of the Fonte d'Amore internment camp in Sulmona passed through Torricella and found refuge with the inhabitants. On October 19 Torricella was officially occupied by the Germans, who in trucks, requisitioned as many men as possible for the fortification works of the Gustav line, rounding up about 100 people, and installing the garrison of the general command in the baronial castle, at the top of the town, where the Obelisk to the Civil War stands. While Casoli was freed by the British on 4 December, Torricella was evacuated, and the villagers took refuge in the country houses, the same night Ettore Troilo came out of his hiding place to go to the allied command of Casoli to propose the birth of the Maiella Volunteer Corps. The German presence in Torricella was marked by repeated harassment, threats and acts of violence, of which the massacre of Sant'Agata (1 February 1944) is remembered, even if this concerns the villagers of nearby Gessopalena; so they gave more impetus to the Casolani, backed by the British to begin the liberation operations of Torricella.
Another grim episode of Nazi barbarism concerns the "Tre Confini massacre". In January 1944 both Torricella and the nearby village of Fallascoso were in German hands, on January 5 the spouses Tranquillino Di Paolo and Concettina Cianci, hidden among the graves of the cemetery, were discovered and brutally killed; on 11 January Antonio Mancini was machine-gunned in the La Morgia district while he was going to visit his wife who had given birth in a farmhouse where she was hidden, and on the same day Giovanni Del Duca was killed in the district of San Venanzio.

The real massacre concerned the Teti Di Riga family: the head of the family Giustino was discovered by the Germans while hiding in the farm so as not to be taken for the fortification works, and was robbed of his animals. Giustino Di Riga reached the English command of Roccascalegna, to try to request military action, since he knew well the daily route of the Germans along the Torricella-Fallascoso road to carry out the raids. The British accepted, and on the night of 11 January they stationed themselves at the Piccone furnace, and upon the arrival of the Germans, the guerrilla warfare began, with the victory of the British, who returned to Roccascalegna, however not considering the presence of another patrol in Colle of the Irco, who launched rockets for help. The Nazi revenge was ruthless against Torricellan civilians, especially towards women, the elderly and children, since the men had either been taken or had fled to the surrounding villages. The Germans set fire to the farms and the elementary school, triggering panic, so that the Germans could more easily machine-gun them: 15-year-old Antonietta Crivelli, her 6-month-old brother, Carmela D'Ulisse, Giuseppe, Rosina and Rosa Porreca, Nicola Nunziato died Rossi, Costanza Uggè, Maria Antonia di Martino and other young children. Because of the impassable road, specially destroyed by the Germans, it was difficult for the "maiellini" casolani to reach Gesso, and subsequently Torricella at the end of January 1944, because the road had to be rebuilt almost anew, and upon arrival, the partisans found the semi-destroyed town, specially mined by the Germans, especially the baronial castle was blown up.

From the post-war period to the twenty-first century

Torricella has recovered quickly with the reconstruction, although the historical building fabric has suffered a lot from the destruction, so much so that a small part is preserved in the original appearance. In the following years the economy suffered an impoverishment due to the isolation of the villages, with strong emigration. In the 1970s, with the construction of the Honda Sevel industrial hub of the Val di Sangro things improved, but Torricella, to get out of anonymity, invested in the memory of the courage of citizens during the Second World War, and in addition to the project of memory, he woven relations with America, about the figure of the writer John Fante, whose father was torricellano; one of the main events of the village is the Festival "John Fante - The God of my Father".

Churches, shrines and hermitages

Palaces

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References

  1. "Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  2. All demographics and other statistics from the Italian statistical institute (Istat)
  3. "Torricella Peligna and its history (Part 1)". Sangroaventino. 2004. Retrieved December 20, 2009.
  4. "Torricella Peligna and its history (Part 2)". Sangroaventino. 2004. Retrieved December 20, 2009.
  5. "Sanctuary of Santa Maria del Roseto". Sangroaventino. 2004. Retrieved October 19, 2009.
  6. "Hermitage of San Rinaldo". Sangroaventino. 2004.
  7. "Church of St. Nicholas". Sangroaventino. 2004. Retrieved October 19, 2009.
  8. "Church of St. James". Sangroaventino. 2004. Retrieved October 19, 2009.
  9. "Church of St. Caillo". Sangroaventino. 2004. Retrieved October 19, 2009.
  10. "Church of St. Agatha". Sangroaventino. 2004. Retrieved October 19, 2009.
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