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Brindisi
Today Brindisi is a large, busy fishing and ferry port, boasting a significant amount of industrial activity, particularly petrochemicals, plastics and food products. For the casual tourist, the city's street layout is confusing, making the discovery of its ancient charms difficult. Brindisi is also a city that requires the visitor to remain vigilant.

History

Brindisi was probably an Illyrian settlement predating the Roman expansion. The Latin name Brundisium, through the Greek Brentesion, is a corruption of the Messapian Brention meaning "deer's head" and probably referring to the shape of the natural harbour. As a Messapic centre, Brindisi was in conflict with Taranto and in friendly relations with Thurii. In 267 BCE (245 BCE, according to other sources) it was conquered by the Romans. After the Punic Wars it became In the Social War it received Roman citizenship, and was made a free port by Sulla. It suffered, however, from a siege conducted by Caesar in 49 BCE and was again attacked in 42 and 40 BCE. The poet Pacuvius was born here about 220 BCE, and here the famous poet Vergil died in 19 BCE. Under the Romans Brundisium, with some 100,000 inhabitants, was an active port, the chief point of embarkation for Greece and the East, via Dyrrachium or Corcyra. It was connected with Rome by the Via Appia and the Via Traiana. Later Brindisi was conquered by Ostrogoths, and reconquered by the Byzantine Empire in the 6th century CE. In 674 it was destroyed by the Lombards led by Romuald I of Benevento. In the 9th century a Saracen settlement existed in the neighourhood of the city, which had been stormed in 836 by pirates. Again a Byzantine possession, it was captured by the Normans in 1070, and subsequently part of the Kingdom of Naples under its various dynasties. Like other Pugliese ports, Brindisi for a short while was ruled by Venice, but was soon reconquered by Spain. A plague and an earthquake struck the city, in 1348 and 1456, respectively. Brindisi fell to Austrian rule in 1707-1734, and afterwards to the Bourbons. Between September 1943 and February 1944 the city functioned as the temporary capital of Italy.

Main monuments

Cathedral
cathedral Brindisi Apulia tourism

Brindisi's cathedral - duomo - with its simple Romanesque facade dating from the 12th century - is dedicated to Saint John the Baptist. Most of the cathedral - not its facade - was rebuilt during the 18th century and features a few Baroque stylings. The interior houses relics of Brindisi's patron saint, St. Theodor and a 16th century wooden choir. The mosaic floor is similar to that in the cathedral at Otranto, suggesting it was done by the same artisans.

Swabian castle - Castello svevo
Swabian castle Castello svevo Brindisi Apulia tourism

Built by Frederick II, the castle overlooks the port on the side of Seno di Ponente (the Eastern Inlet); the building included the former houses and during the XV century the Aragonese added towers and walls. The castle was also a prison and a military base. In 1943 it was the residence of Vittorio Emanuele III.

S. Giovanni al sepolcro
S. Giovanni al sepolcro Brindisi

 

 
Roman column
roman column Brindisi

Brindisi castle which was historically attributed to Ruggero il Normanno, dates back to 1131; it was built on an already existing building dating back to the Byzantine period. Between 1233 and 1240 Frederick II of Swabia put the castle, which had been damaged by Guglielmo il Malo (1156), back into operation by using the pervious layout and the surrounding outside wall structure and the two towers. During the Angioine age, important restoration work was carried out on behalf of Charles I by the promagistrates Pietro d'Agincourt and Giovanni di Toul. In the 16th Century under Isabel of Aragon and her daughter Bona Sforza the rampart wall was built and the central courtyard repaired with the two ramp steps. In the 19th Century the castle was used as a prison and later as an army barracks. It currently houses the Superintendency for Historical, Environmental, Artistic and Architectural Heritage of Apulia. Some rooms are given over to a Gallery of plaster casts and others house temporary exhibitions.

S. Benedetto
S. Benedetto Brindisi