Agropoli
Agropoli
is a coastal agricultural center some 53km from Salerno in the zone of Cilento.
Its name derives from the Greek for 'high city',
although it seems to have been founded by the Byzantines. In 882 AD it was
occupied by the Saracens.
Like Sorrento the main town overlooks the sea and is
perched on high cliffs.
A great place to keep a look out, as the Byzantine
castle suggests, although it didn't stop the Saracens eventual conquest.
Entrance to old Agropoli is via a medieval gate which
no doubt saw the invaders pour through. Once inside turn right and follow the
street up towards the castle and the panoramic views of the sea.
Although a private house now occupies the living area
the grounds and walls can be visited.
A monthly magazine called 'Casa Parco' is produced by
the Parco Nazionale del Cilento & Vallo di Diano. In the Oct 1998 edition
the magazine featured a letter written by Arthur John Strutt, an English writer
from Chelmsford who was traveling in the area
in 1838.
This is what he wrote about Agropoli to his family
while staying over in Castellabate on the 14th May:
'After following this road for 6 miles we proceeded
along a path which wound its way up a hill. Once on the summit the path
descended towards the sea and, after a further walk of 5 or 6 miles, to a
village called Agropoli which sits magnificently on a rock overlooking the bay
of Salerno. We carried on along the mule track as it hugged the coast towards
Castellabate where we choose to rest'.
The city of Agropoli, sits just south of Paestum, and
is approximately 35 minutes driving from Salerno.
The old part of the town, what most tourists come to see, spills on to an
indented promotory jutting out into the sea, which commands a fine view over the
sea of the Cilento.
The name of the town itself "Agropoli"
alludes to what many believe are its fouding fathers - the Greek, but many
scholars now believe that in fact, this city has Byzantine origins
and was in reality founded no earlier than the 5th century A.D.
In the 9th century, the Saracens,
the famous Mediterranean pirates, who were famous for terrorizing coastal towns
along Italy's Tyrrhenian sea, conquered Agropoli and made it their stronghold
for over two centuries. As a result, the infamous group, who were known
throughout the meditteranean, came to be known as the "Agropolitan Saracens."
A field, within the town, has preserved its denomination of "Saracen field"
to this very day.
Today Agropoli is a mostly modern, by comparision to
some of the nearby sites, like Paestum. However, there are many historical
marks throughout the town, such as the medieval castle with its ajoining borough
and the city gate dating from Aragonese
History:
The promontory on which Agropoli stands has been inhabited since Neolithic times.
To the east of the promontory, at the mouth of the River Testene, there is a
natural sheltered bay, called "Foce", which the Greeks used for
trading with the local people. In Roman times, in the area now known as San
Marco, a seaside town called "Ercula" developed between the 1st
century BC, and the 5th century AD. Meanwhile, the harbour of neighbouring Greek
Poseidonia (renamed Paestum by the Romans) became progressively silted up.
During the 5th century AD, when the Vandals from Africa made life difficult in
Ercula, its inhabitants retreated to the overlooking promontory, which offered
better prospects for defence. There the Byzantines fortified the settlement, and
called it Akropolis, meaning "high town". Towards the end of the 6th
century, the Longobard invasion forced the Bishop of Paestum to take refuge in
Agropoli, which then became not only the episcopal see, but the main centre of
the surviving Byzantine territories in Tyrrhenian Lucania.
In 882 the town fell to the Saracens, who turned it
into a powerful stronghold. From this base, they set out to plunder the
surrounding areas, right up to the walls of Salerno. In 915, they were driven
out from their trenched camp at Garigliano, Agropoli was also liberated, and
came back under the jurisdiction of the bishops.
For the rest of the medieval period, the area remained
under the protection of the bishops, who also possessed huge territories around
until the early 15th century. In 1412, Pope Gregory XII ceded the feudal
territories of Agropoli and Castellabate to King Ladislaw of Durazzo. In 1436,
King Alphonse of Aragon granted the fiefdoms of Agropoli and Castellabate to
Giovanni Sanseverino Baron of Cilento. In 1445 the Numerazione dei Fuochi
recorded total 202 families. From 1552 Agropoli passed to various families in
succession: D'Ayerbo of Aragon (1553); Grimaldi (after 1564); Arcella Caracciolo
(1597); Mendoza (1607); the Filomarino princes of Roccadaspide (1626); Mastrillo
(1650); Zattara, and finally the Sanfelice, Dukes of Laureana (1660), who ruled
the town until the abolition of feudalism in 1806.
During the 19th century, Agropoli began to expand
outside the medieval walls, but the old town has remained intact, together with
most of the surrounding defensive walls, and the 7th-century entrance gate.
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