Bitonto

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Comune di Bitonto
Coat of arms of Comune di Bitonto
Municipal coat of arms
Country Flag of Italy Italy
Region Puglia
Province Bari (BA)
Mayor
Elevation 118 m
Area 172.9 km²
Population
 - Total (as of 2004) 56,420
 - Density 328/km²
Time zone CET, UTC+1
Coordinates 41°07′N 16°41′E
Gentilic Bitontini
Dialing code 080
Postal code 70032
Frazioni Palombaio, Mariotto
Patron Madonna dell'Immacolata Concezione
 - Day May 26


Location of Bitonto in Italy
Website: www.comune.bitonto.ba.it

Bitonto is a city and comune in the province of Bari, (Apulia region), Italy. It is nicknamed the "City of Olives".

Contents

Bitonto lies approximately 16 km (10 miles) to the west of the city of Bari, near the coast of the Adriatic Sea.

The city was founded by the Peuceti, and its inhabitants referred to by the Greek settlers of the region, as Butontinoi, an ethnonym of uncertain derivation[1] Its first city wall can be dated to the fifth to fourth centuries BC; traces remain in the foundations of the Norman walling. Similarities of coinage suggest that Bitonto was under the hegemony of Spartan Tarentum, but bearing the numismatic legend BITONTINON. Later, having been a Roman ally in the Samnite Wars, the civitas Butuntinenses became a Roman municipium, preserving its former laws and self-government and venerating its divine protectress, whom the Romans identified by interpretatio romana as Minerva; the site sacred to her is occupied by the Church of San Pietro in Vincoli. As a city of the Late Roman Empire, Bitonto figures in the Liber Colonis of Frontinus, in the Antonine Itinerary and other Imperial itineraries, and the Tabula Peutingeriana, a post where fresh horses were to be had for travellers on the via Traiana for Brundisium.

The foundations of a Paleochristian basilica came to light in excavations beneath the cathedral's crypt, but no written evidence survives of an established diocese in the Early Middle Ages. Though there is no evidence that a Lombard gastaldo had his seat at Bitonto, Lombard customs and law insinuated themselves deeply in local social fabric. During the ninth century, Bitonto successfully withstood a Saracen raid, in which the besiegers' leader was killed beneath the city's walls[2] Bitonto took part in the revolt of Melus of Bari in 1009.

In the Middle Ages Bitonto was a fief of several baronial families, before it passed permanently in the thirteenth century to the Acquaviva, who took their name from their stronghold at Acquaviva delle Fonti:[3] The Acquaviva were later dukes of Atri, and their minor signory of Bitonto was raised to a marquisate in 1464 by the King of Naples, Ferrante di Aragona in favour of Giovanni Antonio Acquaviva; on his premature death it passed to his brother, the successful and cultivated condottiero Andrea Matteo Acquaviva, who exchanged it in 1487 for the marquessate of Ugento, which he subsequently lost.[4] In 1552 the citizens paid for the city's freedom the considerable sum of 66,000 ducats.

In 1734, during the War of Polish Succession, the Spanish army under Charles of Bourbon defeated the Austrians at the Battle of Bitonto, thus securing possession of the Kingdom of Naples for the Bourbons.

The city includes a medieval burg and a modern part.

The Cathedral of Bitonto.
The Cathedral of Bitonto.

The main landmarks include:

  • The Castle and the walls.
  • The Cathedral of S. Valentino, built in the 12th-13th centuries and influenced by the Basilica of San Nicola in Bari. The west façade is divided in three parts and has three portals, the central one sculpted with vegetables motifs and scenes from the Old Testament, four mullioned windows and a rose window flanked by sculptures of animals supported by small columns. The interior has a nave and two aisles: the main artworkd is the marble ambo (1229), a masterwork of medieval Apulian sculpture.
  • The church of San Francesco (12th century).
  • The church of San Gaetano.
  • The church of San Domenico.
  • The church of Santa Caterina.
  • The Sylos-Labini Palace.
  • The Late Renaissance Sylos Vulpano Palace.

Bitonto produces olive oil, wine, beer, cereals, almonds, and handcrafted apparel.

Bitonto is not directly connected to the Italian national railway system. However, it is serviced by an electric rail line operated privately by Ferrotramviaria. Bitonto is 8 km away from the international Karol Wojtyla Airport of Bari.



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