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Acerenza

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Comune di Acerenza
Picture of Acerenza
Coat of arms of Comune di Acerenza
Municipal coat of arms

Location of Acerenza in Italy
Country Italy
Region Basilicata
Province Potenza (PZ)
Mayor Antonio Giordano
Elevation 833 m (2,733 ft)
Area 77 km² (29.7 sq mi)
Population (as of 2006-12-30)
 - Total 2,705
 - Density 35/km² (91/sq mi)
Time zone CET, UTC+1
Coordinates 40°48′N 15°57′E / 40.8°N 15.95°E / 40.8; 15.95
Gentilic Acheruntini
Dialing code 0971
Postal code 85011
Patron St. Canio
 - Day May 25
Website: www.comune.acerenza.pz.it

Acerenza is a town and comune in the province of Potenza, in the Southern Italian region of Basilicata.

Contents

[edit] History

With its strategic position 800 m above sea-level, Acerenza has been sacked by a series of invaders.

The town, then known as Aceruntia or Acheruntia, was conquered by the Romans in 318 BC. Later, it was taken by the Ostrogoths (it was mentioned as an important fortress during the Gothic Wars) and then the Lombards, who fortified the town. In 788 Charlemagne ordered that its walls were destroyed. In 1041, after a period in which it was fought between the Principality of Salerno and the Byzantine Empire, it was conquered again by the Norman Robert Guiscard.

The town has been the see of an archbishop since at least 499, when a Justus is known. According to legend, the town's first bishop was appointed by St. Peter.

From the 16th century, Acerenza was held under the feudal lordship of the Marquess of Galatone, that family being granted the title Duke of Acerenza on 12 April 1593 by Philip II of Spain. Through marriage the duchy of Acerenza was inherited by the family of the Prince Belmonte, in whose line the title has descended to the present day.

[edit] Main sights

  • Acerenza Cathedral,[1] begun in 1080 by archbishop Arnando. In Romanesque-Gothic style, it houses a famed marble bust of Julian the Apostate. It has a nave and two aisles with 16th century canvasses, and a crypt from 1524.
  • The church of San Laviero Martire (12th century). It has a Baroque-style stone high altar with an altarpiece of the Martyrdom of Saint Laviero (18th century).

[edit] References

[edit] External links



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