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] ] ] '''L'Aquila''' (in present-day ]) was established as Aquila in ], with the permission of ] of ] (]), becoming Aquila degli Abruzzi in ], and L'Aquila in ]. | ] ] ] | ||
'''L'Aquila''' (in present-day ]) was established as Aquila in ], with the permission of ] of ] (]), becoming Aquila degli Abruzzi in ], and L'Aquila in ]. | |||
Once established, it quickly developed and became the second city of the kingdom of Naples. It was an autonomous city, ruled by a diarchy composed of the City Council (which had varying names and composition over the centuries) and the King's Captain. It fell initially under the lordship of Niccolò dell'Isola, appointed by the people as People's Knight, then killed when he became a tyrant. Later, it fell under Pietro "Lalle" Camponeschi, Count of Montorio, who became the third side of a new triarchy, with the Council and the King's Captain. Camponeschi, who was also Great Chancellor of the kingdom of Naples, become too powerful, and was killed by order of Prince Luigi of Taranto. His descendants fought with the Pretatti family for power for several generations, but never again attained the power of their ancestor. The last, and the one true "lord" of L'Aquila, was Ludovico Franchi, who challenged the power of the pope by giving refuge to Alfonso d'Este, former duke of ], and the children of Giampaolo Baglioni, deposed "lord" of Perugia. In the end, however, the Aquilans, always fond of their freedom, had him deposed and imprisoned by the king of ]. | Once established, it quickly developed and became the second city of the kingdom of Naples. It was an autonomous city, ruled by a diarchy composed of the City Council (which had varying names and composition over the centuries) and the King's Captain. It fell initially under the lordship of Niccolò dell'Isola, appointed by the people as People's Knight, then killed when he became a tyrant. Later, it fell under Pietro "Lalle" Camponeschi, Count of Montorio, who became the third side of a new triarchy, with the Council and the King's Captain. Camponeschi, who was also Great Chancellor of the kingdom of Naples, become too powerful, and was killed by order of Prince Luigi of Taranto. His descendants fought with the Pretatti family for power for several generations, but never again attained the power of their ancestor. The last, and the one true "lord" of L'Aquila, was Ludovico Franchi, who challenged the power of the pope by giving refuge to Alfonso d'Este, former duke of ], and the children of Giampaolo Baglioni, deposed "lord" of Perugia. In the end, however, the Aquilans, always fond of their freedom, had him deposed and imprisoned by the king of ]. |
Revision as of 12:30, 8 June 2004
L'Aquila (in present-day Italy) was established as Aquila in 1258, with the permission of King Corrado I of Sicily (Roman Emperor Conrad IV), becoming Aquila degli Abruzzi in 1861, and L'Aquila in 1939.
Once established, it quickly developed and became the second city of the kingdom of Naples. It was an autonomous city, ruled by a diarchy composed of the City Council (which had varying names and composition over the centuries) and the King's Captain. It fell initially under the lordship of Niccolò dell'Isola, appointed by the people as People's Knight, then killed when he became a tyrant. Later, it fell under Pietro "Lalle" Camponeschi, Count of Montorio, who became the third side of a new triarchy, with the Council and the King's Captain. Camponeschi, who was also Great Chancellor of the kingdom of Naples, become too powerful, and was killed by order of Prince Luigi of Taranto. His descendants fought with the Pretatti family for power for several generations, but never again attained the power of their ancestor. The last, and the one true "lord" of L'Aquila, was Ludovico Franchi, who challenged the power of the pope by giving refuge to Alfonso d'Este, former duke of Ferrara, and the children of Giampaolo Baglioni, deposed "lord" of Perugia. In the end, however, the Aquilans, always fond of their freedom, had him deposed and imprisoned by the king of Naples.
The power of L'Aquila was based on the close connection between the city and its mother-villages (99, according to local tradition), which had established the city as a federation, each of them building a borough and considering it as a part of the mother-village. The City Council was originally composed of the Mayors of the villages, and the city had no legal existence until King Carlo II of Naples appointed a "Camerlengo", responsible for city tributes (previously paid seperately by each of its mother-villages). Later, the Camerlengo also took political power, as President of the City Council. The town became the see of a Metropolitan Archbishop of the Catholic Church.
This period ended in the 16th century, when Spanish viceroy Philibert van Oranje destroyed L'Aquila and established Spanish feudalism in its countryside. The city, separated from its roots, never developed again. It was destroyed, for the third time (the first was in 1258, by King Manfredi of Sicily, while still unfinished), by an earthquake in 1703.
Nowadays, L'Aquila is a small city, having about 70,000 inhabitants, and is the regional capital of Abruzzo. Not far from Rome, its attractions for tourists include a Spanish military castle of the 16th century, the romanic basilica of St.Mary of Collemaggio (where pope Celestinus V was crowned and buried), the basilica of St. Bernardin, and the medieval fountain of the 99 jets (whose source is still unknown) in memory of the 99 villages which established the city. It is also a ski station for Mt.Gran Sasso d'Italia, the highest of the Appennines. L'Aquila is the site of many electronic industries, and is the home city of a rugby team which has been Italian champion many times. In the surrounding countryside, among other castles, Roman ruins(the important Roman city of Amiternum) and ancient monasteries, there is the castle of Rocca Calascio (used in the 1980s as the location for the movie Ladyhawk), which is the highest castle of Italy and one of the highest in Europe.