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Matera

Matera (Italian pronunciation: [maˈtɛːra], locally [maˈteːra] ; Materano: Matàrë [maˈtæːrə]) is a city and the capital of the Province of Matera in the region of Basilicata, in Southern Italy. With a history of continuous occupation dating back to the Palaeolithic (10th millennium BC), it is renowned for its rock-cut urban core, whose twin cliffside zones are known collectively as the Sassi.

Matera
Comune di Matera
Panorama of Matera
Matera within the Province of Matera
Location of Matera
Matera
Location of Matera in Basilicata
Matera
Matera (Basilicata)
Coordinates: 40°40′N 16°36′E / 40.667°N 16.600°E / 40.667; 16.600
CountryItaly
RegionBasilicata
ProvinceMatera (MT)
FrazioniLa Martella, Venusio, Picciano A, Picciano B
Government
 • MayorDomenico Bennardi (M5S)
Area
 • Total387.4 km2 (149.6 sq mi)
Elevation
401 m (1,316 ft)
Population
 (January 1, 2018)[2]
 • Total60,403
 • Density160/km2 (400/sq mi)
DemonymMaterani
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
75100
Dialing code0835
Patron saintMadonna della Bruna
Saint dayJuly 2
WebsiteOfficial website
The Sassi and the Park of the Rupestrian Churches of Matera
UNESCO World Heritage Site
The Sassi of Matera
CriteriaCultural: iii, iv, v
Reference670
Inscription1993 (17th Session)
Area1,016 ha
Buffer zone4,365 ha

Matera lies on the right bank of the Gravina river, whose canyon forms a geological boundary between the hill country of Basilicata (historic Lucania) to the south-west and the Murgia plateau of Apulia to the north-east.[3] The city began as a complex of cave habitations excavated in the softer limestone on the gorge's western, Lucanian face.[4] It took advantage of two streams which flow into the ravine from a spot near the Castello Tramontano, reducing the cliff's angle of drop and leaving a defensible narrow promontory in between. The central high ground, or acropolis, supporting the city's cathedral and administrative buildings, came to be known as Civita, and the settlement districts scaling down and burrowing into the sheer rock faces as the Sassi. Of the two streambeds, called the grabiglioni [it], the northern hosts Sasso Barisano (facing Bari) and the southern Sasso Caveoso (facing Montescaglioso).[5]

The Sassi consist of around twelve levels spanning the height of 380 m, connected by a network of paths, stairways, and courtyards (vicinati).[6] The medieval city clinging on to the edge of the canyon for its defence is invisible from the western approach.[7] The tripartite urban structure of Civita and the two Sassi, relatively isolated from each other,[8] survived until the 16th century, when the centre of public life moved outside the walls to the Piazza Sedile in the open plain (the Piano) to the west, followed by the shift of the elite residences to the Piano from the 17th century onwards.[9] By the end of the 18th century, a physical class boundary separated the overcrowded Sassi of the peasants from the new spatial order of their social superiors in the Piano, and geographical elevation came to coincide with status more overtly than before, to the point where the two communities no longer interacted socially.[10]

Yet it was only at the turn of the 20th century that the Sassi were declared unfit for modern habitation,[11] and the government relocation of all their inhabitants to new housing in the Piano followed between 1952 and the 1970s.[12] A new law in 1986 opened the path to restoration and reoccupation of the Sassi, this time – as noted by the architectural historian Anne Toxey – for the benefit of the wealthy middle class. The recognition of the Sassi, labelled la città sotterranea ("the underground city"), together with the rupestrian churches across the Gravina as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in December 1993 has assisted in attracting tourism and accelerated the reclaiming of the site.[13] In 2019, Matera was declared a European Capital of Culture.

History edit

Before its integration into the modern Italian state, the city of Matera had experienced the rule of the Romans, Lombards, Arabs, Byzantines, Swabians, Angevins, Aragonese, and Bourbons.

Though scholars continue to debate the date the dwellings were first occupied in Matera,[14] and the continuity of their subsequent occupation, the area of what is now Matera is believed to have been settled since the Palaeolithic (10th millennium BC). This makes it potentially one of the oldest continually inhabited settlements in the world.[15] Alternatively, it has been suggested by Anne Toxey that the area has been "occupied continuously for at least three millennia".[16]

The town of Matera was founded by the Roman Lucius Caecilius Metellus in 251 BC who called it Matheola.[17] In AD 664 Matera was conquered by the Lombards[citation needed] and became part of the Duchy of Benevento. In the 7th and 8th centuries the nearby grottos were colonised by both Benedictine and Basilian monastic institutions.[18][citation needed] After the Arab conquest of Bari in 840,[19] Matera came under Islamic rule.[20] Emancipated from the old Lombard jurisdiction of the gastald of Acerenza in the Principality of Salerno, the town gained regional prominence.[21]

In the spring of 867, it was burnt by the imperial troops of Louis II as the first key target in the emirate's conquest; the Chronicle of St Benedict of Monte Cassino calls it a particularly well-defended site.[22][23][24][25] The Franks soon fell out with the Lombards and the Byzantines exploited the local need for protection from Arab raiding and internal Lombard divisions to retake Apulia, which became the theme of Longobardia in 891/2.[26] Already by 887,[27] Matera's local Lombard elite bore Byzantine titles, the monastery of San Vincenzo al Volturno had to conduct business before the Byzantine judge and town notables of Matera, and the Greeks of Matera made up the Byzantine garrison of Naples.[28] The precarious Byzantine rule had to contend with the ambitions of Lombard towns and nobles against the background of frequent incursions from the neighbouring duchy of Capua-Benevento and from Arab Sicily. In 940 Matera was besieged, possibly with local assistance, by the Lombards.[29][30][31]

On 25 January 982 the army of Otto II camped before the walls of Matera on its way from Salerno to Taranto, ostensibly marching against the Arabs.[32][33][34] In 994 Matera was temporarily captured by the Arabs after a four-month siege.[35][36][37][38][39] The town continued to play a part in Byzantine governance: in June 1019 the chartoularios Stephanos of Matera assisted in the re-foundation of Troia.[40] But civic unrest was also endemic and in 1040 the Byzantine judge Romanos was murdered at Matera by the local auxiliary troops during a wave of assaults on Byzantine officials that swept across the region.[41] After the prominent Apulian rebels enlisted the support of the Normans and defeated the new katepano of Italy at Cannae in 1041,[42][43] Matera fell within the scope of Norman incursions and struck a deal with the invaders.[44] In retaliation for this, the next katepano Georgios Maniakes, dispatched to Italy with special powers in April 1042, carried out mass executions in Matera in June, only to launch a rebellion of his own in September.[45][46][47]

After his departure Matera elected William Iron Arm as its count (1042),[45][48] but like other towns it remained in Byzantine hands despite the Norman advances[49] – in 1054 died Sico, the protospatharios of Matera.[50] The city was seized in April 1064 as an independent acquisition by Robert, Count of Montescaglioso, a seditious nephew of Robert Guiscard, who profited from the involvement of his uncle further south.[51][52][53] After count Robert died in July 1080, Matera accepted the rule of his brother Geoffrey of Conversano.[54][55] Geoffrey's son Alexander joined a revolt against Roger II in 1132, but he fled before the advance of the king to Byzantium and left his son Geoffrey in Matera, whose inhabitants gave the city away to avoid being massacred by the royal troops.[56] Alexander later took part in the Byzantine invasion of Italy in 1156.[57] Lombard aristocrats survived with a reduced status: around 1150, Guaimar (III) of Capaccio, a descendant of Lombard princes, held a sub-fief near Matera from the count of Montescaglioso.[58] Meanwhile, after a period of association with the Byzantine metropolis of Otranto from 968,[59] the episcopal see of Matera was reclaimed by the archbishopric of Acerenza.[60] A new cathedral church of St Eustace was consecrated in May 1082.[61]

After a short communal phase and a series of pestilences and earthquakes, the city became an Aragonese possession in the 15th century, and was given in fief to the barons of the Tramontano family.[citation needed] In 1514, however, the population rebelled against the oppression and killed Count Giovanni Carlo Tramontano. In the 17th century Matera was handed over to the Orsini and then became part of the Terra d'Otranto, in Apulia. Later it was capital of the province of Basilicata, a position it retained until 1806, when Joseph Bonaparte assigned it to Potenza.[citation needed]

In 1927, it became capital of the new province of Matera.[citation needed]

Government edit

Since local government political reorganization in 1993, Matera has been governed by the City Council of Matera. Voters elect directly 32 councilors and the Mayor of Matera every five years.

Main sights edit

The Sassi (ancient town) edit

Matera has gained international fame for its ancient town, the "Sassi di Matera". The Sassi originated in a prehistoric troglodyte settlement, and these dwellings are thought to be among the first ever human settlements in what is now Italy. The Sassi are habitations dug into the calcareous rock itself, which is characteristic of Basilicata and Apulia. Many of them are really little more than small caverns, and in some parts of the Sassi a street lies on top of another group of dwellings. The ancient town grew up on one slope of the rocky ravine created by a river that is now a small stream, and this ravine is known locally as "la Gravina". In the 1950s, as part of a policy to clear the extreme poverty of the Sassi, the government of Italy used force to relocate most of the population of the Sassi to new public housing in the developing modern city.

Until the late 1980s the Sassi was still considered an area of poverty, since its dwellings were, and in most cases still are, uninhabitable and dangerous. The present local administration, however, has become more tourism-orientated, and it has promoted the regeneration of the Sassi as a picturesque tourist attraction with the aid of the Italian government, UNESCO, and Hollywood. Today there are many thriving businesses, pubs and hotels there, and the city is amongst the fastest growing in southern Italy.[citation needed]

 
View from the Canyon (Gravina)

Monasteries and churches edit

 
Stairways in Matera.

Matera preserves a large and diverse collection of buildings related to the Christian faith, including a large number of rupestrian churches carved from the calcarenite rock of the region.[62] These churches, which are also found in the neighbouring region of Apulia, were listed in the 1998 World Monuments Watch by the World Monuments Fund.

Matera Cathedral (1268–1270) has been dedicated to Santa Maria della Bruna since 1389. Built in an Apulian Romanesque architectural style, the church has a 52 m tall bell tower, and next to the main gate is a statue of the Maria della Bruna, backed by those of Saints Peter and Paul. The main feature of the façade is the rose window, divided by sixteen small columns. The interior is on the Latin cross plan, with a nave and two aisles. The decoration is mainly from the 18th century Baroque restoration, but recently[when?] a Byzantine-style 14th-century fresco portraying the Last Judgement has been discovered.

Two other important churches in Matera, both dedicated to the Apostle Peter, are San Pietro Caveoso (in the Sasso Caveoso) and San Pietro Barisano (in the Sasso Barisano). San Pietro Barisano was recently restored in a project by the World Monuments Fund, funded by American Express. The main altar and the interior frescoes were cleaned, and missing pieces of moldings, reliefs, and other adornments were reconstructed from photographic archives or surrounding fragments.[63]

There are many other churches and monasteries dating back throughout the history of the Christian church. Some are simple caves with a single altar, occasionally accompanied by a fresco, often located on the opposite side of the ravine. Some are complex cave networks with large underground chambers, thought to have been used for meditation by the rupestrian and cenobitic monks.

Cisterns and water collection edit

 
Ferdinandea Fountain

Matera was built above a deep ravine called Gravina of Matera that divides the territory into two areas. Matera was built such that it is hidden, but made it difficult to provide a water supply to its inhabitants. Early dwellers invested tremendous energy in building cisterns and systems of water channels.

The largest cistern has been found under Piazza Vittorio Veneto, the Palombaro Lungo which was built in 1832.[64] With its solid pillars carved from the rock and a vault height of more than fifteen metres, it is a veritable water cathedral, which is navigable by boat. Like other cisterns in the town, it collected rainwater that was filtered and flowed in a controlled way to the Sassi.

There were also a large number of little superficial canals that fed pools and hanging gardens. Moreover, many bell-shaped cisterns in dug houses were filled up by seepage. Later, when the population increased, many of these cisterns were turned into houses and other kinds of water-harvesting systems were realised.

Some of these more recent facilities have the shape of houses submerged in the earth.[65]

Natural areas edit

The Murgia National Park (Parco della Murgia Materana), a regional park established in 1990, includes the territory of the Gravina di Matera and about 150 rock churches scattered along the slopes of the ravines and the plateau of the Murgia. This area, inhabited since prehistoric times, still preserves stationing dating back to the Paleolithic, such as the Grotta dei pipistrelli (cave of the bats), and to the Neolithic.[66][67] The symbol of the park is the lesser kestrel.

The San Giuliano Regional Reserve, a protected area established in 2000, includes Lake San Giuliano, an artificial reservoir created by the damming of the Bradano river, and the river sections upstream and downstream of it.[68]

Timmari edit

Colle di Timmari, a green plateau located about 15 km from the city, dominates the Bradano valley and the San Giuliano lake. It is a pleasant residential area, and on the top of the hill there is the small Sanctuary of San Salvatore, dating back to 1310, and an important archaeological area.

Other sights edit

The Tramontano Castle, begun in the early 16th century by Gian Carlo Tramontano, Count of Matera, is probably the only other structure that is above ground of any great significance outside the sassi. However, the construction remained unfinished after his assassination in the popular riot of 29 December 1514. It has three large towers, while twelve were probably included in the original design. During some restoration work in the main square of the town, workers came across what were believed to be the main footings of another castle tower. However, on further excavation large Roman cisterns were unearthed. Whole house structures were discovered where one can see how the people of that era lived.

The Palazzo dell'Annunziata is a historical building on the main square, seat of Provincial Library.

Culture edit

On 17 October 2014, Matera was declared European Capital of Culture for 2019, together with Bulgaria's second-largest city, Plovdiv.

Cuisine edit

 
Pane di Matera
 
Crapiata
 
Strazzate

The cuisine of Matera is a typical "cucina povera" (peasant food) from Southern Italy. It features a sort of blend of Basilicata and Apulia's cuisines being in a border area between the two regions. Some specialties are "peperoni cruschi", a sweet and dry pepper variety very popular in Basilicata, and "Pane di Matera", a type of bread recognizable for its intense flavour and conical shape, granted Protected Geographical Indication (PGI) status.[69] Matera produces an eponymous wine which bears the Denominazione di origine controllata (DOC) designation.[70]

Some dishes from the local cuisine include:

  • Crapiata, a peasant soup with chickpeas, beans, broad beans, wheat, lentils, cicerchie. An old recipe dating to the Roman period, later enriched with other ingredients such as potatoes, it is a common ritual grown into "Sassi di Matera" and celebrated on 1 August[71]
  • Orecchiette alla materana, baked orecchiette-pasta seasoned with tomatoes, lamb, mozzarella and Pecorino cheese
  • Pasta con i peperoni cruschi, a pasta dish with peperoni cruschi and fried breadcrumb. Grated cheese or turnip greens can be added.
  • Cialedda, a frugal recipe with stale bread as a main ingredient. It can be "calda" (hot) with egg, bay leaves, garlic and olives or "fredda" (cold) with tomatoes and garlic.[72]
  • Pignata, sheep meat with potatoes, onion, tomatoes and celery cooked in the "pignata", a terracotta pot shaped like an amphora.[73]
  • Strazzate, crumbly biscuits prepared with egg, almonds and coffee

Cinema edit

 
Enrique Irazoqui and Pier Paolo Pasolini in Matera, on the set of The Gospel According to St. Matthew, 1964

Because of the ancient primeval-looking scenery in and around the Sassi, it has been used by filmmakers as the setting for ancient Jerusalem. The following famous biblical period motion pictures were filmed in Matera:

Other movies filmed in the city include:[75]

Music edit

Matera appears in the music videos for the songs "Sun Goes Down" (2014) by Robin Schulz[76] and "Spit Out the Bone" (2016) by Metallica.[77]

Religious traditions edit

 
Matera Cathedral

The Feast of the Madonna della Bruna, held in Matera on 2 July each year, is notable for its religious procession featuring an ornamented chariot which is then pulled apart by spectators. The origins of the festival are not well known, because its story has changed while being handed down from generation to generation. One of these legends says that a woman asked a farmer to go up on his wagon to accompany her to Matera. When she arrived to the periphery of the city, she got off the wagon and asked farmer to take her message to the bishop. In this message she said she was Christ's mother. The bishop, the clergy and the folk rushed to receive the Virgin, but they found a statue. So the statue of Madonna entered in the city on a triumphal wagon. Another legend talks about a destruction of the wagon: Saracens besiege Matera and the citizens, to protect the painting of Madonna, hid it on a little wagon. They then destroyed the wagon to keep the Saracens from taking the painting.[78]

Different hypotheses are attributed to the name of Madonna della Bruna : the first says that the noun derives from the Lombard high-medieval term brùnja (armor/protection of knights). So the name might mean Madonna of defense. Another hypothesis is that the name comes from herbon, a city of Giudea, where the Virgin went to visit her cousin Elisabetta. A third hypothesis says that the name comes from the colour of the Virgin's face. The profane insertions such as the navalis wagon and its violent destruction, along with the intimacy and the religious solemnity, suggest this festival shares roots with ancient traditions of other Mediterranean countries. For example, in Greek culture, wedding parties also celebrate with a triumphal wagon (ships on wheels richly designed).[79] The Madonna's sculpture is located in a case in the transept of the cathedral dedicated to her, where there is also a fresco that portrays her. It dates back to the 13th century and it belongs to the Byzantine school.[80]

Notable people edit

Transportation edit

Matera is the terminal station of the Bari–Matera, a narrow gauge railroad managed by Ferrovie Appulo Lucane. The nearest airport is Bari Airport. Matera is connected to the A14 Bologna-Taranto motorway through the SS99 national road. It is also served by the SS407, SS665 and SS106 national road.

Bus connection to Italy's main cities is provided by private firms.

Sports edit

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Matera is twinned with:[81][82]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Warkentin, Elizabeth (March 10, 2023). "Italy's impressive subterranean civilisation". BBC Travel.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved March 16, 2019.
  2. ^ "Total Resident Population on 1st January 2018 by sex and marital status. Municipality: Matera". National Institute of Statistics (Italy). Retrieved January 27, 2018.
  3. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 17.
  4. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 23.
  5. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 24–25.
  6. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 30–1.
  7. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 21–22.
  8. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 24.
  9. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 38–41.
  10. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 41–2, 45.
  11. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 47, 63.
  12. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 54–58.
  13. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 59.
  14. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 36.
  15. ^ Leonardo A. Chisena, Matera dalla civita al piano: stratificazione, classi sociali e costume politico, Congedo, 1984, p.7
  16. ^ Anne Parmly Toxey (2016). "Recasting Materan Identity: The Warring And Melding Of Political Ideologies Carved In Stone". In Micara, Ludovico; Petruccioli, Attilio; Vadini, Ettore (eds.). The Mediterranean Medina: International Seminar. Gangemi Editore spa. ISBN 9788849290134. Retrieved April 14, 2019.
  17. ^ Domenico, Roy Palmer (2002). The Regions of Italy: A Reference Guide to History and Culture. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 37. ISBN 9780313307331.
  18. ^ Toxey 2011, p. 32.
  19. ^ Bondioli 2018, p. 472–5.
  20. ^ Kreutz 1991, p. 38.
  21. ^ Gay 1904, p. 178.
  22. ^ Kreutz 1991, p. 41, 172.
  23. ^ Musca 1964, p. 92.
  24. ^ Bondioli 2018, p. 487.
  25. ^ Churchill 1979, p. 123.
  26. ^ Whittow 1996, p. 307–9.
  27. ^ von Falkenhausen 1967, p. 21.
  28. ^ Gay 1904, p. 177–8.
  29. ^ von Falkenhausen 1967, p. 79.
  30. ^ Kreutz 1991, p. 98, 188.
  31. ^ Churchill 1979, p. 126.
  32. ^ Gay 1904, p. 333.
  33. ^ Kreutz 1991, p. 122, 198.
  34. ^ Loud 2000, p. 26.
  35. ^ Churchill 1979, p. 131.
  36. ^ von Falkenhausen 1967, p. 52.
  37. ^ Loud 2000, p. 28.
  38. ^ Kreutz 1991, p. 123.
  39. ^ Gay 1904, p. 338.
  40. ^ von Falkenhausen 1967, p. 113, 177.
  41. ^ Gay 1904, p. 454–5.
  42. ^ Loud 2000, p. 78–80, 94.
  43. ^ Gay 1904, p. 456.
  44. ^ Gay 1904, p. 459.
  45. ^ a b Churchill 1979, p. 140.
  46. ^ von Falkenhausen 1967, p. 59, 61, 91.
  47. ^ Gay 1904, p. 462.
  48. ^ Gay 1904, p. 466.
  49. ^ Loud 2000, p. 100.
  50. ^ Churchill 1979, p. 143.
  51. ^ Loud 2000, p. 132, 237.
  52. ^ Gay 1904, p. 533–4.
  53. ^ Churchill 1979, p. 145.
  54. ^ Loud 2000, p. 243.
  55. ^ Churchill 1979, p. 149.
  56. ^ Loud 2012, p. 91–2, 204–5.
  57. ^ Murray 2021, p. 311.
  58. ^ Loud 2021, p. 200.
  59. ^ von Falkenhausen 1967, p. 31, 48, 148.
  60. ^ Gay 1904, p. 549.
  61. ^ Churchill 1979, p. 151–2.
  62. ^ Colin Amery and Brian Curran, Vanishing Histories, Harry N. Abrams, New York, NY: 2001, p. 44.
  63. ^ World Monuments Fund – Rupestrian Churches of Puglia and the City of Matera
  64. ^ "Piazza Vittorio Veneto". Divento.com. Retrieved February 11, 2021.
  65. ^ Museo Laboratorio della Civiltà Contadina ONLUS (2014) [1st. Pub. 2007]. Water-harvesting systems of Matera, from Neolithic to the first half of XX century. Matera. ISBN 978-1500611569.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  66. ^ Circolo culturale La Scaletta (1966). Le Chiese rupestri di Matera. De Luca ed.
  67. ^ Mario Tommaselli (1986). Le masserie fortificate del materano. De Luca ed.
  68. ^ The Times Comprehensive Atlas of the World (13 ed.). London: Times Books. 2011. p. 78 K2. ISBN 9780007419135.
  69. ^ "Bread of Matera, a world patrimony". italianfoodexcellence.com. November 14, 2016. Retrieved November 16, 2020.
  70. ^ "The Wines Of Basilicata". made-in-italy.com. Retrieved January 15, 2021.
  71. ^ "Traditions". vivimatera.it. Retrieved January 15, 2021.
  72. ^ "Bread from Matera". italia.it. Retrieved January 15, 2021.
  73. ^ "'La Pignata' - A Materan Classic". lalucana.com. February 28, 2018. Retrieved January 15, 2021.
  74. ^ "Movie Review: Audacious Bible-era story 'The Book of Clarence' is maybe too audacious".
  75. ^ "Matera e il Cinema". Matera Private Tours. Retrieved March 26, 2021.
  76. ^ Lilja Haefele (October 6, 2014). "Robin Schulz "Sun Goes Down" (Lilja, dir.)". videostatic.com. Retrieved November 11, 2016.
  77. ^ "Matera nel nuovo video dei Metallica". retecinemabasilicata.it. November 18, 2016. Retrieved November 20, 2016.
  78. ^ Rota, Lorenzo (2001). Matera : the History of a Town. Matera: Giannatelli. p. 342. ISBN 9788897906001.
  79. ^ "The Feast of the Madonna della Bruna". Festa della Bruna. 2018. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  80. ^ Morelli, Michele (2006). La festa della Bruna. Matera: Adecom. ISBN 9788897906001.
  81. ^ "Un'associazione per Romeo Sarra". lagazzettadelmezzogiorno.it (in Italian). La Gazzetta del Mezzogiorno. May 31, 2014. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
  82. ^ "Toms River Partners With Italian City To Promote Tourism, Cultural Exchanges". patch.com. Patch. March 7, 2015. Retrieved May 4, 2021.

References edit

  • Bondioli, Lorenzo M. (2018), "Islamic Bari between the Aghlabids and the Two Empires", in Anderson, Glaire D.; Fenwick, Corisande; Rosser-Owen, Mariam (eds.), The Aghlabids and Their Neighbors: Art and Material Culture in Ninth-Century North Africa, Leiden: Brill, pp. 470–490, ISBN 978-90-04-35566-8
  • Churchill, William J. (1979), The Annales Barenses and the Annales Lupi Protospatharii: Critical Edition and Commentary (PDF), PhD thesis: University of Toronto
  • von Falkenhausen, Vera (1967), Untersuchungen über die byzantinische Herrschaft in Süditalien vom 9. bis ins 11. Jahrhundert, Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz
  • Gay, Jules (1904), L'Italie méridionale et l'Empire byzantin depuis l'avènement de Basile Ier jusqu'à la prise de Bari par les Normands (867-1071), Paris: Fontemoing
  • Giura Longo, Raffaele (1970), Sassi e secoli, Matera: BMG
  • Kreutz, Barbara (1991), Before the Normans: Southern Italy in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries, Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, ISBN 0-8122-1587-7
  • Loud, Graham A. (2000), The Age of Robert Guiscard: Southern Italy and the Norman Conquest, London: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-582-04529-3
  • Loud, Graham A., ed. (2012), Roger II and the Creation of the Kingdom of Sicily, Manchester: Manchester University Press, ISBN 9780719082016
  • Loud, Graham A. (2021), The Social World of the Abbey of Cava, c.1020–1300, Woodbridge: Boydell, ISBN 9781783276325
  • Murray, Alan V. (2021), "From Alexandria to Tinnīs: the kingdom of Sicily, Egypt and the Holy Land, 1154–87", in Drell, Joanna H.; Oldfield, Paul (eds.), Rethinking Norman Italy: Studies in honour of Graham A. Loud, Manchester: Manchester University Press, pp. 305–322, ISBN 9781526138538
  • Musca, Giosuè (1964), L'emirato di Bari, 847–871, Bari: Dedalo
  • Toxey, Ann Parmly (2011), Materan Contradictions: Architecture, Preservation and Politics, Farnham: Ashgate, ISBN 9781409412076
  • Whittow, Mark (1996), The Making of Orthodox Byzantium, 600–1025, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 9780333496015

External links edit

  • Travel Video promotion APT Basilicata (in English)
  • UNESCO site
  • Museo Laboratorio della Civiltà Contadina
  • BBC News: Italian cave city goes hi-tech

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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Italian January 2022 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Italian Wikipedia article at it Matera see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated it Matera to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Matera Italian pronunciation maˈtɛːra locally maˈteːra Materano Matare maˈtaeːre is a city and the capital of the Province of Matera in the region of Basilicata in Southern Italy With a history of continuous occupation dating back to the Palaeolithic 10th millennium BC it is renowned for its rock cut urban core whose twin cliffside zones are known collectively as the Sassi MateraComuneComune di MateraPanorama of MateraCoat of armsMatera within the Province of MateraLocation of MateraMateraLocation of Matera in BasilicataShow map of ItalyMateraMatera Basilicata Show map of BasilicataCoordinates 40 40 N 16 36 E 40 667 N 16 600 E 40 667 16 600CountryItalyRegionBasilicataProvinceMatera MT FrazioniLa Martella Venusio Picciano A Picciano BGovernment MayorDomenico Bennardi M5S Area 1 Total387 4 km2 149 6 sq mi Elevation401 m 1 316 ft Population January 1 2018 2 Total60 403 Density160 km2 400 sq mi DemonymMateraniTime zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code75100Dialing code0835Patron saintMadonna della BrunaSaint dayJuly 2WebsiteOfficial website The Sassi and the Park of the Rupestrian Churches of MateraUNESCO World Heritage SiteThe Sassi of MateraCriteriaCultural iii iv vReference670Inscription1993 17th Session Area1 016 haBuffer zone4 365 haMatera lies on the right bank of the Gravina river whose canyon forms a geological boundary between the hill country of Basilicata historic Lucania to the south west and the Murgia plateau of Apulia to the north east 3 The city began as a complex of cave habitations excavated in the softer limestone on the gorge s western Lucanian face 4 It took advantage of two streams which flow into the ravine from a spot near the Castello Tramontano reducing the cliff s angle of drop and leaving a defensible narrow promontory in between The central high ground or acropolis supporting the city s cathedral and administrative buildings came to be known as Civita and the settlement districts scaling down and burrowing into the sheer rock faces as the Sassi Of the two streambeds called the grabiglioni it the northern hosts Sasso Barisano facing Bari and the southern Sasso Caveoso facing Montescaglioso 5 The Sassi consist of around twelve levels spanning the height of 380 m connected by a network of paths stairways and courtyards vicinati 6 The medieval city clinging on to the edge of the canyon for its defence is invisible from the western approach 7 The tripartite urban structure of Civita and the two Sassi relatively isolated from each other 8 survived until the 16th century when the centre of public life moved outside the walls to the Piazza Sedile in the open plain the Piano to the west followed by the shift of the elite residences to the Piano from the 17th century onwards 9 By the end of the 18th century a physical class boundary separated the overcrowded Sassi of the peasants from the new spatial order of their social superiors in the Piano and geographical elevation came to coincide with status more overtly than before to the point where the two communities no longer interacted socially 10 Yet it was only at the turn of the 20th century that the Sassi were declared unfit for modern habitation 11 and the government relocation of all their inhabitants to new housing in the Piano followed between 1952 and the 1970s 12 A new law in 1986 opened the path to restoration and reoccupation of the Sassi this time as noted by the architectural historian Anne Toxey for the benefit of the wealthy middle class The recognition of the Sassi labelled la citta sotterranea the underground city together with the rupestrian churches across the Gravina as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in December 1993 has assisted in attracting tourism and accelerated the reclaiming of the site 13 In 2019 Matera was declared a European Capital of Culture Contents 1 History 2 Government 3 Main sights 3 1 The Sassi ancient town 3 2 Monasteries and churches 3 3 Cisterns and water collection 3 4 Natural areas 3 4 1 Timmari 3 5 Other sights 4 Culture 4 1 Cuisine 4 2 Cinema 4 3 Music 4 4 Religious traditions 5 Notable people 6 Transportation 7 Sports 8 Twin towns sister cities 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 Further reading 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksHistory editBefore its integration into the modern Italian state the city of Matera had experienced the rule of the Romans Lombards Arabs Byzantines Swabians Angevins Aragonese and Bourbons Though scholars continue to debate the date the dwellings were first occupied in Matera 14 and the continuity of their subsequent occupation the area of what is now Matera is believed to have been settled since the Palaeolithic 10th millennium BC This makes it potentially one of the oldest continually inhabited settlements in the world 15 Alternatively it has been suggested by Anne Toxey that the area has been occupied continuously for at least three millennia 16 The town of Matera was founded by the Roman Lucius Caecilius Metellus in 251 BC who called it Matheola 17 In AD 664 Matera was conquered by the Lombards citation needed and became part of the Duchy of Benevento In the 7th and 8th centuries the nearby grottos were colonised by both Benedictine and Basilian monastic institutions 18 citation needed After the Arab conquest of Bari in 840 19 Matera came under Islamic rule 20 Emancipated from the old Lombard jurisdiction of the gastald of Acerenza in the Principality of Salerno the town gained regional prominence 21 In the spring of 867 it was burnt by the imperial troops of Louis II as the first key target in the emirate s conquest the Chronicle of St Benedict of Monte Cassino calls it a particularly well defended site 22 23 24 25 The Franks soon fell out with the Lombards and the Byzantines exploited the local need for protection from Arab raiding and internal Lombard divisions to retake Apulia which became the theme of Longobardia in 891 2 26 Already by 887 27 Matera s local Lombard elite bore Byzantine titles the monastery of San Vincenzo al Volturno had to conduct business before the Byzantine judge and town notables of Matera and the Greeks of Matera made up the Byzantine garrison of Naples 28 The precarious Byzantine rule had to contend with the ambitions of Lombard towns and nobles against the background of frequent incursions from the neighbouring duchy of Capua Benevento and from Arab Sicily In 940 Matera was besieged possibly with local assistance by the Lombards 29 30 31 On 25 January 982 the army of Otto II camped before the walls of Matera on its way from Salerno to Taranto ostensibly marching against the Arabs 32 33 34 In 994 Matera was temporarily captured by the Arabs after a four month siege 35 36 37 38 39 The town continued to play a part in Byzantine governance in June 1019 the chartoularios Stephanos of Matera assisted in the re foundation of Troia 40 But civic unrest was also endemic and in 1040 the Byzantine judge Romanos was murdered at Matera by the local auxiliary troops during a wave of assaults on Byzantine officials that swept across the region 41 After the prominent Apulian rebels enlisted the support of the Normans and defeated the new katepano of Italy at Cannae in 1041 42 43 Matera fell within the scope of Norman incursions and struck a deal with the invaders 44 In retaliation for this the next katepano Georgios Maniakes dispatched to Italy with special powers in April 1042 carried out mass executions in Matera in June only to launch a rebellion of his own in September 45 46 47 After his departure Matera elected William Iron Arm as its count 1042 45 48 but like other towns it remained in Byzantine hands despite the Norman advances 49 in 1054 died Sico the protospatharios of Matera 50 The city was seized in April 1064 as an independent acquisition by Robert Count of Montescaglioso a seditious nephew of Robert Guiscard who profited from the involvement of his uncle further south 51 52 53 After count Robert died in July 1080 Matera accepted the rule of his brother Geoffrey of Conversano 54 55 Geoffrey s son Alexander joined a revolt against Roger II in 1132 but he fled before the advance of the king to Byzantium and left his son Geoffrey in Matera whose inhabitants gave the city away to avoid being massacred by the royal troops 56 Alexander later took part in the Byzantine invasion of Italy in 1156 57 Lombard aristocrats survived with a reduced status around 1150 Guaimar III of Capaccio a descendant of Lombard princes held a sub fief near Matera from the count of Montescaglioso 58 Meanwhile after a period of association with the Byzantine metropolis of Otranto from 968 59 the episcopal see of Matera was reclaimed by the archbishopric of Acerenza 60 A new cathedral church of St Eustace was consecrated in May 1082 61 After a short communal phase and a series of pestilences and earthquakes the city became an Aragonese possession in the 15th century and was given in fief to the barons of the Tramontano family citation needed In 1514 however the population rebelled against the oppression and killed Count Giovanni Carlo Tramontano In the 17th century Matera was handed over to the Orsini and then became part of the Terra d Otranto in Apulia Later it was capital of the province of Basilicata a position it retained until 1806 when Joseph Bonaparte assigned it to Potenza citation needed In 1927 it became capital of the new province of Matera citation needed Government editSee also List of mayors of Matera Since local government political reorganization in 1993 Matera has been governed by the City Council of Matera Voters elect directly 32 councilors and the Mayor of Matera every five years Main sights editThis section is written like a travel guide Please help improve the section by introducing an encyclopedic style or move the content to Wikivoyage January 2022 The Sassi ancient town edit Main article Sassi di Matera Matera has gained international fame for its ancient town the Sassi di Matera The Sassi originated in a prehistoric troglodyte settlement and these dwellings are thought to be among the first ever human settlements in what is now Italy The Sassi are habitations dug into the calcareous rock itself which is characteristic of Basilicata and Apulia Many of them are really little more than small caverns and in some parts of the Sassi a street lies on top of another group of dwellings The ancient town grew up on one slope of the rocky ravine created by a river that is now a small stream and this ravine is known locally as la Gravina In the 1950s as part of a policy to clear the extreme poverty of the Sassi the government of Italy used force to relocate most of the population of the Sassi to new public housing in the developing modern city Until the late 1980s the Sassi was still considered an area of poverty since its dwellings were and in most cases still are uninhabitable and dangerous The present local administration however has become more tourism orientated and it has promoted the regeneration of the Sassi as a picturesque tourist attraction with the aid of the Italian government UNESCO and Hollywood Today there are many thriving businesses pubs and hotels there and the city is amongst the fastest growing in southern Italy citation needed nbsp View from the Canyon Gravina nbsp nbsp Interior of a cave house nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Exterior of a cave church nbsp Interior of a cave church nbsp Monasteries and churches edit nbsp Stairways in Matera Matera preserves a large and diverse collection of buildings related to the Christian faith including a large number of rupestrian churches carved from the calcarenite rock of the region 62 These churches which are also found in the neighbouring region of Apulia were listed in the 1998 World Monuments Watch by the World Monuments Fund Matera Cathedral 1268 1270 has been dedicated to Santa Maria della Bruna since 1389 Built in an Apulian Romanesque architectural style the church has a 52 m tall bell tower and next to the main gate is a statue of the Maria della Bruna backed by those of Saints Peter and Paul The main feature of the facade is the rose window divided by sixteen small columns The interior is on the Latin cross plan with a nave and two aisles The decoration is mainly from the 18th century Baroque restoration but recently when a Byzantine style 14th century fresco portraying the Last Judgement has been discovered Two other important churches in Matera both dedicated to the Apostle Peter are San Pietro Caveoso in the Sasso Caveoso and San Pietro Barisano in the Sasso Barisano San Pietro Barisano was recently restored in a project by the World Monuments Fund funded by American Express The main altar and the interior frescoes were cleaned and missing pieces of moldings reliefs and other adornments were reconstructed from photographic archives or surrounding fragments 63 There are many other churches and monasteries dating back throughout the history of the Christian church Some are simple caves with a single altar occasionally accompanied by a fresco often located on the opposite side of the ravine Some are complex cave networks with large underground chambers thought to have been used for meditation by the rupestrian and cenobitic monks Cisterns and water collection edit nbsp Ferdinandea FountainMatera was built above a deep ravine called Gravina of Matera that divides the territory into two areas Matera was built such that it is hidden but made it difficult to provide a water supply to its inhabitants Early dwellers invested tremendous energy in building cisterns and systems of water channels The largest cistern has been found under Piazza Vittorio Veneto the Palombaro Lungo which was built in 1832 64 With its solid pillars carved from the rock and a vault height of more than fifteen metres it is a veritable water cathedral which is navigable by boat Like other cisterns in the town it collected rainwater that was filtered and flowed in a controlled way to the Sassi There were also a large number of little superficial canals that fed pools and hanging gardens Moreover many bell shaped cisterns in dug houses were filled up by seepage Later when the population increased many of these cisterns were turned into houses and other kinds of water harvesting systems were realised Some of these more recent facilities have the shape of houses submerged in the earth 65 Natural areas edit The Murgia National Park Parco della Murgia Materana a regional park established in 1990 includes the territory of the Gravina di Matera and about 150 rock churches scattered along the slopes of the ravines and the plateau of the Murgia This area inhabited since prehistoric times still preserves stationing dating back to the Paleolithic such as the Grotta dei pipistrelli cave of the bats and to the Neolithic 66 67 The symbol of the park is the lesser kestrel The San Giuliano Regional Reserve a protected area established in 2000 includes Lake San Giuliano an artificial reservoir created by the damming of the Bradano river and the river sections upstream and downstream of it 68 Timmari edit Colle di Timmari a green plateau located about 15 km from the city dominates the Bradano valley and the San Giuliano lake It is a pleasant residential area and on the top of the hill there is the small Sanctuary of San Salvatore dating back to 1310 and an important archaeological area nbsp Gravina di Matera nbsp Murgia National Park with prehistoric caves and rupestrian churches nbsp Horses in the Murgia National Park nbsp nbsp nbsp Saracen village nbsp Cave church of San Luca alla Selva nbsp San Giuliano Regional ReserveOther sights edit nbsp The Tramontano Castle nbsp Palazzo Lanfranchi nbsp Auditorium of the culture centre Casa CavaThe Tramontano Castle begun in the early 16th century by Gian Carlo Tramontano Count of Matera is probably the only other structure that is above ground of any great significance outside the sassi However the construction remained unfinished after his assassination in the popular riot of 29 December 1514 It has three large towers while twelve were probably included in the original design During some restoration work in the main square of the town workers came across what were believed to be the main footings of another castle tower However on further excavation large Roman cisterns were unearthed Whole house structures were discovered where one can see how the people of that era lived The Palazzo dell Annunziata is a historical building on the main square seat of Provincial Library Culture editOn 17 October 2014 Matera was declared European Capital of Culture for 2019 together with Bulgaria s second largest city Plovdiv Cuisine edit nbsp Pane di Matera nbsp Crapiata nbsp StrazzateThe cuisine of Matera is a typical cucina povera peasant food from Southern Italy It features a sort of blend of Basilicata and Apulia s cuisines being in a border area between the two regions Some specialties are peperoni cruschi a sweet and dry pepper variety very popular in Basilicata and Pane di Matera a type of bread recognizable for its intense flavour and conical shape granted Protected Geographical Indication PGI status 69 Matera produces an eponymous wine which bears the Denominazione di origine controllata DOC designation 70 Some dishes from the local cuisine include Crapiata a peasant soup with chickpeas beans broad beans wheat lentils cicerchie An old recipe dating to the Roman period later enriched with other ingredients such as potatoes it is a common ritual grown into Sassi di Matera and celebrated on 1 August 71 Orecchiette alla materana baked orecchiette pasta seasoned with tomatoes lamb mozzarella and Pecorino cheese Pasta con i peperoni cruschi a pasta dish with peperoni cruschi and fried breadcrumb Grated cheese or turnip greens can be added Cialedda a frugal recipe with stale bread as a main ingredient It can be calda hot with egg bay leaves garlic and olives or fredda cold with tomatoes and garlic 72 Pignata sheep meat with potatoes onion tomatoes and celery cooked in the pignata a terracotta pot shaped like an amphora 73 Strazzate crumbly biscuits prepared with egg almonds and coffeeCinema edit nbsp Enrique Irazoqui and Pier Paolo Pasolini in Matera on the set of The Gospel According to St Matthew 1964Because of the ancient primeval looking scenery in and around the Sassi it has been used by filmmakers as the setting for ancient Jerusalem The following famous biblical period motion pictures were filmed in Matera Pier Paolo Pasolini s The Gospel According to St Matthew 1964 Bruce Beresford s King David 1985 Mel Gibson s The Passion of the Christ 2004 Abel Ferrara s Mary 2005 Catherine Hardwicke s The Nativity Story 2006 Cyrus Nowrasteh s The Young Messiah 2016 Timur Bekmambetov s Ben Hur 2016 Garth Davis s Mary Magdalene 2018 Jeymes Samuel s The Book of Clarence 2024 74 Other movies filmed in the city include 75 Mario Volpe s Le due sorelle 1950 Alberto Lattuada s La lupa 1953 Roberto Rossellini s Garibaldi 1961 Luigi Zampa s Roaring Years 1962 Brunello Rondi s Il demonio 1963 Nanni Loy s Made in Italy 1965 Francesco Rosi s More Than a Miracle 1967 Lucio Fulci s Don t Torture a Duckling 1972 Roberto Rossellini s Anno uno 1974 Paolo and Vittorio Taviani s Allonsanfan 1974 Fernando Arrabal s The Tree of Guernica 1975 Carlo Di Palma s Blonde in Black Leather 1975 Francesco Rosi s Christ Stopped at Eboli 1979 Francesco Rosi s Three Brothers 1981 Paolo and Vittorio Taviani s The Sun Also Shines at Night 1990 Giuseppe Tornatore s The Star Maker 1995 John Moore s The Omen 2006 Liu Jiang s Let s Get Married 2015 Matteo Rovere s Italian Race 2016 Patty Jenkins s Wonder Woman 2017 Cary Joji Fukunaga s No Time to Die 2021 the 25th James Bond filmMusic edit Matera appears in the music videos for the songs Sun Goes Down 2014 by Robin Schulz 76 and Spit Out the Bone 2016 by Metallica 77 Religious traditions edit nbsp Matera CathedralThe Feast of the Madonna della Bruna held in Matera on 2 July each year is notable for its religious procession featuring an ornamented chariot which is then pulled apart by spectators The origins of the festival are not well known because its story has changed while being handed down from generation to generation One of these legends says that a woman asked a farmer to go up on his wagon to accompany her to Matera When she arrived to the periphery of the city she got off the wagon and asked farmer to take her message to the bishop In this message she said she was Christ s mother The bishop the clergy and the folk rushed to receive the Virgin but they found a statue So the statue of Madonna entered in the city on a triumphal wagon Another legend talks about a destruction of the wagon Saracens besiege Matera and the citizens to protect the painting of Madonna hid it on a little wagon They then destroyed the wagon to keep the Saracens from taking the painting 78 Different hypotheses are attributed to the name of Madonna della Bruna the first says that the noun derives from the Lombard high medieval term brunja armor protection of knights So the name might mean Madonna of defense Another hypothesis is that the name comes from herbon a city of Giudea where the Virgin went to visit her cousin Elisabetta A third hypothesis says that the name comes from the colour of the Virgin s face The profane insertions such as the navalis wagon and its violent destruction along with the intimacy and the religious solemnity suggest this festival shares roots with ancient traditions of other Mediterranean countries For example in Greek culture wedding parties also celebrate with a triumphal wagon ships on wheels richly designed 79 The Madonna s sculpture is located in a case in the transept of the cathedral dedicated to her where there is also a fresco that portrays her It dates back to the 13th century and it belongs to the Byzantine school 80 Notable people editFranco Selvaggi 1953 Football Serie A player Italy National Team player and World Cup 1982 winner Luigi De Canio 1957 football manager Egidio Romualdo Duni 1708 1775 composer Emanuele Gaudiano 1986 show jumping rider Cosimo Fusco 1962 actor John of Matera 1070 1139 Benedictine monk and saint Enzo Masiello 1969 Paralympic athlete Antonio Persio 1542 1612 philosopher Tommaso Stigliani 1573 1651 poet and writer Giovanni Carlo Tramontano 1451 1514 noblemanTransportation editMatera is the terminal station of the Bari Matera a narrow gauge railroad managed by Ferrovie Appulo Lucane The nearest airport is Bari Airport Matera is connected to the A14 Bologna Taranto motorway through the SS99 national road It is also served by the SS407 SS665 and SS106 national road Bus connection to Italy s main cities is provided by private firms Sports editFC Matera Olimpia Matera a basketball teamTwin towns sister cities editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Italy Matera is twinned with 81 82 nbsp Oulu Finland nbsp Petra Jordan nbsp Toms River United StatesGallery edit nbsp nbsp nbsp Via Ridola nbsp Via Bruno Buozzi nbsp Domenico Ridola archeological museum nbsp Palazzo dell Annunziata nbsp Chiesa di San Francesco d Assisi nbsp Church of San Agostino nbsp Church of San Giovanni Battista nbsp San Pietro CaveosoSee also editChurch of San Leonardo Matera Matera Centrale railway stationFurther reading editWarkentin Elizabeth March 10 2023 Italy s impressive subterranean civilisation BBC Travel Notes edit Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011 Italian National Institute of Statistics Retrieved March 16 2019 Total Resident Population on 1st January 2018 by sex and marital status Municipality Matera National Institute of Statistics Italy Retrieved January 27 2018 Toxey 2011 p 17 Toxey 2011 p 23 Toxey 2011 p 24 25 Toxey 2011 p 30 1 Toxey 2011 p 21 22 Toxey 2011 p 24 Toxey 2011 p 38 41 Toxey 2011 p 41 2 45 Toxey 2011 p 47 63 Toxey 2011 p 54 58 Toxey 2011 p 59 Toxey 2011 p 36 Leonardo A Chisena Matera dalla civita al piano stratificazione classi sociali e costume politico Congedo 1984 p 7 Anne Parmly Toxey 2016 Recasting Materan Identity The Warring And Melding Of Political Ideologies Carved In Stone In Micara Ludovico Petruccioli Attilio Vadini Ettore eds The Mediterranean Medina International Seminar Gangemi Editore spa ISBN 9788849290134 Retrieved April 14 2019 Domenico Roy Palmer 2002 The Regions of Italy A Reference Guide to History and Culture Greenwood Publishing Group p 37 ISBN 9780313307331 Toxey 2011 p 32 Bondioli 2018 p 472 5 Kreutz 1991 p 38 Gay 1904 p 178 Kreutz 1991 p 41 172 Musca 1964 p 92 Bondioli 2018 p 487 Churchill 1979 p 123 Whittow 1996 p 307 9 von Falkenhausen 1967 p 21 Gay 1904 p 177 8 von Falkenhausen 1967 p 79 Kreutz 1991 p 98 188 Churchill 1979 p 126 Gay 1904 p 333 Kreutz 1991 p 122 198 Loud 2000 p 26 Churchill 1979 p 131 von Falkenhausen 1967 p 52 Loud 2000 p 28 Kreutz 1991 p 123 Gay 1904 p 338 von Falkenhausen 1967 p 113 177 Gay 1904 p 454 5 Loud 2000 p 78 80 94 Gay 1904 p 456 Gay 1904 p 459 a b Churchill 1979 p 140 von Falkenhausen 1967 p 59 61 91 Gay 1904 p 462 Gay 1904 p 466 Loud 2000 p 100 Churchill 1979 p 143 Loud 2000 p 132 237 Gay 1904 p 533 4 Churchill 1979 p 145 Loud 2000 p 243 Churchill 1979 p 149 Loud 2012 p 91 2 204 5 Murray 2021 p 311 Loud 2021 p 200 von Falkenhausen 1967 p 31 48 148 Gay 1904 p 549 Churchill 1979 p 151 2 Colin Amery and Brian Curran Vanishing Histories Harry N Abrams New York NY 2001 p 44 World Monuments Fund Rupestrian Churches of Puglia and the City of Matera Piazza Vittorio Veneto Divento com Retrieved February 11 2021 Museo Laboratorio della Civilta Contadina ONLUS 2014 1st Pub 2007 Water harvesting systems of Matera from Neolithic to the first half of XX century Matera ISBN 978 1500611569 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Circolo culturale La Scaletta 1966 Le Chiese rupestri di Matera De Luca ed Mario Tommaselli 1986 Le masserie fortificate del materano De Luca ed The Times Comprehensive Atlas of the World 13 ed London Times Books 2011 p 78 K2 ISBN 9780007419135 Bread of Matera a world patrimony italianfoodexcellence com November 14 2016 Retrieved November 16 2020 The Wines Of Basilicata made in italy com Retrieved January 15 2021 Traditions vivimatera it Retrieved January 15 2021 Bread from Matera italia it Retrieved January 15 2021 La Pignata A Materan Classic lalucana com February 28 2018 Retrieved January 15 2021 Movie Review Audacious Bible era story The Book of Clarence is maybe too audacious Matera e il Cinema Matera Private Tours Retrieved March 26 2021 Lilja Haefele October 6 2014 Robin Schulz Sun Goes Down Lilja dir videostatic com Retrieved November 11 2016 Matera nel nuovo video dei Metallica retecinemabasilicata it November 18 2016 Retrieved November 20 2016 Rota Lorenzo 2001 Matera the History of a Town Matera Giannatelli p 342 ISBN 9788897906001 The Feast of the Madonna della Bruna Festa della Bruna 2018 Retrieved March 22 2019 Morelli Michele 2006 La festa della Bruna Matera Adecom ISBN 9788897906001 Un associazione per Romeo Sarra lagazzettadelmezzogiorno it in Italian La Gazzetta del Mezzogiorno May 31 2014 Retrieved May 4 2021 Toms River Partners With Italian City To Promote Tourism Cultural Exchanges patch com Patch March 7 2015 Retrieved May 4 2021 References editBondioli Lorenzo M 2018 Islamic Bari between the Aghlabids and the Two Empires in Anderson Glaire D Fenwick Corisande Rosser Owen Mariam eds The Aghlabids and Their Neighbors Art and Material Culture in Ninth Century North Africa Leiden Brill pp 470 490 ISBN 978 90 04 35566 8 Churchill William J 1979 TheAnnales Barensesand theAnnales Lupi Protospatharii Critical Edition and Commentary PDF PhD thesis University of Toronto von Falkenhausen Vera 1967 Untersuchungen uber die byzantinische Herrschaft in Suditalien vom 9 bis ins 11 Jahrhundert Wiesbaden Harrassowitz Gay Jules 1904 L Italie meridionale et l Empire byzantin depuis l avenement de Basile Ier jusqu a la prise de Bari par les Normands 867 1071 Paris Fontemoing Giura Longo Raffaele 1970 Sassi e secoli Matera BMG Kreutz Barbara 1991 Before the Normans Southern Italy in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries Philadelphia PA University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 0 8122 1587 7 Loud Graham A 2000 The Age of Robert Guiscard Southern Italy and the Norman Conquest London Routledge ISBN 978 0 582 04529 3 Loud Graham A ed 2012 Roger II and the Creation of the Kingdom of Sicily Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 9780719082016 Loud Graham A 2021 The Social World of the Abbey of Cava c 1020 1300 Woodbridge Boydell ISBN 9781783276325 Murray Alan V 2021 From Alexandria to Tinnis the kingdom of Sicily Egypt and the Holy Land 1154 87 in Drell Joanna H Oldfield Paul eds Rethinking Norman Italy Studies in honour of Graham A Loud Manchester Manchester University Press pp 305 322 ISBN 9781526138538 Musca Giosue 1964 L emirato di Bari 847 871 Bari Dedalo Toxey Ann Parmly 2011 Materan Contradictions Architecture Preservation and Politics Farnham Ashgate ISBN 9781409412076 Whittow Mark 1996 The Making of Orthodox Byzantium 600 1025 Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9780333496015External links editMatera at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage Travel Video promotion APT Basilicata in English UNESCO site Museo Laboratorio della Civilta Contadina BBC News Italian cave city goes hi tech Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Matera amp oldid 1207332951, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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