fbpx
Wikipedia

Pozzuoli

Pozzuoli (Italian pronunciation: [potˈtswɔːli]; Neapolitan: Pezzulo [pətˈtsuːlə]; Latin: Puteoli) is a city and comune of the Metropolitan City of Naples, in the Italian region of Campania. It is the main city of the Phlegrean Peninsula.

Pozzuoli
Pezzulo (Neapolitan)
Rione Terra, the first settlement
Location of Pozzuoli
Pozzuoli
Location of Pozzuoli in Campania
Pozzuoli
Pozzuoli (Campania)
Coordinates: 40°50′40″N 14°05′36″E / 40.84444°N 14.09333°E / 40.84444; 14.09333Coordinates: 40°50′40″N 14°05′36″E / 40.84444°N 14.09333°E / 40.84444; 14.09333
CountryItaly
RegionCampania
Metropolitan cityNaples (NA)
FrazioniArco Felice, Campana Annunziata, Cuma, Licola Centro, Licola Lido, Lucrino, Montenuovo, Monterusciello, Pisciarelli, Toiano
Government
 • MayorVincenzo Figliolia (PD)
Area
 • Total43.44 km2 (16.77 sq mi)
Elevation
28 m (92 ft)
Population
 (31 August 2017)[2]
 • Total81,231
 • Density1,900/km2 (4,800/sq mi)
DemonymPuteolani
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
80078, 80014, 80125
Dialing code081
Patron saintSt. Proculus
Saint day16 November
WebsiteOfficial website
Pozzuoli and surroundings

History

 
The ancient Macellum of Pozzuoli was a market building, erroneously identified as a Serapeum when a statue of Serapis was discovered

Pozzuoli began as the Greek colony of Dicaearchia (Greek: Δικαιαρχία) founded in about 531 BC with the consent of nearby Cumae when refugees from Samos escaped from the tyranny of Polycrates.[3][4]

The Samnites occupied Dicaearchia in 421 BC after conquering Cumae and may have changed its name to Fistelia.[5] It enjoyed considerable political and commercial autonomy favoured by the excellent position of its port with the Campanian hinterland.

The Roman occupation of Campania after the end of the 1st Samnite War from 341 BC marked the start of the Romanisation of the Greek-Samnite city.

During the Second Punic War (218-201 BC), Rome experienced the strategic importance of the port of Puteoli and reinforced the defences and introduced a garrison to protect the town from Hannibal, who failed to capture it in 215.[6][7] They made it a Roman colony from 195 BC.

The Roman conquest of the east and the need for a port to trade made it the Mediterranean port of Rome, even though it was 150 miles away. It took the name Puteoli whose roots are in the Latin puteus (well or cistern).[8] An alternative etymology of Puteoli derives from the Latin puteo (to stink), referring to the sulfuric fumes in the area, most notably from Solfatara.[9]

Puteoli became the great emporium for the Alexandrian grain ships and other ships from all over the Roman world. It also was the main hub for goods exported from Campania, including blown glass, mosaics, wrought iron, and marble. Lucilius wrote in about 125 BC that it was second only to Delos in importance, then the greatest harbour of the ancient world. Many inscriptions show that a polyglot population established companies (stationes) for trade and transport and formed professional guilds for arts, crafts and religious associations for foreign cults; they included Greeks from the islands and the coast of Asia, Jews and later Christians. Under the Roman Empire, it was the greatest emporium of foreign trade in all of Italy. Trade with Tyre was so important that the Tyrians established a factory there in 174 (C.I. no. 5853).

The Roman naval base at nearby Misenum housed the largest naval fleet in the ancient world. It was also the site of the Roman Dictator Sulla's country villa and the place where he died in 78 BC. Cicero had a house in Puteoli and a villa nearby on the shore of the Lucrine Lake.[10] Pliny mentions Puteoli as the site of a famed cochlearium created by Fulvius Hirpinus, known for raising exquisite snails.

The local volcanic sand, pozzolana (Latin: pulvis puteolanus, "dust of Puteoli") formed the basis for the first effective concrete, as it reacted chemically with water. Instead of just evaporating slowly off, the water would turn this sand/lime mix into a mortar strong enough to bind lumps of aggregate into a load-bearing unit. This made possible to construct the cupola of the Pantheon, which is still the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome.

The apostle Paul landed here on his way to Rome, from which it was 170 miles (274 kilometres) distant. Here he stayed for seven days (Acts 28:13, 14) and then began with his companions his journey by the Appian Way to Rome.

Puteoli is considered the best candidate for the unnamed city where the 1st-century Roman novel Satyricon takes place.

In 37 AD Puteoli was the location for a political stunt by Emperor Gaius Caligula, who, on becoming Emperor, ordered a temporary floating bridge to be built using trading vessels, stretching for over two miles (3.2 km) from the town to the famous neighboring resort of Baiae, across which he proceeded to ride his horse, in defiance of an astrologer's prediction that he had "no more chance of becoming Emperor than of riding a horse across the Gulf of Baiae".[11]

With the development of the port of Ostia begun by Claudius in 42 AD, completed by Nero in 54 and enlarged by Trajan between 100 and 106, the fortunes of Puteoli began to decline although Antoninus Pius repaired the pier's storm damage in 139. Nero's abortive attempt to build the Fossa Neronis canal from Puteoli to Rome may have prolonged its life.

As a reward for their support in the fight against Vitellius, Vespasian (r. 69-79 AD) installed more veterans there, assigned the city a part of the Capuan territory and gave it the title Colonia Flavia which it retained.

Hadrian died at Baiae in 138 and was interred at Cicero's villa at Puteoli,[12] though he was later transferred to Rome.

Two aqueducts eventually served Puteoli; the Campanian aqueduct dating from the 1st c. BC at latest,[13] and also the Aqua Augusta. Several cisterns still exist, including the very large Piscina di Cardito.[14]

Saint Proculus (San Procolo) was martyred here with his companions in the fourth century and is the city's patron saint. The seven eagle heads on the coat-of-arms for the town of Pozzuoli are said to represent seven of these martyrs. November 16 was the official feast day for Saint Proculus. St. Proculus was affectionately nicknamed 'u pisciasotto ("the pants-pisser") because November 16 was often a day of rain. The townspeople also celebrated his feast day on the second Sunday in May.[15]

The city was taken and plundered by Alaric I in 410, by Genseric in 455, and by Totila in 545, from which it took centuries to recover.

Charles Lyell visited Pozzuoli in 1828 and studied the Macellum columns.

Since 1946 the town has been the home of the Accademia Aeronautica, the Italian Air Force Academy, which was first situated on the island of Nisida, then from 1962 on a purpose-built hilltop campus overlooking the bay.

From August 1982 to December 1984, the city experienced hundreds of tremors and bradyseismic activity, which peaked on 4 October 1983, damaging 8,000 buildings in the city centre and displacing 36,000 people, many permanently. The events raised the sea bottom by almost 2 m, and rendered the Bay of Pozzuoli too shallow for large craft.

Main sights

 
Flavian Amphitheatre
 
Temple of Augustus in the Cathedral
 
Mausolea lining Roman Road to Naples

The town's attractions include:

  • Flavian Amphitheatre (Amphitheatrum Flavium), the third largest Italian amphitheatre after the Colosseum and the Capuan Amphitheatre
  • The Macellum of Pozzuoli, also known as the Temple of Serapis or serapeum, is considered the city's symbol. The "temple" was a marketplace. Its name derives from the misinterpretation of its function after a statue of the god Serapis was found in 1750. The Macellum includes three majestic columns in Cipollino marble, which show erosion from marine Lithophaga molluscs when, at an earlier time, the ground level was much lower due to Bradyseism, and sea-water could flow in.[16]
  • Temple of Augustus (part of the cathedral)
  • Smaller Amphitheatre, very close to the Flavian one, its remains were absorbed by other buildings, but some arches can be seen by Via Solfatara and Via Vign
  • Roman Baths, the so-called Temple of Neptune, are the remains of a big thermal complex now in Corso Terracciano, which also included the nearby "Dianae Nymphaeum".
  • The Villa Avellino park has several Roman ruins and cisterns. There is also a still working Roman "face" water fountain.
  • Rione Terra, the first settlement of Puteoli, originally Dicearkia in Greek.
  • Necropolis of Via Celle, a rich complex of tombs and mausoleums, very near to an old Roman road still used today (Via Cupa Cigliano).
  • Necropolis of the Via Puteolis Capuam, just under the bridge that leads outside the city near Via Solfatara.
  • Stadium of Antoninus Pius, a very similar stadium to the Domitian one in Rome, partially excavated (Via Campi Flegrei).
  • The Piscina di Cardito cistern, second in size only to the Piscina Mirabilis, and used as a settlement tank for the water supply from the Aqua Augusta aqueduct.
  • Sanctuary of San Gennaro (St. Januarius). Along with the Cathedral of Naples, it is one of the two places where the alleged miracle of the liquefaction of the saint's blood occurs.
  • Solfatara (volcanic crater with active fumaroles)

Transportation

It is easily reached by train from Rome on Naples Metro line 2, and by the trains of "Cumana" lines leaving from the station of Montesanto, in the city center.

Neighbouring communes

Notable people

See also

References

  1. ^ "Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  2. ^ "Popolazione Residente al 1° Gennaio 2018". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  3. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium
  4. ^ Puteoli http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0064:id=puteoli-geo
  5. ^ E. T. Salmon, Samnium and the Samnites, Cambridge 1967, pp. 71, 72
  6. ^ Livy 24.7, 12, 13
  7. ^ Silius Italicus Punica (The Second Carthaginian War) Book XII
  8. ^ "Comune di Pozzuoli (NA)".
  9. ^ John Everett-Heath, ed. (2010). "Pozzuoli". Concise Dictionary of World Place-Names. Oxford University Press (Oxford Reference Online Premium Database).
  10. ^ Cicero, de Fat. 1, ad Att. 1.4, 14.7, 15.1)
  11. ^ C. Suetonius Tranquillius. "Caius Caesar Caligula." The Lives of the Twelve Caesars.
  12. ^ Historia Augusta, Hadrianus 25,5-11
  13. ^ Ferrari Graziano, Lamagna Raffaella. The Campanian Aqueduct stairway was rediscovered. Hypogea 2015 - International congress of speleology in artificial cavities
  14. ^ "Piscina Cardito, una cisterna per il foro di Puteoli". 27 January 2017.
  15. ^ http://www.icampiflegrei.it/Azienda%20Turismo/pozzuoli/articoli2003/novembre_eng.htm
  16. ^ Legler, Rolf (1990). Der Golf von Neapel (in German). Cologne: DuMont Buchverlag. ISBN 978-3-7701-2254-7.

Bibliography

  • Amalfitano, Paolo, et al. (1990) I Campi Flegrei, Venezia
  • Annecchino, Raimondo (1960) Storia di Pozzuoli e della zona flegrea. Pozzuoli: Arti Grafiche D. Conte
  • Gianfrotta, Piero Alfredo & Maniscalco, Fabio (eds.) (1998) Forma Maris: Forum Internazionale di Archeologia Subacquea. Puteoli
  • Gore, Rick (May 1984). "A Prayer For Pozzuoli". National Geographic. Vol. 165, no. 5. pp. 614–625. ISSN 0027-9358. OCLC 643483454.
  • Puteoli: studi di storia Romana; no. 2; 4/5
    • Sommella, Paolo (1978) Forma e urbanistica di Pozzuoli romana. Pozzuoli: Azienda Autonoma di Soggiorno, Cura e Turismo di Pozzuoli
    • Atti del convegno Studi e ricerche su Puteoli romana: Napoli, Centre J. Bérard, 2-3 aprile 1979. Napoli, 1984

External links

  Media related to Pozzuoli at Wikimedia Commons

  • Kub Foto Pozzuoli
  • Pozzuoli Italian Portal (soon translated into English)

pozzuoli, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available, assist, . This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Pozzuoli Italian pronunciation potˈtswɔːli Neapolitan Pezzulo petˈtsuːle Latin Puteoli is a city and comune of the Metropolitan City of Naples in the Italian region of Campania It is the main city of the Phlegrean Peninsula Pozzuoli Pezzulo Neapolitan ComuneRione Terra the first settlementCoat of armsLocation of PozzuoliPozzuoliLocation of Pozzuoli in CampaniaShow map of ItalyPozzuoliPozzuoli Campania Show map of CampaniaCoordinates 40 50 40 N 14 05 36 E 40 84444 N 14 09333 E 40 84444 14 09333 Coordinates 40 50 40 N 14 05 36 E 40 84444 N 14 09333 E 40 84444 14 09333CountryItalyRegionCampaniaMetropolitan cityNaples NA FrazioniArco Felice Campana Annunziata Cuma Licola Centro Licola Lido Lucrino Montenuovo Monterusciello Pisciarelli ToianoGovernment MayorVincenzo Figliolia PD Area 1 Total43 44 km2 16 77 sq mi Elevation28 m 92 ft Population 31 August 2017 2 Total81 231 Density1 900 km2 4 800 sq mi DemonymPuteolaniTime zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code80078 80014 80125Dialing code081Patron saintSt ProculusSaint day16 NovemberWebsiteOfficial websitePozzuoli and surroundings Contents 1 History 2 Main sights 3 Transportation 4 Neighbouring communes 5 Notable people 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory Edit The ancient Macellum of Pozzuoli was a market building erroneously identified as a Serapeum when a statue of Serapis was discovered Pozzuoli began as the Greek colony of Dicaearchia Greek Dikaiarxia founded in about 531 BC with the consent of nearby Cumae when refugees from Samos escaped from the tyranny of Polycrates 3 4 The Samnites occupied Dicaearchia in 421 BC after conquering Cumae and may have changed its name to Fistelia 5 It enjoyed considerable political and commercial autonomy favoured by the excellent position of its port with the Campanian hinterland The Roman occupation of Campania after the end of the 1st Samnite War from 341 BC marked the start of the Romanisation of the Greek Samnite city During the Second Punic War 218 201 BC Rome experienced the strategic importance of the port of Puteoli and reinforced the defences and introduced a garrison to protect the town from Hannibal who failed to capture it in 215 6 7 They made it a Roman colony from 195 BC The Roman conquest of the east and the need for a port to trade made it the Mediterranean port of Rome even though it was 150 miles away It took the name Puteoli whose roots are in the Latin puteus well or cistern 8 An alternative etymology of Puteoli derives from the Latin puteo to stink referring to the sulfuric fumes in the area most notably from Solfatara 9 Puteoli became the great emporium for the Alexandrian grain ships and other ships from all over the Roman world It also was the main hub for goods exported from Campania including blown glass mosaics wrought iron and marble Lucilius wrote in about 125 BC that it was second only to Delos in importance then the greatest harbour of the ancient world Many inscriptions show that a polyglot population established companies stationes for trade and transport and formed professional guilds for arts crafts and religious associations for foreign cults they included Greeks from the islands and the coast of Asia Jews and later Christians Under the Roman Empire it was the greatest emporium of foreign trade in all of Italy Trade with Tyre was so important that the Tyrians established a factory there in 174 C I no 5853 The Roman naval base at nearby Misenum housed the largest naval fleet in the ancient world It was also the site of the Roman Dictator Sulla s country villa and the place where he died in 78 BC Cicero had a house in Puteoli and a villa nearby on the shore of the Lucrine Lake 10 Pliny mentions Puteoli as the site of a famed cochlearium created by Fulvius Hirpinus known for raising exquisite snails The local volcanic sand pozzolana Latin pulvis puteolanus dust of Puteoli formed the basis for the first effective concrete as it reacted chemically with water Instead of just evaporating slowly off the water would turn this sand lime mix into a mortar strong enough to bind lumps of aggregate into a load bearing unit This made possible to construct the cupola of the Pantheon which is still the world s largest unreinforced concrete dome The apostle Paul landed here on his way to Rome from which it was 170 miles 274 kilometres distant Here he stayed for seven days Acts 28 13 14 and then began with his companions his journey by the Appian Way to Rome Puteoli is considered the best candidate for the unnamed city where the 1st century Roman novel Satyricon takes place In 37 AD Puteoli was the location for a political stunt by Emperor Gaius Caligula who on becoming Emperor ordered a temporary floating bridge to be built using trading vessels stretching for over two miles 3 2 km from the town to the famous neighboring resort of Baiae across which he proceeded to ride his horse in defiance of an astrologer s prediction that he had no more chance of becoming Emperor than of riding a horse across the Gulf of Baiae 11 With the development of the port of Ostia begun by Claudius in 42 AD completed by Nero in 54 and enlarged by Trajan between 100 and 106 the fortunes of Puteoli began to decline although Antoninus Pius repaired the pier s storm damage in 139 Nero s abortive attempt to build the Fossa Neronis canal from Puteoli to Rome may have prolonged its life As a reward for their support in the fight against Vitellius Vespasian r 69 79 AD installed more veterans there assigned the city a part of the Capuan territory and gave it the title Colonia Flavia which it retained Hadrian died at Baiae in 138 and was interred at Cicero s villa at Puteoli 12 though he was later transferred to Rome Two aqueducts eventually served Puteoli the Campanian aqueduct dating from the 1st c BC at latest 13 and also the Aqua Augusta Several cisterns still exist including the very large Piscina di Cardito 14 Saint Proculus San Procolo was martyred here with his companions in the fourth century and is the city s patron saint The seven eagle heads on the coat of arms for the town of Pozzuoli are said to represent seven of these martyrs November 16 was the official feast day for Saint Proculus St Proculus was affectionately nicknamed u pisciasotto the pants pisser because November 16 was often a day of rain The townspeople also celebrated his feast day on the second Sunday in May 15 The city was taken and plundered by Alaric I in 410 by Genseric in 455 and by Totila in 545 from which it took centuries to recover Charles Lyell visited Pozzuoli in 1828 and studied the Macellum columns Since 1946 the town has been the home of the Accademia Aeronautica the Italian Air Force Academy which was first situated on the island of Nisida then from 1962 on a purpose built hilltop campus overlooking the bay From August 1982 to December 1984 the city experienced hundreds of tremors and bradyseismic activity which peaked on 4 October 1983 damaging 8 000 buildings in the city centre and displacing 36 000 people many permanently The events raised the sea bottom by almost 2 m and rendered the Bay of Pozzuoli too shallow for large craft Main sights Edit Flavian Amphitheatre Temple of Augustus in the Cathedral Mausolea lining Roman Road to Naples The town s attractions include Flavian Amphitheatre Amphitheatrum Flavium the third largest Italian amphitheatre after the Colosseum and the Capuan Amphitheatre The Macellum of Pozzuoli also known as the Temple of Serapis or serapeum is considered the city s symbol The temple was a marketplace Its name derives from the misinterpretation of its function after a statue of the god Serapis was found in 1750 The Macellum includes three majestic columns in Cipollino marble which show erosion from marine Lithophaga molluscs when at an earlier time the ground level was much lower due to Bradyseism and sea water could flow in 16 Temple of Augustus part of the cathedral Smaller Amphitheatre very close to the Flavian one its remains were absorbed by other buildings but some arches can be seen by Via Solfatara and Via Vign Roman Baths the so called Temple of Neptune are the remains of a big thermal complex now in Corso Terracciano which also included the nearby Dianae Nymphaeum The Villa Avellino park has several Roman ruins and cisterns There is also a still working Roman face water fountain Rione Terra the first settlement of Puteoli originally Dicearkia in Greek Necropolis of Via Celle a rich complex of tombs and mausoleums very near to an old Roman road still used today Via Cupa Cigliano Necropolis of the Via Puteolis Capuam just under the bridge that leads outside the city near Via Solfatara Stadium of Antoninus Pius a very similar stadium to the Domitian one in Rome partially excavated Via Campi Flegrei The Piscina di Cardito cistern second in size only to the Piscina Mirabilis and used as a settlement tank for the water supply from the Aqua Augusta aqueduct Sanctuary of San Gennaro St Januarius Along with the Cathedral of Naples it is one of the two places where the alleged miracle of the liquefaction of the saint s blood occurs Solfatara volcanic crater with active fumaroles Transportation EditIt is easily reached by train from Rome on Naples Metro line 2 and by the trains of Cumana lines leaving from the station of Montesanto in the city center Neighbouring communes EditBacoli Giugliano in Campania Monte di Procida Naples QuartoNotable people EditJanuarius Patron Saint of Naples executed at Solfatara c 305 Josephus landed there on his way to Rome The Life of Flavius Josephus 3 16 William Jopling British leprologist was born there Sophia Loren film actress grew up there Gilbert Count of Montpensier Viceroy of Naples died there on 15 October 1496 Saint Paul the Apostle landed there on his way to Rome Acts 28 13 Giovanni Battista Pergolesi Baroque composer died there Lucius Cornelius Sulla Dictator of Rome died at his villa there Ludovica Nasti L amica geniale My Brilliant Friend actress was originally from there See also EditDe balneis PuteolanisReferences Edit Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011 Italian National Institute of Statistics Retrieved 16 March 2019 Popolazione Residente al 1 Gennaio 2018 Italian National Institute of Statistics Retrieved 16 March 2019 Stephanus of Byzantium Puteoli http www perseus tufts edu hopper text doc Perseus text 1999 04 0064 id puteoli geo E T Salmon Samnium and the Samnites Cambridge 1967 pp 71 72 Livy 24 7 12 13 Silius Italicus Punica The Second Carthaginian War Book XII Comune di Pozzuoli NA John Everett Heath ed 2010 Pozzuoli Concise Dictionary of World Place Names Oxford University Press Oxford Reference Online Premium Database Cicero de Fat 1 ad Att 1 4 14 7 15 1 C Suetonius Tranquillius Caius Caesar Caligula The Lives of the Twelve Caesars Historia Augusta Hadrianus 25 5 11 Ferrari Graziano Lamagna Raffaella The Campanian Aqueduct stairway was rediscovered Hypogea 2015 International congress of speleology in artificial cavities Piscina Cardito una cisterna per il foro di Puteoli 27 January 2017 http www icampiflegrei it Azienda 20Turismo pozzuoli articoli2003 novembre eng htm Legler Rolf 1990 Der Golf von Neapel in German Cologne DuMont Buchverlag ISBN 978 3 7701 2254 7 Bibliography EditAmalfitano Paolo et al 1990 I Campi Flegrei Venezia Annecchino Raimondo 1960 Storia di Pozzuoli e della zona flegrea Pozzuoli Arti Grafiche D Conte Gianfrotta Piero Alfredo amp Maniscalco Fabio eds 1998 Forma Maris Forum Internazionale di Archeologia Subacquea Puteoli Gore Rick May 1984 A Prayer For Pozzuoli National Geographic Vol 165 no 5 pp 614 625 ISSN 0027 9358 OCLC 643483454 Puteoli studi di storia Romana no 2 4 5 Sommella Paolo 1978 Forma e urbanistica di Pozzuoli romana Pozzuoli Azienda Autonoma di Soggiorno Cura e Turismo di Pozzuoli Atti del convegno Studi e ricerche su Puteoli romana Napoli Centre J Berard 2 3 aprile 1979 Napoli 1984External links Edit Media related to Pozzuoli at Wikimedia Commons Kub Foto Pozzuoli Pozzuoli Italian Portal soon translated into English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pozzuoli amp oldid 1132285762, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.