Bassano in Teverina

Coordinates: 42°27′50″N 12°18′30″E / 42.46389°N 12.30833°E / 42.46389; 12.30833
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Bassano in Teverina
Comune di Bassano in Teverina
Coat of arms of Bassano in Teverina
Location of Bassano in Teverina
Map
Fidentius and Terentius
Saint day27 September
WebsiteOfficial website

Bassano in Teverina is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Viterbo in the Italian region of Latium. It is inhabited by 1,332 people and is located about 90 kilometres (56 mi) north of Rome and about 20 kilometres (12 mi) northeast of Viterbo. It is one of I Borghi più belli d'Italia ("The most beautiful villages of Italy").[3]

Geography

Bassano in Teverina lies on the border between Lazio and Umbria and is situated in a position which overlooks the Tiber Valley, on the last offshoots north of the Cimini Hills.

History

The origin of the town is extremely uncertain. The ending of the name, derived from the Latin adjectival suffix -anus, takes back to Roman times and, together with the root of the name, seems to remember the family name (Bassus) of a character who owned large estates in the area: Bassus> Bassanus> Bassano.

The town center of Bassano in Teverina arises on a tuff spur set in a slightly rearward position compared to the Tiber Valley, of which it overlooks one part. Its location, hidden by the surrounding hillocks, does not allow the visibility of neighboring locations such as Mugnano, Attigliano, Chia and Bomarzo. However, a system of sighting and communication must have existed through the hillocks Sasso Quadro (324 m above sea level) and Poggio Zucco (318 m above sea level), directly connected to Bassano through old paths as well as locations of ancient settlements, as remains of buildings prove.

Downstream from the city center, not far away from the Tiber, lies

Etruscans
performed rituals and periodic celebrations, while in its waters the Romans immersed their weapons to make them invincible.

Built on the Cimini Hills slopes, Bassano was a necessary step in the way from Soriano to the Tiber, and also exercised a strategic function on the valley. The little center was already inhabited in Etruscan times but was abandoned during the domination of Romans, who conquered the whole surrounding area, taking the territory thanks to two bloody battles: the first in 309 BC, under the leadership of the consul Quintus Fabius Rullianus, and the second in 283 BC, with which they finally defeated Etruscans and Senones (a Gallic population who had previously occupied the territory). According to a legend, on that occasion, Tiber's waters turned red and took with them the enemy's bodies, announcing the victory to Rome. Once they took possession of the place, the Romans, in order to consolidate the dominion over the Etruscans and to monitor the navigation on Tiber, founded on these hills a castrum, identified with the name of Castrum Amerinum (it's believed to be the actual Palazzolo of Vasanello), according to a topographic map realized by the Mattei family in the second half of the seventeenth century. The site was recovered between the ninth and tenth centuries when, under the threat of the Hungarians, it took importance again for the easily defensible location thanks to its proximity to the Via Amerina, an old Roman road still in use at that time.

The name of Bassano in Teverina appears for the first time in the eleventh century. According to the tradition, the Countess

Apostolic Chamber. The town, therefore, found itself always under the protection of the Church, protected from attacks by the powerful nearby town, especially Orte
's.

Between 1298 and 1377 the town became a municipality, but always under the Holy See's dependence. In 1437 the Diocese of Orte, to which Bassano belonged, was combined with the Civita Castellana one. In 1527, Pope Clement VII gave the estate to the Neapolitan nobleman Alfonso Lagne, after whose death it went back again to the Apostolic Chamber. In 1559, the complex was sold by Pope Pius IV to Cardinal Cristoforo Madruzzo, to his brother Nicola and to his nephew Fortunato. Twenty years later, Fortunato's brother in law, Cardinal Marco Sittico Altemps, bought the estate and ordered the construction of his palace, but at the end of the sixteenth century the territory was finally delivered into the hands of the Apostolic Chamber, who worked on it for many years to come. In 1929 the town of Bassano, weak and small, was combined to Orte and became independent again only in 1958. On 25 November 1943, during the Second World War, it was severely damaged by a tremendous explosion that shook the area: a German munition loaded train parked below the station blew up, causing a windage that destroyed roofs and walls of the town's ancient hamlet, forcing people to abandon it and making it uninhabitable for many decades.

In the last few decades, the hamlet has been involved in a series of recovery interventions and 31 housings have been restored thanks to public initiatives. In 2002 it was decided to consolidate the tuff cliff on which a large part of the hamlet rests.

Overview of Bassano in Teverina

Points of interest

  1. Church of Santa Maria dei Lumi
  2. Clock Tower
  3. Church of Immaculate Conception
  4. Church of Saints Fidenzio and Terenzio
  5. Church of Madonna della Quercia
  6. Old Fountain
  7. Old Churches of Saint Biagio and Saint Anna
  8. Amphitheater Giovanni Paolo II
  9. Poggio Zucco and Sasso Quadro

Society

Twinning

Bassano in Teverina is twinned with Lagardelle-sur-Lèze.

Sport

Bassano in Teverina's football team is ASD Sporting Bassano in Teverina, which plays in Viterbo championship, third category, group B.

Photogallery

  • Church of Santa Maria dei Lumi and Clock Tower
    Church of Santa Maria dei Lumi and Clock Tower
  • Church of Immacolata Concezione
    Church of Immacolata Concezione
  • Church of Saints Fidenzio and Terenzio
    Church of Saints Fidenzio and Terenzio
  • Church of Madonna della Quercia
    Church of Madonna della Quercia
  • The old hamlet
    The old hamlet

References

  1. ^ "Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  2. Istat
    .
  3. ^ "Lazio" (in Italian). Retrieved 1 August 2023.

External links