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History
of Catania |
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Katane was founded by the Calcidesi people in 729 B.C. in a fertile plain at the foot of Etna. In 476 B.C. the city was conquered by Gerone, the fierce Siracusa tyrant who threw out the inhabitants replacing them with people from Siracusa, and it was renamed Aitna. The Calcidesi reclaimed the city after the tyrant was defeated, and gave it back its original name. However, this period of autonomy was short-lived: in 403 B.C. another Siracusa tyrant conquered Katane and sold the city’s inhabitants as slaves. The city remained under Siracusa rule until the beginning of the 3rd century. Rome took over from Siracusa in 263 B.C. During the first Punic war, they invaded the city and stayed there for about seven centuries, a period in which Katane developed its culture and economy greatly. After the fall of the Empire, the ex-Roman colony was
conquered by Belisarius (535 A.D.) and was ruled by the Byzantine Empire
for about three centuries. In 1169, the city was destroyed by a terrible earthquake
that struck the whole of Eastern Sicily. Thirty years later, while the
city was still working on reconstruction, Catania supported the Altavilla
against Henry VI, the son of Barbarossa: the imperial reaction was very
violent, culminating in a fire that destroyed part of the city, including
the Cathedral. The second half of 1600 was an extremely tragic period
in Catania’s history: in 1669 there was a violent eruption of
Etna and it covered everything with lava. Less than thirty years later
(1693), when the city was still nursing its wounds, an earthquake destroyed
anything that was still left. During the Risorgimento period, Catania rebelled against
the Bourbons in 1837 and in 1848, freeing itself permanently in 1860,
when the Thousand conquered Palermo. Catania was annexed to the Kingdom
of Italy. |
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