'Apulia' (
Italian: '''Puglia''' ['pua]) is a region in southeastern
Italy bordering the
Adriatic Sea in the east, the
Ionian Sea to the southeast, and the Strait of Ã’tranto and
Gulf of Taranto in the south. Its southern portion known as
Salento, a peninsula, forms the heel of the Italian "boot". The region comprises 19,345 km² (7,469 square miles), and its population is about 4 million. It is bordered by the other Italian regions of
Molise to the north,
Campania to the west, and
Basilicata to the southwest. It neighbors
Greece and
Albania, across the Ionian and Adriatic Seas, respectively. The region extends as far north as
Monte Gargano, and was the scene of the last stages in the
Second Punic War.
Geography
Apulia is mostly a plain (see
Tavoliere delle Puglie); its low coast, however, is broken by the mountainous Gargano Peninsula in the north, and there are mountains in the north central part of the region. Other important centers are
Alberobello,
Andria,
Barletta,
Canosa,
Conversano,
Francavilla Fontana,
Gallipoli,
Gioia del Colle,
Gravina in Puglia,
Grottaglie,
Manfredonia,
Martina Franca,
Mattinata,
Molfetta,
Monopoli,
Ostuni,
Otranto,
Palo del Colle,
Santa Maria di Leuca,
San Giovanni Rotondo,
San Vito dei Normanni,
Trani,
Lizzano,
Taranto,
Bari,
Lecce,
Manduria,
Leverano.
Apulia is divided into six provinces:
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Bari
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Barletta-Andria-Trani
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Brindisi
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Foggia
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Lecce
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Taranto
Economy
Farming was the chief occupation, but industry has expanded rapidly. Farm products include olives, grapes, cereals, almonds, figs, tobacco, and livestock (sheep, pigs, cattle, and goats). Manufactured products include refined petroleum, chemicals, cement, iron and steel, processed food, plastics, and wine. Fishing is pursued in the Adriatic and in the Gulf of Taranto. The scarcity of water has long been an acute problem in Apulia, and it is necessary to carry drinking water by aqueduct across the Apennines from the
Sele River in Campania.
Services and tourism are increasingly replacing agriculture as the main resources of the region.
History
In ancient times only the northern part of the region was called Apulia; the southern peninsula was known as
Calabria, a name later used to designate the toe of the Italian "boot."
One of the richest in Italy for archeological findings, the region was settled from the 1st millennium BC by several Illyric and
Italic peoples. Later, the
Greeks expanded until reaching the area of
Taranto and the
Salento.
Apulia was an important area for the ancient
Romans, who conquered it in the 4th century BC but also suffered a crushing defeat here in the
battle of Cannae against
Hannibal. However, after the Carthaginians left the region, the Romans captured the ports of Brindisi and Taranto, and established dominion over the region. During the Imperial age Apulia was a flourishing area for production of grain and oil, becoming the most important exporter to the Eastern provinces.
After the fall of Rome, Apulia was held successively by the
Goths, the
Lombards and, from the 6th century onwards, the
Byzantines. Bari became the capital of a province that extended to modern Basilicata, and was ruled by a
catepano (governor), hence the name of
Capitanata of the Barese neighbourhood. From 800 on Saracen domination in the area was intermittent, but Apulia was mostly under Byzantine authority until the 11th century, when the
Normans conquered it with relative ease.
Robert Guiscard set up the duchy of Apulia in 1059. After the Norman conquest of
Sicily in the late 11th century,
Palermo replaced Melfi (just west of present day Apulia) as the center of Norman power, and Apulia became a mere province, first of the
Kingdom of Sicily, then of the
Kingdom of Naples. From the late 12th to early 13th centuries, Apulia was a favorite residence of the
Hohenstaufen emperors, notably
Frederick II. After the fall of the latter's heir,
Manfred, under the
Angevine and
Aragonese/Spanish dominations Apulia became largely dominated by a small number of powerful landowners (''Baroni''). The coast was occupied at times by the
Turks and by the
Venetians. The French also controlled the region in 1806-1815, resulting in the abolition of feudalism and the reformation of the justice system.
Liberation movements began to spread in the 1820s. In 1861, with the fall of
Two Sicilies, the region joined
Italy. Social and agrarian reforms that had proceeded slowly from the 19th century accelerated in the mid-20th century.
The characteristic Apulian architecture of the 11th–13th centuries reflects
Greek,
Arab,
Norman, and
Pisan influences. There are universities at Bari and Lecce.
Language
The official national language (since 1861) is
Italian. However, as a consequence of its deep and colorful history, other historical languages have been spoken in this region for centuries. In the northern and central sections, some dialect of the
Neapolitan language are spoken: for example the "
Barese", spoken in the zone of
Bari or "
Foggiano" near
Foggia. In the southern part of the region, dialects of the
Sicilian language called "
Tarantino" and "
Salentino" are spoken. In isolated pockets of the Southern part of
Salento, a dialect of modern Greek called "
Griko",
[1] is spoken by just a few thousand people. A rare dialect of the
Franco-Provençal language called "
Faetar" is spoken in two isolated towns in the
Province of Foggia. In a couple of villages, the "
Arbëreshë"
[2] dialect of the
Albanian language has been spoken since a wave of refugees settled there in the
15th century by a very small community. The
Messapic language formerly spoken in the region was extinct by the
1st century BC due to the
Romanization/
Latinization of this area which took place after the definitive conquest of the region by the
Romans during the
3rd century BC (see
Punic Wars).
Citations
References
1. [1]
2. [2]
See also
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Nardò
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Capitanata
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Tavoliere delle Puglie
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Gargano
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Gravina in Puglia
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Salento
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Murgia
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Trullo
External links
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Official website
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Life in Puglia
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Environmental League Puglia
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Video of the last pacht of Puglia. Nardò, Salento