'Siponto' (
Latin: '''Sipontum''') was an ancient city and port in
Apulia,
Italy, located c. 3 km south of today's
Manfredonia.
According to the legend, it was founded by the
Homeric hero
Diomedes's son, called with the same name. Probably Siponto was a village of the
Dauni, becoming later a flourishing
Greek colony and then being conquered by the
Samnites.
In
335 BC it was captured by
Alexander I, King of
Epirus and uncle of
Alexander the Great. In
189 it became a
Roman colony.
According to another legend, Siponto was one of the first
episcopal see in Italy, its bishop being named directly by
St. Peter. The first known bishop of the city is however a Felice, appointed in 465 AD.
In the 9th century the city was occupied for a while by the
Saracens, while in
1042 the
Italo-Normans made it the seat of a county.
In
1223 the city was damaged by a violent earthquake, followed by another in
1255 which largely destroyed it. King
Manfred of Sicily established therefore that it would be rebuilt in a new position, founding the modern
Manfredonia.