BARI
The chief town of the Region is between the provinces of Foggia and Brindisi. The plains
stretch
almost entirely along the coast and only briefly touch upon the Murgia
Barese. The town is in the shape of a bird with open wings, whose head
forms the nucleus of Bari
Vecchia, the old town. Bari was annexed to the Roman Empire in the third century before
Christ
and over the ages was an Arab Emirate and conquered by Longobards,
Bizantines and Saracens. Once the base of the Roman Empire’s fleet for
the Orient, the urban structure of the old town is arranged around the
catapan court. After the remains of Saint Nicholas were stolen and the
homonymous Basilica was built, Bari became a major centre of
Christianity and a convenient place the Crusades could leave from and
return to from the Orient.
Ruled by Normans, Angevins, Aragons
and the Spanish, the town first expanded outside of the old one in 1813
when work started on the new town.
Important monuments in town
include the Basilica of San Nicola, housing the remains of the patron
saint, the Romanesque basilica of San Gregorio, the Cathedral of San
Sabino and Bari’s Norman-Swabian Castle, built on the orders of
Frederick II for purposes of defence.
Places not to be missed in the old part of town are the piazza Mercantile and the Colonna
infame, once used as a pillory for insolvent debtors. More modern buildings also worth a
visit are Teatro Petruzzelli, Teatro Margherita, Palazzo Fizzarotti and the library of
Santa Teresa dei Maschi. There are also many churches on the reefs and hypogeums cut out of the rock and subsoil.
These include: the church on the reefs of Saint Candida, the temple of Saint George and
the
hypogeum of Madio Diana, the “Jewish” hypogeum. Museums worth a visit:
the Archaeology Museum, the Provincial picture gallery, the Civic
History museum and the Botanical Gardens Institute.
Definitely worthy of mention are the historic districts, the so-called “Old Bari”,
surrounded
by the majestic Lungomare Imperatore Augusto – or Emperor Augustus
seafront - and the splendid Piazza del Ferrarese. The views from behind
the port are lovely, including the characteristic Piazza San Pietro, the
monastery of Santa Scolastica, the buildings of the archconfraternity
of San Luca and the Svevo Castle.
Important events include the festivities of Saint Nicholas, the patron saint of the town,
between the 7th and 9th of May, and the exhibitions at the Levante Fair in the building
constructed in the 1930s.
Fonte: regione Puglia
BARI
Informazioni article by:NETWORK PORTALI, Pisa