Martin M. Miles' photos with the keyword: Basilica bizantina
Otranto - Basilica bizantina di San Pietro
30 Sep 2020 |
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Otranto occupies the site of an ancient Greek city. It gained importance in Roman times, as it was the nearest port to the eastern coast of the Adriatic Sea.
After the end of the Roman Empire, it was in the hands of the Byzantine emperors until it surrendered to the Norman troops of Robert Guiscard in 1068. The Normans fortified the city and built the cathedral, that got consecrated in 1088. When Henry VI., son of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, married Constanze of Sicily in 1186 Otranto came under the rule of the Hohenstaufen and later in the hands of Ferdinand I of Aragón, King of Naples.
Between 1480 and 1481 the "Ottoman invasion" took place here. Troops of the Ottoman Empire invaded and laid siege to the city and its citadel. Legends tell that more than 800 inhabitants were beheaded after the city was captured. The "Martyrs of Otranto" are still celebrated in Italy, their skulls are on display in the cathedral. A year later the Ottoman garrison surrendered the city following a siege by Christian forces and the intervention of Papal forces.
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Otranto had been one of the last Byzantine strongholds in Apulia, but finally had to surrender Robert Guiscard. It had probably been such a stronghold, as Otranto had been the kernel of "Magna Graecia" the Byzantine area in Apulia. It even hosted an autocephalous bishopric, only dependent of the patriarchal see of Byzantium since 968.
San Pietro is a Byzantine basilica a testimony of the Byzantine dominion in Terra d'Otranto upto 1068. It is dated to the 9th/10th century, built on the blueprint of a Greek Cross, which is typical for this period of Byzantine architecture
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