Caltagirone

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Comune di Caltagirone

Location of Caltagirone in Italy
Country Flag of Italy Italy
Region Sicily
Province Catania (CT)
Mayor Francesco Pignataro (since June 11, 2002)
Elevation 608 m (1,995 ft)
Area 382 km² (147.5 sq mi)
Population (as of 2007 (ISTAT))
 - Total 39,333
 - Density 103/km² (267/sq mi)
Time zone CET, UTC+1
Coordinates 37°14′0″N 14°31′0″E / 37.23333, 14.51667
Gentilic Calatini or Caltagironesi
Dialing code 0933
Postal code 95041, 95040
Frazioni Granieri, Santo Pietro, Piano San Paolo
Patron St. James
 - Day July 25
Website: http://www.comune.caltagirone.ct.it/

Caltagirone (Sicilian: Caltaggiruni) is a town and comune in the province of Catania, on the island (and region) of Sicily, about 70 km southwest of Catania. It is bounded by the comuni of Acate, Gela, Grammichele, Licodia Eubea, Mazzarino, Mazzarrone, Mineo, Mirabella Imbaccari, Niscemi, Piazza Armerina, San Michele di Ganzaria.

The famous decorated staircase of Caltagirone.

The city has been long famous for the production of pottery and terra-cotta wares. Nowadays the production is more and more oriented to artistic production of ceramics and terra-cotta sculptures. Other activities are mainly related to agriculture (production of grapes, olives, peaches).

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[edit] History

The city's name derives from the Arabic "qal'at-al-ganom" ("Castle of the Genies"). It was inhabited since pre-historical times, as attested by the presence of two necropolis dating from the second millennium BCE and by numerous other archaeological findings. It was later inhabited by the Sicels pre-Roman population.

The Arabs built here a castle, which in 1030 was attacked by Ligurian troops under the Byzantine general George Maniakes, and which have left traces of Ligurian language in the current dialect. The city flourished under the Norman and Hohenstaufen domination, becoming a renowned center for production of ceramics.

The city was almost completely destroyed by the severe earthquake of 1693. Many public and private buildings have then been reconstructed in Baroque style. Primarily for this reason, the city has been inserted, together with the surrounding territory in an area protected by the UNESCO World Heritage program.

[edit] Main sights

A collection of ancient and modern pottery and terra-cotta, dating back to the Magna Grecia period, is available in the local Museum of Pottery, created in 1965.

The main landmark of the city is the 142-step monumental Staircase of Santa Maria del Monte, built from 1608 in the old part of the town. The peculiarity is that each step is decorated with different hand-decorated ceramics, using styles and figures derived from the millennial tradition of pottery making. Once a year, on and around the day of the city's patron saint, (St. James, 25 July), the staircase is illuminated with candles of different colours arranged in order to reconstruct an artistic drawing of several tens of meters.

Religious buildings include:

  • The Cathedral of St. Julian, of Norman origin, with a twentieth-century art nouveau façade by Saverio Gulli.
  • The Baroque church of San Francesco di Paola. The sacristy is in Gothic style, dating from before the 1693 earthquake.
  • San Francesco d'Assisi, edified in 1236 and rebuilt in Baroque style after 1693. The façade has two orders with marine symbols and a statue of the Immaculate. The dome is unfinished.
  • Church of the Gesù (1570). The façade has eight statues portraying saints and the Madonna with Child. The interior, one a single nave, houses a Pietà by Filippo Paladino (1607) and Christ's Nativity by Polidoro da Caravaggio.
  • Santa Maria del Monte (12th century).
  • The Renaissance Church of the New Capuchins, in white stone, with a noteworthy treasure and a picture gallery.
  • St. James.
  • Also noteworthy is the Palazzo Senatorio (fifteenth century), the former Town Hall.

[edit] Notable people

[edit] Sister cities



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