Teramo In Abruzzo Italy

Communal Capital

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City of Teramo

Region    Abruzzo
Province    Teramo (TE)

Population  51,023 (M 24,526; F 26,497)
Density (per square km): 335.9
Number of Families    18,406
Housing Units    20,783
Population Name    teramani
Patron Saint    San Berardo di Teramo

Zip Code    64100
Phone Prefix    (+39) 0861
Istat Code    067041
Belfiore Code    L103

Teramo City Hall
Address: Piazza Orsini, 1 – 64100 Teramo – ITALY
Phone Number: (+39) 0861-3241; Fax: (+39) 0861-246565

Teramo Localities (Frazioni)
Castagneto, Cavuccio, Colleatterrato Alto, Colleminuccio, Colle Santa Maria, Varano, Forcella, Frondarola, Magnanella, Miano, Nepezzano, Piano D’Accio, Poggio Cono, Poggio San Vittorino, Putignano, Rapino, Rocciano, Rupo, San Nicolò a Tordino, San Pietro ad Lacum, Sant’Atto, Spiano, Tofo Sant’Eleuterio, Tordinia, Valle San Giovanni, Villa Gesso, Villa Ripa, Villa Vomano

Adjacent Towns
Basciano, Bellante, Campli, Canzano, Castellalto, Cermignano, Cortino, Montorio al Vomano, Penna Sant’Andrea, Torricella Sicura

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Abruzzo Lodging

The name

Interamna (Greek: Ἰντέραμνα: Eth. Interamnas, Interamnātis), was the name of several cities in different parts of Italy. Its obvious etymology, already pointed out by Varro and Festus, indicates their position at the confluence of two streams.[1] The form Interamnium (Greek: Ἰντεράμνιον), and the ethnic form Interamnis, are also found, but more rarely. The name referred to the two rivers Vezzola and Tordino, between which it lies.

The name is already corrupted in extant manuscripts of the Liber Coloniarum into Teramne, whence its modern form of Teramo. But in the Middle Ages it appears to have been known also by the name of Aprutium, supposed to be a corruption of Praetutium, or rather of the name of the people Praetutii, applied (as was so often the case in Gaul) to their chief city. Thus the name Abrutium is present among the cities of Picenum enumerated by the Geographer of Ravenna (iv. 31); and under the Lombards a comes Aprutii is mentioned. The name has been retained in that of Abruzzo, now a region of Italy.

History

Interamna was founded by the Praetutii (who according to some ancient legends were possibly connected to the Phoenicians, although most scholars consider them related to another nearby Italic tribe, the Piceni) as their capital. The name is omitted by Pliny, but is found in Ptolemy, who distinctly assigns it to the Praetutii; and it is mentioned also in the Liber Coloniarum among the Civitates Piceni (cities of Picenum). It there bears the epithet of “Palestina” or, as the name is elsewhere written, “Paletina”; the origin and meaning of which are wholly unknown but may be related to legendary associations between the Praetutii and the Phoenicians.[2] In the genuine fragments of Frontinus, on the other hand, the citizens are correctly designated as Interamnates Praetutiani.[3]

It was conquered by consul Manius Curius Dentatus in 290 BCE, and made a Municipium. During the Social War (91-88 BCE) it sided against Sulla, who deprived it of its municipium status. The latter was restored by Julius Caesar. Being situated in the interior of the country, at a distance from the highroads, the name is not found in the Itineraries, but we know that it was an episcopal see and a place of some importance under the Roman Empire. Vestiges of the ancient theatre, of baths and other buildings of Roman date, as well as statues, altars, and other ancient remains, have been discovered on the site: numerous inscriptions have been also found, in one of which the citizens are designated as Interamnites Praetutiani. [4]

The city rapidly declined after the fall of the Western Empire and, following Goth and Byzantine domination, became part of the territories of the Lombard Duchy of Spoleto. In 1156 it was put on fire by Norman Count Robert of Loretello and then rebuilt thanks to Bishop Guido II. In the 14th- and 15th centuries it was plagued by feuds between local families which finally ended under the Aragonese dominion. After that it shared the fortunes of the Kingdom of Naples – under which it was the capital of the province of Abruzzo Ulteriore – until in 1860 it was annexed to the Kingdom of Italy.

During World War II the people of Teramo rebelled against the German occupation. This deed earned the province of Teramo the Gold Medal for Civil Valour, assigned by Carlo Azeglio Ciampi on September 15, 2005. The town was liberated from forces of the Nazis and fascists of Salò on June 14, 1944.

Main sights
Bell tower of the Cathedral of San Berardo.
The Sanctuary of the Madonna delle Grazie.

The main monuments of the city are:

* the majestic Cathedral of San Berardo, built in 1158 by bishop Guido II, in Romanesque style. Noteworthy is the great portal in Gothic style, finished in 1332 by the Roman master Deodato di Cosma. It houses a precious silver paliotto by Nicola of Guardagriele (with 35 scenes of the life of Jesus) and a polyptych by the Venetian artist Jacobello del Fiore depicting the Incoronation of the Virgin. Annexed is a 50 m bell tower.
* the Romanesque church of ìSant’Antonio (1127), with a fine portal. The interior, with a single nave, was renovated along Baroque lines.
* the church of San Getulio, built in the early Middle Ages on the ruins of a Roman temple, finally destroyed in 1155 by the Normans. Only the presbyterium and some Romanesque elements remain of the original building.
* the church of San Domenico (14th century) with a fine Virgin with Child.
* the sanctuary of the Madonna delle Grazie (also known as Chiesa di Santa Maria delle Grazie). It has a notable Romanesque cloister and a 15th century miraculous wooden statue of the Virgin, attributed to Silvestro dell’Aquila.
* the Palazzo Vescovile (“Bishops Palace”), from the 14th century.
* the remains of the Roman theatre (built about 30 BCE) and of the amphitheatre (about 3rd-4th century CE).

Written by stefanaccio

June 11, 2009 at 9:43 am

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