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Benevento


 

Benevento is a town and archiepiscopal see of Campania, Italy, capital of the province of Benevento, 32 miles northeast of Naples. It is situated on a hill 400 ft. above sea-level at the confluence of the Calore and Sabbato. Estimated population in 1997 was 63,568.

History

Benevento in antiquity

The site was the chief town of the Samnites, who took refuge here after their defeat by the Roman Republic in 314 BC. It appears not to have fallen into Roman hands until Pyrrhus's absence in Sicily, but served as a base of operations in the last campaign against Pyrrhus, who gave up his campaign in Italy after the inconclusive Battle of Beneventum (275 BC).

Related Topics:
Samnites - Roman Republic - 314 BC - Pyrrhus - Sicily - Battle of Beneventum - 275 BC

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A Latin colony was planted here in 268 BC, and it was then that the name was changed for the sake of superstition (male = bad, bene = good), and probably then that the Via Appia was extended from Capua to Beneventum. It remained in the hands of the Romans during both the Punic and the Social Wars, and was a fortress of importance to them. After the Social War it became a municipium and under Augustus a colony.

Related Topics:
Latin - Colony - 268 BC - Via Appia - Capua - Punic - Social War - Municipium - Augustus

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The position is naturally strong, being protected by the two rivers, and the medieval fortifications, which are nearly 2 miles in length, probably follow the ancient line, which was razed to the ground by Totila.

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Being a meeting point of six main roads, Beneventum was much visited by travellers. The Arch of Trajan erected A.D. 114 (illustration, above right) is one of the best-preserved Roman structures in the Campagna. It repeats the formula of the Arch of Titus in the Roman Forum, with reliefs of Trajan's life and exploits of his reign. Some of the sculptures are in the British Museum.

Related Topics:
Arch of Titus - British Museum

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Duchy of Benevento

Not long after it had been sacked by Totila and its walls razed (545), Benevento became the seat of a powerful Lombard duchy, which soon converted from Arianism to Trinitarian Christianity. The Dukes immediately walled the city once more, and soon began building the church of Santa Sophia, on its polygonal groundplan, one of the most important Lombard architectural complexes. Santa Sophia ("Holy Wisdom") was a dedication acceptable to Arian and Trinitarian alike.

Related Topics:
Totila - 545 - Lombard - Duchy - Arianism - Trinitarian Christianity

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In the early Middle Ages, Benevento was the most important city of southern Italy. The Dukes of Benevento, part of the loosely-knit Lombard kingdom at first, were essentially independent, in spite of their common roots and similar language, law and religion with the north, and in spite of taking to wife women from the royal family. A swathe of territory that owed allegiance to Rome or to Ravenna separated the dukes of Benevento from the Lombard kings at Pavia. Cultural autonomy followed naturally: a distinctive liturgical chant, the "Beneventan chant" developed in the Duchy; it was finally entirely superseded by Gregorian chant only in the 11th century. A unique Beneventan script was also developed for writing Latin manuscripts. The great writer of the 8th century, Paul the Deacon arrived in Benevento in the retinue of a princess from Pavia, the duke's bride; he settled into the greatest of Beneventan monasteries, Monte Cassino, to write first a history of Rome, then his great history of the Lombards, our primal source.

Related Topics:
Gregorian chant - Beneventan script - Paul the Deacon - Monte Cassino

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In 758, Desiderius, king of the Lombards, briefly captured Spoleto and Benevento, but with the collapse of the Lombard kingdom in 773, Duke Arechi II was elevated to Prince under the new empire of the Franks, in compensation for having some of his territory transferred to the Papal States. Benevento was acclaimed by a chronicler as a "second Pavia"— Ticinum geminum— after the Lombard capital was lost. Arechi expanded the Roman city, with new walled enclosures extending onto the level ground southwest of the old city, where Arechi razed old constructions for a new princely palace, whose open court is still traceable in the Piano di Corte of the acropolis. Like their Byzantine enemies, the dukes linked the palace compound with a national church, also a "Saint Sophia." Benevento continued to be independent until the Normans of Sicily conquered it in 1053.

Related Topics:
758 - Spoleto - Duke Arechi II - Franks - Papal States - Second Pavia - Normans - 1053

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Papal Benevento

Benevento passed to the Papacy peacefully when the emperor Henry III ceded it to Leo IX in exchange for the bishopric of Bamberg. Benevento was the cornerstone of the Papacy's temporal powers in southern Italy. The Papacy ruled it by appointed rectors, seated in a magnificent palace, and the principality continued to be a papal possession until 1806, when Napoleon granted it to his minister Talleyrand with the title of Sovereign Prince. Talleyrand was never to settle down and actually rule his new principality; in 1815 Benevento was returned to the papacy. It was united to Italy in 1860.

Related Topics:
Henry III - Leo IX - Bishopric - Bamberg - 1806 - Napoleon - Talleyrand - 1815 - Papacy - 1860

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Manfred of Sicily lost his life in 1266 in battle with Charles of Anjou not far from the town (see Battle of Benevento).

Related Topics:
Manfred of Sicily - 1266 - Charles of Anjou - Battle of Benevento

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