Il ruolo della “piazza Maggiore” nel contesto della Montanea Aprutii: il caso di Amatrice
Abstract
In the context of the 13th century, the Montanea Aprutii, including Amatrice, Leonessa, Antrodoco, Cittaducale, and Cittareale,
was fragmented into small autonomous settlements due to the feudal system. The territorial reform program initiated during
the Swabian era and continued under the Angevins aimed to consolidate populated centres to improve military, economic, and
fiscal control. }e new towns adopted advanced urban schemes, like those used for the French bastides, characterized by quadrangular
central squares and a regular arrangement of blocks.
The city of Amatrice, according to modern historiography, appears to have had a main square located centrally from its inception,
marked by the presence of a civic tower, which, however, exhibits more archaic characteristics compared to the uniform,
homogeneous, and orthogonal layout of towns like Antrodoco, Cittaducale, and Cittareale.
The idea of a ‘Piazza Maggiore’ at the centre of the city is based on two critical readings: on the one hand, the comparative analysis
of towns founded during the Angevin era highlights the consistent presence of a central square; on the other, an 18th-century
source records an assembly in 1293 in the ‘Piazza Maggiore’ near the ‘Regio Campanile’, identified with the current Civic
Tower. This study aims to examine historical sources in relation to the architectural structures observable before the 2016 earthquake,
in order to accurately identify the main square of medieval Amatrice.
Keywords : Amatrice, Piazza Maggiore, history of medieval architecture, Montanea Aprutii, angevin foundations.
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