Pizzo, also called
Pizzo Calabro, is a seaport and
comune in the
province of Vibo Valentia
(Calabria,
southern
Italy), situated
on a steep cliff overlooking the Gulf of Santa Eufemia.
Fishing is one of
the main activities, including that of tuna and coral.
History
As with many other
places in Calabria, Pizzo claims ancient origins. The town may have been
founded by colonists from an unknown site in ancient
Magna Grecia, but
there is currently no documentary or archeological evidence to support
this. Consequently, the history of Pizzo begins in 1300 when the
existence of a community of Basilian monks, a fort, and a fishing
village is documented . The name Pizzo (translated either as
bird's beak or projecting point) fits perfectly with the tuffa
promontory that juts out into the sea near the mouth of the river
Angitola.
For centuries tuna
was trapped in the beaches around Pizzo, especially in the months of May
and June. Despite fading in importance over time this activity continued
until the 1970s in the Centofontane area, where nets were spread to
corral tuna from offshore. Ruins of the activity remain. The activity is
now banned. The Piedigrotta and Prangi areas include some sea caves, and
"the cave of the Saracen", although largely eroded today, was supposedly
used by Saracen pirates to store booty and people captured during their
raids along the coast of Calabria.
The former King of
Naples
Joachim Murat,
who was the brother-in-law of
Napoleon, was
imprisoned for several days in the town's Aragonese castle and then
sentenced to death. He was executeded by firing squad on October 13th
1815 in the main hall of the castle and was possibly buried in the
church of San Giorgio. Paradoxically, the castle is now called
Castello Murat.
Inside the castle is the Provincial Museum Murat.
In 1783 the town
was almost destroyed by an
earthquake, and
it suffered some damage from the same cause in 1905.
Main sights
It has an old
castle, built by the
Aragonese in the
15th century, in which
Joachim Murat,
ex-king of Naples, was shot on October 13, 1815.
Other sights
include the Baroque church of St. George (1632) and the cave church of
Piedigrotta (17th century)
Food
Pizzo is famous in
the area for its
Tartufo, a large
ball of ice cream filled with molten chocolate.
References
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All demographics and other statistics from the
Italian statistical institute (Istat)
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