Senerchia

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Senerchia
Senerchia (Italien)
Senerchia (Italien)
Staat Italien
Region Kampanien
Provinz Avellino (AV)
Koordinaten 40° 45′ N, 15° 12′ OKoordinaten: 40° 44′ 30″ N, 15° 12′ 15″ O
Höhe 600 m s.l.m.
Fläche 36 km²
Einwohner 751 (31. Dez. 2022)[1]
Postleitzahl 83050
Vorwahl 0827
ISTAT-Nummer 064098
Bezeichnung der Bewohner Senerchiesi
Website Senerchia
Senerchia

Senerchia ist eine italienische Gemeinde mit 751 Einwohnern (Stand 31. Dezember 2022) in der Provinz Avellino in der Region Kampanien. Der Ort ist Teil der Comunità Montana Terminio Cervialto

Geografie

Die Nachbargemeinden sind Acerno (SA), Calabritto, Campagna (SA), Oliveto Citra (SA) und Valva (SA).

Commons: Senerchia – Sammlung von Bildern, Videos und Audiodateien

Einzelnachweise

  1. Bilancio demografico e popolazione residente per sesso al 31 dicembre 2022. ISTAT. (Bevölkerungsstatistiken des Istituto Nazionale di Statistica, Stand 31. Dezember 2022).


Vorlage:Infobox Italian comune

Senerchia (Sinerchia in the local dialect) is an Italian municipality with 1370 registered voters, but only 1036 inhabitants, in the Province of Avellino, located in the upper valley of the Sele River in Campania. It was the site of the defeat of Spartacus and is noted for the ruins of an ancient castle.

Geography

Senerchia mainly borders the Province of Salerno, and it is surrounded by the Picentini Mountains. Its main road links it to the town of Quaglietta.

Senerchia borders the municipalities of Acerno (SA), Campagna (SA), Oliveto Citra (SA), Valva (SA) and Calabritto, the only neighbouring municipality in the same province.

The village is located Vorlage:Convert above sea level in the High Sele Valley, in a hilly area on the eastern side of the Picentini Mountains, at the foot of the steep slopes of Mount Boschetiello. The territory is composed of forests and mountains, including many peaks over Vorlage:Convert above sea level, such as Mount Boschetiello at Vorlage:Convert, Mount Croce at Vorlage:Convert, Raia della Volpe at Vorlage:Convert, Sierro dei Cuoppi at Vorlage:Convert, Sierro della Pica at Vorlage:Convert and Raia del Pastore at Vorlage:Convert. The hilly terrain starts at Vorlage:Convert and continues down the country on the right bank of the river Sele. The territory is full of springs and landslide soil. In addition to the Sele, which skirts the municipal area, other waterways include the Vallone Forma, Piceglia, Fiumicello Rovivo, Pozzo San Nicola and Acquabianca.

Following the Irpinia earthquake of 1980, Senerchia has undergone a radical urban transformation. The village was completely destroyed. The old part has been abandoned and dangerous buildings are clearly visible. There is now a green area where the main square and the church were destroyed by a landslide. New buildings have been built beside the old site, with new urbanization and wide streets.

History

Origins

Senerchia originated as a group of remote, pre-Roman settlements. The first settlement was positioned on the heights where the ruins of the castle currently stand, almost forming a fortified town. The ruins of the castle are located in the upper part of the old village, near the church of the town's patron saint, Saint Michael the Archangel. This hill, a spur of Mount Boschetiello, overlooks the High Sele Valley.

The name "Senerchia" is derived from "Sena Herclae," which means "Bosom of Hercules" in archaic Latin. The etymology of the word and the castle ruins may indicate that Senerchia was once strong and powerful. Some also say thatVorlage:Who, the name recalls the local Northern Tuscan names silerchia and silerchie which presuppose a "silercula" from the Latin Siler-eris, meaning a plant that grows in places full of water.

Spartacus

The final battle that saw the defeat and death of Spartacus in 71 BC took place in the present-day territory of Senerchia, on a site on the right bank of the river Sele in an area that includes the border with Oliveto Citra up to Calabritto, near the village of Quaglietta. At the time of the battle this territory was part of Lucania. There have been numerous recent finds of armour and swords dating back to the Roman Empire.

Spartacus and his army of slaves were marching toward Apulia to set sail for Thrace when Crassus, who was at the head of a well-armed Roman army, attacked from behind. Spartacus, partially due to the weariness of his men, wanted to take the battle to the Romans. Spartacus killed his horse, saying that if he won he would have all the horses he wanted, but if he lost he would not be tempted to run away. Spartacus was at the front of the attack, where he died after first killing some Roman soldiers. Some detachments of his army fled and scattered over the surrounding mountains.[citation needed]

Sinerchia family

The Sinerchia family was mentioned in the Catalogus Baronum of 1150–1168.

Scipione Ammirato (1531–1601) described Senerchia as "a castle in the Principality of Salerno of 160 hearths, which has given its name to the family that has owned it for over three hundred years", referring to the Sinerchia family whose history was so closely linked to the village. The Sinerchias were an ancient noble family of Norman origin, derived from the Filangieri. They had many feuds between Campania, Basilicata and Puglia, and lived mainly between Senerchia and Naples until the fifteenth century. The Sinerchia, transplanted later to the Basilicata region, were honored with the title of Count in the fifteenth century, and following the 1481 Conspiracy of the Barons assumed the surname Scardaccione. Orlando Sinerchia Scardaccione, Count of Sant’Andrea, when he moved to Potenza, together with his cousin Amelio was deprived of possessions as a consequence of the Conspiracy of the Barons.

Castle

The castle of Senerchia, overlooking the High Sele Valley, had ancient origins. It may already have been the defensive garrison of Irpini, and the Romans probably had to work hard to subdue it; hence the Latin name Sena Herclea (which means Bosom of Hercules). It was strengthened under the control of the Byzantines in the final war against the Goths. The Lombards changed the fortifications and made further extensions. In the Angevin period of Senerchia, Nicholas was keeper in 1271, commissioned by Charles I of Anjou. The keep, with only its west front still well preserved, is one of the few survivors of the ancient fortified complex.

References

Vorlage:Reflist Vorlage:Province of Avellino