When
I was eight I went with my family to Positano, on the coast just
south of Naples. This was the beginning of my lifelong passion for
Italy and certain intense memories have stayed with me: the sight of
people living in caves in the mountainside; a vivid green lizard
disappearing into a sunlit wall; luscious fragrant peaches that were
so juicy you had to wash after you guzzled them. As an adult I came
to know Italy well but didn’t return to that coast until last month
when my husband and I spent a week in Amalfi. I always thought of
that stunning coast as existing purely for tourism of the most
indulgent kind but discovered, to my surprise, that Amalfi has a long
and complex history.
Its
origins are very vague; Amalfi
was a beautiful nymph (who still apears on the town banner) and Hercules
fell in love with her. Alternatively, in the fourth century, Roman
nobles in five ships set out from the new city of Constantinople
and, after many adventures, ended up at Scala, in the mountains above
Amalfi. Huns, Vandals and Goths invaded but Scala and Amalfi were
protected by their mountains. Before the rise of Venice Amalfi was a
great maritime power, part of the Byzantine empire until the Normans
invaded.
There
were bishops and doges and each doge announced his accession to the
Emperor in Constantinople. Although it was supposed to be a republic
the doges were really absolute monarchs from the same family. It was
a city of merchant adventurers with trading colonies as far away as
Beirut and Cairo.
In
1073 Robert Guiscard seized and sacked Amalfi and added 'Duke of
Amalfi' to his titles but Amalfi revolted and elected one last last
doge. After that the Normans ruled Amalfi and it grew into a city of
seventy thousand people with a flourishing cultural life and a big
fleet. Trading connections brought the Amalfitani in contact very
early with the process of paper making, which Arab merchants had
first discovered in China in the early Middle Ages, and there is
still a paper factory.
In
1343 a terrible earthquake struck the Bay of Naples. The tsunami
that followed destroyed the lower town of Amalfi which fell into the
sea. This tsunami was observed by the poet Petrarch, whose ship was
forced to return to port, and he wrote about it in the fifth book of
his Epistolae Familiares. So a great city was transformed
into a village with a harbour and just a few thousand residents.
Of course this kind of lost Atlantis story always has great
imaginative appeal and you wonder what ruined palaces and churches
you are swimming over.
The
second of the fifteenth century Piccolomini Dukes of Amalfi, Alfonso,
was married to Joanna of Aragon, who was Webster’s Duchess of
Malfi.
When
her husband died the Duchess fell in love with her steward, Antonio
Bologna, and secretly married him. She gave birth to his child,
Frederick, who was sent away to be brought up elsewhere and then they
had a girl. One of her brothers, a Cardinal, became suspicious so
Bologna escaped to Ancona with their children and the Duchess,
pregnant with their third child, followed. She said to her household
there, ‘I would rather live privately with my husband than remain
duchess.’
When
her brother the Cardinal heard this he had them banished from Ancona.
Bologna fled to Siena and then to Padua where he was eventually
killed. The Duchess with her children and maid was captured and
imprisoned in Torre dello Ziro, a tower between Amalfi and Atrani
(which is still there) where she is said to have been murdered by
her brothers. Webster would have got this gory tale from Bandello’s
Novelle
(1554). Bandello had known the real Bologna in Milan before his
assassination.
Amalfi
never regained its earlier importance. Later, that area was ruled by
Spain, then by Joseph Bonaparte, and in 1861 Francis 11, the last
King of Naples, had his kingdom absorbed into the kingdom of Italy.
Amalfi remained a quiet harbour town until the arrival of roads and
tourism. Every four years there is still a regatta of the four
ancient rival maritime republics: Genoa, Pisa, Venice and Amalfi. The
boat rowed by the Amalfi team, beautifully painted and carved, can be
seen in a courtyard near the sea.
Ravello,
in the mountains just above Amalfi, is also supposed to have been
founded by Roman fugitives. The Bishop of Ravello was
appointed directly from Rome and in the exquisite little Cathedral
Hadrian IV, Nicholas Breakspear, the only Englishman ever to be made
Pope, confirmed Norman William as King of Sicily.
In
the 12th century Ravello had about twenty-five thousand inhabitants
but now it is tiny. Its wonderful medieval palaces and gardens have
attracted many artists, musicians, and writers including Boccaccio,
Grieg, Escher, Virginia Woolf and D H Lawrence. Wagner is thought to
have found inspiration for Parsifal in the gardens of the Villa
Ruffalo and until his death Gore Vidal lived in one of the medieval
palaces. Every summer Ravello has a classical music festival.
How interesting! And on a day like today, I do feel a distinct pull towards the blue south. I must visit it. Such a sad story about the Duchess; it shows the limitations of privilege.
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