Sassari

Sassari

Sassari
—  Comune  —
Comune di Sassari

Coat of arms
Sassari is located in Italy
Sassari
Location of Sassari in Italy
Coordinates: 40°44′N 8°34′E / 40.733°N 8.567°E / 40.733; 8.567Coordinates: 40°44′N 8°34′E / 40.733°N 8.567°E / 40.733; 8.567
Country Italy
Region Sardinia
Province Sassari (SS)
Frazioni Argentiera, Bancali, Biancareddu, Campanedda, Canaglia, Caniga, La Corte, La Landrigga, La Pedraia,
Li Punti, Ottava, Palmadula, Platamona, Saccheddu, San Giovanni, Tottubella
Government
 - Mayor Gianfranco Ganau (Democratic Party)
Area
 - Total 546.08 km2 (210.8 sq mi)
Elevation 225 m (738 ft)
Population (31 December 2009)
 - Total 130.656
 - Density 0.2/km2 (0.6/sq mi)
Demonym Sassaresi or Turritani
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 - Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 07100
Dialing code 079
Patron saint Saint Nicholas
Saint day December 6
Website Official website

Sassari (Italian pronunciation: [ˈsassari] ( listen); Sassarese: Sàssari; Sardinian: Tàtari) is an Italian city. It is the second-largest city of Sardinia in terms of population with about 130,000 inhabitants, or about 300,000 including the greater metropolitan area. Being one of the oldest cities on the island, it contains a considerable collection of art.

Over time, Sassari has been ruled by the Sardinians themselves (albeit briefly), the Genoese, the Pisans, the Aragonese, the Catalans, the Spanish and the Austrians, all of whom have contributed to Sassari's historical and artistic heritage. Sassari is a city rich in art, culture and history, and is well known for its beautiful "palazzi" and its elegant, neo-classical piazzas, such as Piazza d'Italia (Square of Italy) and the Teatro Civico (Civic Theatre).

As Sardinia's second most important city, and the fifth largest municipality in Italy (area 546 km²), it has a considerable amount of cultural, touristic, commercial and political importance in the island. The city's economy mainly relies on tourism and services, however also partially on research, construction, pharmaceuticals and the petroleum industry.

Contents

Geography

Sassari is located in north-western Sardinia, at 225 metres above sea level. The area rises up on a wide karstic plateau, that slopes gently down towards the Gulf of Asinara and the Nurra Plain. The city is surrounded by a green belt of thousands of hectares of olive plantations, that from the 19th century has partly replaced the mixed woodlands of oak and other Mediterranean trees as well as the maquis shrubland. The thinly populated Nurra Plain, located in the west, occupies the main part of the region of Sassari, while the urban agglomeration, with a population of about 275.000 inhabithants, is located in the south east.

Panorama of the central areas of Sassari as seen from West.


The abundance of water (400 springs and artesian wells) has made for much development of horticulture over the centuries.

History

Prehistory and ancient history

Prehistoric step Pyramid of Monte d'Accoddi.

Although Sassari was founded in the early Middle Ages, the surrounding area has been inhabited since the Neolithic age, and throughout ancient history, by the Nuragics and the Romans.
Many archaeological sites and ancient ruins are located inside or around the town, as the prehistoric step pyramid of Monte d'Accoddi, a large number of Nuraghes and Domus de Janas (Fairy Houses), the ruins of a Roman aqueduct, the ruins of a roman villa discovered under San Nicholas Cathedral, and a portion of the ancient road that connected the Latin colony of Turrys Lybissonis with Caralis.
Inside the boundaries of the municipality is also found a fossil site where an Oreopithecus bambolii, a prehistoric anthropomorphic primate, was discovered, dated at 8,5 millions years.

Middle Ages

The town was founded around the 9th-10th century AD by the inhabitants of the ancient Roman port of Turris Lybisonis (current Porto Torres), who sought refuge in the mainland to escape the Saracen attacks from the sea.

Sassari's Republic medieval statutes written in Sardinian language.

It developed from the merger of a number of separate villages, such as San Pietro di Silki, San Giacomo di Taniga, San Giovanni di Bosove. The oldest mention of a village called Tathari is in an 1113 document in the archive of the Monastery of St. Peter in Silki. Sassari was sacked by the Genoese in 1166. Immigration continued until, in the early 13th century, it was the most populous city in the Giudicato of Torres, and its last capital. After the assassination of the latter's last ruler (1274), Sassari became subject to the Republic of Pisa with a semi-independent status.

In 1284 the Pisans were defeated by the Genoese fleet at the Battle of Meloria, and the city was able to free itself: it became the first and only early independendant renaissance city-state of Sardinia, with statutes of its own, allied to Genoa; the Genoese were pleased to see it thus withdrawn from Pisan control. Its statutes of 1316 are remarkable for the leniency of the penalties imposed when compared with the penal laws of the Middle Ages.

From 1323 the Republic of Sassari was taken over by the Aragonese Empire, in whose hands it remained for much of the following centuries, though the population revolted at least three times. The revolts ceased when King Alfonso V of Aragon nominated the town as a Royal Burg, directly ruled by the King and free from feudal taxation. Further attempts made by the Genoa to conquer the city failed. In 1391 it was conquered by Brancaleone Doria and Marianus V of Arborea, of the indeoendent Sardinian Giudicato of Arborea, of which it became the capital. However, in 1420 it fell back into the hands of the Aragonese, replaced by the Spaniards in 1479 on the joinging of Aragonese and Spanish thrones.

During the period of Aragonese/Catalan and then Spanish domination the city was known as Sàsser in catalan language and Saçer in Spanish.

Renaissance

The Cathedral of St. Nicholas.

The city alternated years of crisis, featuring economic exploitation, the decrease of the maritime trade, made unsafe by the daily raids of Saracens pirates, political corruption of its rulers, the sacking of Sassari in 1527 by the French, and two plagues in 1528 and 1652, with periods of cultural and economic prosperity. The Jesuits founded the first Sardinian university in Sassari in 1562. In the same year the first printing press was introduced and the ideals of Renaissance humanism became more widely known. Several artists of the Mannerist and Flemish schools practiced their art in the city.

Modern history

After the end of the Spanish period following the European wars of the early 18th century, the brief period of Austrian rule (1708–1717) was succeeded by domination by the Piemontese, who then took over the Title of Kingdom of Sardinia (1720–1861). On 28 December 1795 an anti-feudal revolt broke out in the town, led by Giovanni Maria Angioy, a Sardinian politician and patriot, who fought against the house of Savoy. The city was occupied by troops at the time. The dynasty of the Piemontese King of Sardinia went on to the monarchs of Italy. Sassari, along with the rest of Italy, became part of the newly created Kingdom of Italy.

Giovanni Maria Angioy, the leader of Anti Savoy revolt enters in Sassari (1795)

At the end of 18th century the University was restored. In 1836, after six hundred years, the medieval walls were partially demolished, allowing the town to expand. New urban plans were developed, on the model of the capital of the new regime's, (Turin), with geometric streets and squares.

Sassari became an important industrial center. In the 19th century it was the second most important town in what was to become the future Italy for the production of leather, and in 1848 the Sassarese entrepreneur Giovanni Antonio Sanna gained control of the mine at Montevecchio, becoming the third richest man in the new Kingdom of Italia. The first railway was opened in 1872.

In 1877 the old Aragonese castle was demolished, and on the site the "Caserma La Marmora" was built, where the headquarters of "Brigata Sassari" is still located. Founded in 1915, it is the only Italian military unit consisting almost exclusively of Sardinian soldiers.

At the end of the 19th century new urban developments grew on Cappuccini Hill and to the south of the city, architecturally dominated by Eclecticism, Art Nouveau and Art Deco styles, which created a movement towards the hybrid experimentation of new local architectural styles, known as the Sassarese Liberty.

During the Fascist dictatorship the town had over fifty thousand inhabitants and new neighbourhoods were built, the most important of these being Monte Rosello and Porcellana, typical examples of Rationalist Architecture. On the other hand, the newspaper La Nuova Sardegna, which considered subversive, was closed down.

During the Second World War three Allied attempts to bomb the town failed: only the railway station was damaged, and there was only one casualty.

Today Sassari is the main cultural, administrative and historical centre of Northern Sardinia.

Culture

University

University of Sassari.

The University of Sassari is the oldest in Sardinia (founded by the Jesuits in 1562-1627), and has a high reputation, especially in Jurisprudence, Veterinary, Medicine and Agriculture. Its libraries contain a number of ancient documents, among them the Condaghes, Sardinia's first legal codes and the first documents written in the Sardinian language (11th century) and the famous Carta de Logu (the constitution issued by Marianus IV of Arborea and updated later by his daughter the Giudichessa Eleanor of Arborea) in the 14th century .

The University of Sassari gained first place in 2009 in the ranking for the best “medium-sized” Italian university, awarded by the Censis Research Institute.

Language

The sassarese compared to Corsican dialects

Sassarese (Sassaresu or Turritanu) is much closer to Corsican than it is to Sardinian, although this fact has caused some political controversy. It is a mixed language, its core being the Sardinian formerly spoken in the area, which was close to the Corsican of southern Corsica, with super-stata influence from Pisan (Pisano) and Ligurian (Genoan), due to the long late medieval contacts with the maritime republics of Pisa and Genoa, and Catalan and Spanish. A strong substrata current of Sardinian (Logudorese) influence can also be felt in its phonetics, syntax, and vocabulary.

Sassarese is spoken in Sassari and its immediate area by approximately 120,000 people out a total population of 175,000 inhabitants; it is also the language of the north-west of Sardinia, including Stintino, Sorso and Porto Torres; in the mid-northern areas of Sardinia, its Castellanesi dialects 'transit' into Gallurese, particularly in Castelsardo, Tergu and Sedini).

Main sights

The Catalan gothic style House of King Enzio in the medieval district of the town
  • Archeological site of Monte d'Accoddi: a unique prehistoric monument with a Step pyramid construction
  • The Pisan City Walls that in the 13th century surrounded the city with 36 towers (which at the moment only 6 remains), and the Aragonese Castle named Castello di Sassari, demolished in 1877, whose ruins, including some rooms, the basement, and part of a tower were rediscovered in 2008.
  • The church of St. Peter in Silki, built in the 12th century but renovated in the 17th century. Here were found the medieval codes known as Condaghe di san Pietro in Silki.
  • Corso Vittorio Emanuele is the main street of the medieval town, surrounded by interesting buildings of different ages, as several examples of Catalan-gothic (as the so-called House of Re Enzo), the baroque church of Sant' Andrea, built by Corsican community, the neoclassic Civic Theatre and Quesada's palace.
  • The Cathedral of St. Nicholas of Bari, built in the 13th century and enlarged in Catalan Gothic style from 1480; there is a monument to the Duca di Moriana inside. The façade, belonging to the Baroque Spanish colonial restorations of 1650–1723, has a rectangular portico surmounted by three niches housing statues of saints. The bell tower is in Romanesque style.
  • The church and monastery of Santa Maria di Bètlem (13th-19th century). The original façade and parts of monastery are in Lombard Romanesque style, some chapels in International Gothic, while the rest of building, include the big dome, was rebuilt in Baroque and Neoclassic style, by the Sardinian architect Antonio Cano in 1829-34.
  • The Church of the Most Blessed Trinity contains a beautiful picture by an unknown artist of the Quattrocento.
  • Palazzo D'Usini, most important example of civilian architecture of the Renaissance period in Sardinia (now housing the main Public Library, therefore open to visits from the public).
  • The Fountain of the Rosello, built in 1606 by Genoese craftsmen. It is made by two squared parts surmounted by two crossing arches supporting the statue of St. Gavino.
  • University Palace (17th-20th century), originally a Jesuit school.
  • The Ducal Palace (current Town Hall, 1775–1806), built for the Duke of the Asinara in the 18th century.
  • Piazza d'Italia (19th century) is the main square in Sassari. It is surrounded by interesting buildings such as the Neogothic "Palazzo Giordano" and the neoclassical "Palace of Sassari's Province", where the ancient royal apartments of the House of Savoy were once located.

Museums

National "G.A. Sanna" Museum
  • National Archaeological and Ethnographic "G.A. Sanna" Museum
  • National Pinacotheca "Mus'A"
  • Historical Museum of "Brigata Sassari"
  • Museum of Science and Technology (it is constituted by many collections located in several university faculties: mineralogical, botanic, Entomological, zoological, anatomical collection "Luigi Rolando", physics and agronomic collection)
  • Ethnographic Museum "Francesco Bande"
  • Contemporary Art Museum "Masedu"
  • Museum and Treasury of the Cathedral
  • Museum of History of Sassari
  • Museum of Sassari's Diocese
  • Museum of Candelieri
  • Mario Sironi art collection
  • Art gallery "Giuseppe Biasi"
  • Pavilion of Sardinian handicraft EXPO "I.S.O.L.A."
Piazza d' Italia (Square of Italy)

Festivals and Traditions

  • The Cavalcata Sarda (the Sardinian Cavalcade): it's the main laic folk event in Sardinia, the last Sunday of May thousands of people come from all over Sardinia to Sassari parade through the city in their local folk costumes accompanied by hundreds of the best examples of Sardinian horses.
  • The Faradda di li candareri (the Candle Holders): it's a devotional procession, in which enormous wooden candles are carried by members of the city guilds from the town centre to the church of Santa Maria of Betlem,in commemoration of the end of the plague in 1582, but probably it has got older origins come from a cultural tradition from Pisa that already in the second half of 13th century was practised in some parts of Sardinia.
  • Sardinia Film Festival was founded in 2006, with 500 films, short subjects, animated cartoons and documentaries in 2009, it has become the most prominent film festival in Sardinia.

Notable people

Sassaripzzaitalia.jpg

Notable people born here include the former presidents of the Italian Republic, Antonio Segni and Francesco Cossiga, and Enrico Berlinguer, secretary of the Italian Communist Party.

Sassari is also the birthplace of Domenico Alberto Azuni, a jurist expert in commercial law.

Personalities associated with Sassari

Notable Historical Personages

  • Salvatore Alepus, theologist and poet (Morilla - Valencia)
  • Edina Altara, artist
  • Giovanni Maria Angioy, politician
  • Efisio Arru
  • Domenico Alberto Azuni, jurist
  • Enrico Berlinguer, leader of Italian Communist Party
  • Mario Berlinguer, politician
  • Giuseppe Biasi, painter
  • Daniel Bovet, biochemist (nobel prize)
  • Italo Calvino, writer
  • Luigi Canepa, composer and orchestra conductor
  • Antonio Cano, architect
  • Giacomo Camilla, artist
  • Annunzio Cervi, poet
  • Francesco Cetti,
  • Fernando Clemente, architect
  • Francesco Cossiga, President of the Italian Republic
  • Enrico Costa, writer
  • Giovanni del Giglio (Sassari, 15th century – Sassari, 1554) painter AKA Maestro di Ozieri.
  • Giovanni Fara, historian and writer
  • Alessio Fontana, member of Imperial Chancellery of Charles V
  • Vico Mossa, architect
  • Costantino Nivola, artist
  • Antonio Pigliaru,
  • Luigi Rolando, anatomist
  • Roberto Ruffilli, politician
  • Giovanni Antonio Sanna, politician
  • Aligi Sassu, painter
  • Antonio Segni, President of the Italian Republic
  • Mario Sironi, painter of creator of the Novecento
  • Giovanni Spano, writer
  • Eugenio Tavolara, artist
  • Palmiro Togliatti, leader of Italian Communist Party
  • Efisio Tola, patriot
  • Pasquale Tola, politician and magistrate
  • Tomaso Vercellotti, inventor of piezosurgery
  • Michel Zanche, politician, he was named by Dante in the Divina Commedia... "With him is his cohort Michel Zanche of Logodoro, and their tongues never tire with constant chatter about Sardinia".

Contemporary personalities

  • Gavino Angius, leader of Democratici di Sinistra now leader of Partito Socialista
  • Gian Paolo Bazzoni, writer
  • Marco Bazzoni, actor
  • Bianca Berlinguer, director of TG3 RAI
  • Giovanni Berlinguer, one of the main members of Democratici di Sinistra
  • Luigi Berlinguer, Minister of Istruzione, and member of Consiglio Superiore della Magistratura
  • Sergio Berlinguer, politician
  • Elisabetta Canalis, actress and television host
  • Bruno Dettori, politician
  • Antonello Grimaldi, film director
  • Santi Licheri, TV personality, judge of Forum
  • Pier Francesco Loche, actor
  • Giovanni Maciocco, architect
  • Luigi Manconi, Former Leader of Federation of the Greens
  • Salvatore Mannuzzu, writer
  • Angelo Mundula, poet
  • Adolfo Orrù, painter
  • Arturo Parisi, Former minister of Difesa and member of Margherita
  • Pino & gli anticorpi, acting company
  • Gianluca Piredda, writer and screenwriter
  • Giuseppe Pisanu, Former Italian Minister of the Interior and now president of Antimafia Commission
  • Bianca Pitzorno, writer
  • Giovanni Puggioni, runner
  • Mario Segni, member of European parliament
  • Tazenda, ethno-pop-rock band
  • Tressardi, acting company

Demographics

Historical populations
Year Pop.  %±
1861 25,594
1871 32,315 26.3%
1881 34,540 6.9%
1901 37,746 9.3%
1911 43,028 14.0%
1921 43,792 1.8%
1931 51,283 17.1%
1936 54,926 7.1%
1951 69,571 26.7%
1961 89,311 28.4%
1971 106,261 19.0%
1981 118,631 11.6%
1991 122,339 3.1%
2001 120,729 −1.3%
2009 (Est.) 130,306 7.9%
Source: ISTAT 2001

In 2007, there were 128,611 people residing in Sassari, of whom 61,944 were male and 66,667 were female. The population is increased of 9,519 inhabitants in the last 7 years (2001–2008).

  • Birth rate = 8,2 births/1000 inhabitants;
  • Total fertility rate = 1,15 births/1000 inhabitants;
  • Mortality rate = 7,9 deaths/1000 inhabitants.

Migration

The town has increased its population considerably, in the last decades, due to domestic migrations, of thousands of Sardinians come from inland regions of the island. In 2008, 98,4% of population of town was Italian, 1,978 residents were foreign immigrants.

The main foreign nationalities residing in Sassari are :

Administration

Palace of the Duke of Asinara (City Hall)

The Municipal Council of Sassari is led by a left-wing majority, elected in May 2005. The mayor is Gianfranco Ganau, member of the Democratic Party.

Administrative subdivision

The Municipality of Sassari is subdivided into 6 Circoscrizioni (administrative districts).

Circoscrizioni Population Quarters included
1° Circoscrizione 21,070 Historical Centre, Bancali, Caniga, La Landrigga
2° Circoscrizione 30,822 Latte dolce, Li Punti, San Giovanni, Ottava, Sant'Orsola
3° Circoscrizione 46,247 Monte Rosello, Cappuccini, Luna e Sole, Lu Fangazzu
4° Circoscrizione 27,966 Carbonazzi, San Giuseppe, Porcellana, Rizzeddu
5° Circoscrizione 1,816 Tottubella, La Corte, Campanedda
6° Circoscrizione 1,284 Argentiera, Biancareddu, La Pedraia, Baratz, Canaglia, Palmadula, Villa Assunta

Economy

Banco di Sardegna's headquarter
the beach of Porto Palmas

The economy of town is, mainly, focused on services and advanced tertiary. It is the principle administrative centre of central and northern Sardinia. The main Sardinian banks (Banco di Sardegna and Banca di Sassari) have head office and presidency in the city.

Several research centers are located in town, as the University ones, the Center of Regional Weather Service (Meteo Sar.), the Regional Agency for Environmental Protection (ARPA), the Zooprophylaxis Institute of Sardinia, many labs of the National Research Center (CNR), as the Institute of Biometeorology (IBIMET), the Institute of Biomolecular Chemistry (ICB), the Institute of Ecosystem Studies (ISE), the Institute of sciences of food production (ISPA), the Institute for animal production system in mediterranean environment (ISPAAM).
Manufacturing system is based on construction, pharmaceutical, food, typographic industry, but, also, indirectly, on petrochemical and oil refineries, located in Porto Torres.

Tourism is concentrated, mainly, along the coasts. Platamona, Porto Ferro, Porto Palmas and Argentiera are the principal seaside turist spots of municipality.

Transportation

Metrotram Sirio - Terminal of line 1 in Railway Station Square

The nearest airport, Fertilia International Airport, is 25 km from the city.

The closest seaport is located at Porto Torres, 16 km from the town.

Urban and Suburban Public Transport is operated by 23 bus lines of Azienda Trasporti Pubblici (ATP) and by a light rail transit of Ferrovie della Sardegna (FdS).
Two different railway companies connect the town to the rest of island, Trenitalia links Sassari to Porto Torres, Oristano, Cagliari, Olbia, Golfo Aranci, the FdS reach Alghero, Sorso, Nulvi and Palau.

Sassari is linked to Porto Torres and Cagliari by freeway SS131, to Alghero by the freeway SS291. High-capacity traffic roads connect Sassari to Tempio Pausania (SS672) and Olbia (SS199).

Sports

Palasport Roberta Serradimigni
  • A.S.D. Torres Calcio football club, founded in 1903, playing in Eccellenza
  • Sassari Torres Calcio Femminile women's football club, playing in Serie A
  • Dinamo Basket Sassari, playing in Lega Basket Serie A
  • Yellow Team Sassari Baseball, playing in Serie C1
  • Sassari Baseball Softball Club, playing in serie C2
  • HC Tangram 1 Sassari women's team handball club, playing in Serie A1
  • A.S.D.Rugby Sassari, playing in Serie C

Consulates

Twin towns - sister cities

Sassari is twinned with:

  • Romania Timişoara, Romania, since 1990
  • Italy Gubbio, Italy, since 2002
  • Italy Viterbo, Italy, since 2006
  • Italy Nola, Italy, since 2006
  • Italy Palmi, Italy since 2006
  • Spain Barcelona, Spain, since 2010

See also

  • Sassarese language
  • Province of Sassari
  • University of Sassari
  • Sassari Mechanized Brigade

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed (1913). "Sassari". Catholic Encyclopedia. Robert Appleton Company.  [1]
Notes


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