Balsorano

Balsorano
Comune
Comune di Balsorano

Coat of arms
Balsorano

Location of Balsorano in Italy

Coordinates: 41°48′39″N 13°33′39″E / 41.81083°N 13.56083°E / 41.81083; 13.56083
Country Italy
Region Abruzzo
Province / Metropolitan city L'Aquila (AQ)
Frazioni Balsorano vecchio, Case Marconi, Collecastagno, Collepiano, Fosse, La Selva, Grottella, Pagliare, Pelagalli, Ridotti, Tre Ponti
Government
  Mayor Carica Vacante
Area
  Total 57.98 km2 (22.39 sq mi)
Elevation 340 m (1,120 ft)
Population (31 December 2013)[1]
  Total 3,646
  Density 63/km2 (160/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Balsoranesi
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 67052
Dialing code 0863
Patron saint St. George Martyr
Saint day April 23
Website Official website

Balsorano is a comune (municipality) and town in the province of L'Aquila in the Abruzzo region of Italy.

History

Balsorano (once known as Vallis Soranae), given the frequent Benedictine presence in the area. In the "Catalogue of the Barons", the twelfth century, Balsorano is referred to as "fief of four soldiers", subject to the Count Roger of Albe. From the thirteenth to the fifteenth century, then, the story of Balsorano is identical with that of the county of Albe, which however comes off after the defeat of Ruggiero in 1463, being Balsorano (along with Celano) passed in feud to Antonio Piccolomini.

The last baron (Tiberius Piccolomini Head) loses the feud in 1806 and its assets are acquired by the French Charles Lefebvre, the founder of the mechanical industry in the Liri Valley and paper mills of the Fibreno, around 1850.

Commune created in 1809, Balsorano also includes the villages of Rendinara, San Giovanni Valle Roveto and Roccavivi; but the first, in 1816, it passes under Civita d'Antino (and later under Morino) and the other two under the administration of San Vincenzo Valle Roveto.

II 5 October 1860 stop in Balsorano Colonel Bourbon De la Grange, and in 1861 stationed there permanently Piedmontese soldiers on horseback, engaged in the fight against banditry. The job is to last at least until 1868, when the same general Pallavicini is forced to stop just in Balsorano. The country is located in the lower Roveto valley, beyond the Fucino basin, can be considered an "authentic village" that still preserves important medieval elements although there are other architectural styles. The town bases its economy on agriculture but lately also makes lever on tourism thanks to the presence of the beautiful Castello Piccolomini (in which, especially in the sixties and seventies, were shot many films). The name derives from the Latin Vallis Balsorano Soranae or valley near Sora. For a long time the country has been a defensive fortress and then passed under the domination of various families including the Piccolomini.

In contemporary age two were the most important events: the "Revolution of Balsorano" of 1910, popular revolt against the harassment suffered by the powerful inhabitants of the old village, and the Avezzano earthquake of 1915. The earthquake caused details here damage and numerous casualties. The town was almost completely destroyed and rebuilt further downstream, as it was for many centers of Roveto Valley and Marsica.

On 1 May 1944 the brothers, Mario and Bruno Durante, two young partisans, were captured in Meta di Civitella Roveto by the Nazi SS and made to disappear into thin air. They refused to disclose the existence of their brother, Faustino, too partisan and the help that the population of the village offered against Allied prisoners escaped from the concentration camps of Abruzzo. They were killed after a month of torture in Tagliacozzo. Their grave and their bodies were never found. Both were awarded the gold medal for civil merit

Points of interest

Now it is an hotel and it has been used as location for several Italian movies.[2]


References

  1. Population data from Istat
  2. Abruzzo, Molise. Touring Club Italiano. 1979. p. 229. ISBN 88-365-0017-X.


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