Misilmeri: A Pearl
in the Eleutero Valley
Giovanni
Montanti, a Sicilian native who has made documentary
videos for 43 other Sicilian towns, has completed the video
for Misilmeri! It contains footage of the most important buildings,
churches, streets, archaeological sites, historic centers,
the cemetery, and the procession of the saints. It is now
available and can be shipped immediately!
Learn
more about Misilmeri: A Pearl in the Eleutero Valley
CLICK HERE
to order your copy of Misilmeri: A Pearl in the Eleutero Valley,
by Giovanni Montanti.
Giovanni has a web site with a listing of the other towns
he has done videos for. For more information, please visit
www.sicilyvideo.it.
versione
italiana
Here are a few links for Misilmeri based websites...enjoy!
Comune
di Misilmeri-The home page for the town of Misilmeri.
The most interesting parts of this site for those of us in
America would be the links on the bottom left hand side under
"Chiavi della città". See the Galleria fotografica,
siti web misilmeresi, and cultura e storia for great links,
pictures and more.
La
Chiesa Madre online-The website for the "Mother Church",
Parrocchia San Giovanni Battista. A great website to visit.
It has pictures and a history of the church back to 1553.
La
Fontana Nuova-A great picture of the fountain in the center
of the town, from 1910.
STREET
MAP OF MISILMERI-I have scanned an old street map of Misilmeri
that was given to me when I went to Misilmeri. I do not know
what year the map was drawn. You can click on the Section
Links to see sections of the map enlarged so that you can
look for the streets your ancestors lived on! Have fun!
See the Population
of Misilmeri since the year 999!
Transportation
in Sicily: Angelo Muscara lives in Misilmeri and has a
transportation company based in Palermo. They can help you
visit the places you want to go!
COMING SOON: More information about Misilmeri will be added
regularly, as time allows me to translate interesting information
from La Storia di Misilmeri, by Mons. Francesco Romano. The
next items will be a complete street listing to go along with
the street map above, and a complete listing of all the notaries
who worked in Misilmeri.
**As Misilmeri is quite a small town in Sicily, it is a bit
difficult to find information about the town itself. The information
below is translated to the best of my ability from the
Comune di Misilmeri homepage (see Cenni Storici). Please
note that, as I do not speak or read fluent Italian, there
may be some discrepancies.
The
Comune di Misilmeri is in the Province of Palermo, about 15
km southeast of the city of Palermo. It is inhabited by almost
24,000 people and sits in the mid-valley of the River Eleuterio
on the southern slopes of Montagna Grande at about 129 meters
above sea level. It became a Comune in the year 1812 as part
of the abolition of feudal policies. Before this, it was a
dukedom under the Bonanno family, who were Catholic princes.
It seems that today's Misilmeri is the site where there once
was the ancient Cidonia, a stronghold that refugee Cretans
had to construct in the 4th century a.d. after having been
turned out from their cities of origin, Eleutera and Cidonia,
on the isle of Crete, a part of Greece. The origin of the
area, as first built, must be attributed to the Arabs, because
of the remains of the ruins of the castle on the hilltop and
because of historical information. Still many names for the
village are handed down, many comprised of a similar denomination
of Misilmeri, such as ancient Mùsuluméni. The
different names will probably remain a controversy, as some
people derive the name from "Menzil el Amir", which
means village of the Emir, while others derive it from "Masel
Amer" which means a flourishing place bathed in water.
Misilmeri was a baronial and ducal center with concessions
and privileges from the 1200's and the gentlemen belonged
to the noblest of Sicilian families, such as the Caitagirone,
the Ajutamicristo, the Chiaramonte and the Moncada, the Bosco
and the Bonanno. Someone thinks that among the first possessors
of the castle there was even a Giorgio Antioscheno, Admiral
and Great Advisor of Ruggero.
A lot of it's historical importance is due to the fact that
in this area took place famous battles between the Norman,
Ruggero, and the Arabs, where finally the Arabs were defeated
in the year 1068. These battles are legacy to the Italian
Renaissance and have always been the avante-guarde of the
revolutionary movements of 1848 and 1860, along with the death
of Francisco Ventimiglia, one of the 13 victims of April 1860,
in Palermo and the famed battlefield of Gibilrossa that, under
General La Masa, smoothed the way to Palermo for Garibaldi.
The coat of arms of the Comune di Misilmeri portray an Arabic
tower and a flying dove, in memory of the battle and the fact
that later on, in continuation of the battle, some Normans
who had doves in their possession were found by the Arabs
in Arab territory. After soaking the doves in the blood of
the Normans, they were sent, flying, back to Palermo to return
the sad news of the Norman deaths.
Misilmeri
is positioned on the slopes of hills, and also standing here
is the "Rocca di Ciavole" or "Fortress of Ciavole".
According to Villalonga, these are the ruins of an Arab-Norman
castle. This castle overlooking Misilmeri was constructed
in the beginning by the Normans who transformed an existing
Arab tower into an entire fortress. In 1520, it was described
as a considerable fortress but later on it was embellished
by the Chiaramonte family and Guglielomo Ajutamiscrito at
the hands of the famous master Matteo Carnalivari. Not far
from the homes of Misilmeri begins the coast of the Eleutero
river, which has been navigable to the river's end south of
Marineo at least since the year 1540, having been recorded
in the maps of the distinguished and famous geographer Tolomeo.
The valley of the River Eleutro is much noted for its antiquity,
because it contains the famous fortress of Sa 'd, later on
commonly called "castello di Bassano" or "Bassano
Castle". Other noted antiquities include the Porcara
with the remains eliminated and the famous Cannita, where
between 1600-1700 two Greek limestone coffins were discovered
and can still be admired today in the archaeological Museum
of Palermo.
The
patron Saint of Misilmeri is Santo Giusto (Saint Justin),
a martyr from Cagliaritano, whose body is conserved in the
chapel of the Madrice, within a silver urn which was donated
to the citizenship of Misilmeri by the Dutchess Donna Tommasa
Bosco et Sandoval, of which her son was the prince, Duke Giuseppe
del Bosco-Sandoval, from May 17, 1671.
Misilmeri is a mostly agricultural village, rich with water,
and is greatly fertile and productive, with varied and intensive
crops and with profuse vegetation. The most popular agricultural
products are grapes, olives, prickly pears, lotus, and citrus
fruit. Another characteristic of Misilmeri is the wood handicraft.
In the fields of history and literature, the fame of Misilmeri
helps to form some of the most beautiful parts of Italian
history. One of the first botanical gardens of Europe was
in Misilmeri, thought up by Duke Giuseppe del Bosco-Sandoval,
and carried out by the distinguished Botanist Padre Francesco
Cupani, in 1692. It is positioned next to the famous zoological
garden, with access to the current day Chiasso Verde (which
translates as Green Uproar!). The main public square of the
village has in its midst the headquarters of the Governo Provvisorio
di Sicilia, or Temporary Governor of Sicily, established in
May 1860 by Garibaldi. Toward the end of the 1700's, the first
boarding school for the Sicilian nobility, il Real Convitto
Ferdinando, was located in this square for a period of about
40 years.
As for popular imagination and according to many Arabic travelers
of other times, buried here in Misilmeri is the famous Galeno,
distinguished doctor of philosophy and medicine. The philosopher
Cosmo Guastella, the poet Filippo Guastella, among the first
to translate the Divine Comedy of Dante into Sicilian, and
the venerable Mother Maria Antonia La Lia, founder of the
Domenican Ordor of San Sisto Vecchio in Rome were all from
this area. Also from this area, sculptor Gian Battista Portanova,
noteworthy in America, where for a great part of his life
he resided and Paternostro, the first to display the tricolor
flag in the public square Fieravecchia in Palermo, and in
her native village she also took part in the encoding of the
civil laws in Japan. [I am not sure if I translated this correctly!]
Among the works of art that can be admired in Misilmeri are
the Monumental Fountain in the Comitato Square, the work of
Benedetto Civiletti and his school; the Crucifixion, a bass
relief in alabaster placed in the Chiesa delle Anime Sante
or Church of the Saint Spirits, work commonly attributed to
the Gagini and it's school; l'Immacolata, The Immaculate One,
painted on burlap and placed above the great altar of the
Madrice, a work of Vito D'Anna; la Fontana Nuova, the New
Fountain, a 17th century work adorning the Piazza Cosmo Guastella,
or Cosmo Guastella Square; il Campo di Gibilrossa, the Field
of Gibilrossa, a work by G.B. Portanova, traced in plaster
and displayed in the former consiliare room of the Comune
offices, which today is the Mayor's office; the plaster of
the Madrice is all executed from Ferrajolo and the school
of Giacomo Serpotta.
Insufficient information is known about the population in
these long ago times. The census of Emperor Carl V, in 1548,
places Misilmeri with 40 lineages, referring to the first
person of each family. In the census of 1595, there were 463
inhabitants. In 1650, Misilmeri contained 1077 inhabitants
with 240 houses and in 1713 it already had 2096 inhabitants
and 531 houses. In 1861 it reached 7460 inhabitants.
For an interesting history of all of Sicily, check out the
Catholic
Encyclopedia.
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