|
>>> Scopello
| Castellammare
del Golfo |
|
 |
Scopello
is perhaps the more evocative and colorful place of the entire gulf
of Castellammare. It is a small village risen at the end of the 18th
century around the "baglio", on a previous arab country
house. In the low-lying wonderful cove limited by the stacks and protected
by old towers, there is the "tonnara" (thunny-fishing structure),
known sine a long time ago (it is mentioned in documents of the year
1200); it has worked until few years ago, together with the"baglio",
the buildings and the warehouses. |
| Scopello |
 |
| Riserva
dello Lo Zingaro |
|
| Feste
e Tradizioni |
|
| La
Spiaggetta |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| You can reach it from
Castellammare driving through the state street 187 in the direction
of Trapani, deviating at Km 32.4, passing the bay of Guidaloca on
which there is a 16th century cylindrical tower. The name of Scopello
probably derives from the Greek "scopelos" (rock), from
the Latin "scopellum" (rock) and from the arab "iscubul
iactus" (high rock). It has been inhabited since the prehistoric
period (finds discovered in the caves of the inland document the human
presence, starting from the palaeolithic period), the zone has been
known since ancient times because of the abundance of tunnys, which
were fished in its sea, so much that the Greeks called it "Cetaria",
that means "earth of the tunnys". |
| The Arabs founded there a country
house, which was inhabited by fishermen and shepherds and, in 1235,
Frederic II the Swabian, after having annexed it with all the feud
to the city Mounte San Giuliano, granted the property to a group of
settlers of Piacenza, who soon left because of the continuous piratic
incursions. In those centuries, in fact, the pirates who infested
the low Mediterranean sea, used the bay of Scopello as a base for
their raids: mooring the ships behind the stacks, they were practically
invisible from the open sea. |
| The towers give to the landscape a
mystery halo and a fascinating atmosphere, which mixes together nature
and history. They go back to different ages and they were part of
a system of defense and communication distributed along all the perimeter
of the Sicily: communicating among themselves through the fire, by
night and with the smoke during the day, all the island could be informed
in very little time of every military new. |
| The oldest, probably built up by the
Arabs to protect the "tonnara", is the one that rises on
the stack that was once connected to the mainland, which could be
approached through a bridge or probably a scale that was carved in
the rock itself The Doria tower, from the name of the Spanish nobleman
who let it build on the terrace that faces the bay, goes back to the
XVII century. Another one, the Bennistra tower, is the one built in
the XV century on the top of a mount in the south of the "baglio"
and that dominates from its exceptional point of observation the entire
gulf of Castellammare. |
| |
| |
| il
testo è stato redatto da Giuseppe Calandrino |
| |
|
|
|