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Modica

Modica
Comune
Comune di Modica
Modica view.jpg
Coat of arms of Modica
Coat of arms
Modica is located in Italy
Modica
Modica
Location of Modica in Italy
Coordinates: 36°51′N 14°46′E / 36.850°N 14.767°E / 36.850; 14.767
Country Italy
Region Sicily
Province / Metropolitan city Ragusa (RG)
Frazioni Frigintini, Marina di Modica
Government
 • Mayor Ignazio Abbate
Area
 • Total 290.77 km2 (112.27 sq mi)
Elevation 296 m (971 ft)
Population (31 May 2009)
 • Total 54,581
 • Density 190/km2 (490/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Modicani
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 97015
Dialing code 0932
Patron saint St. George
Saint day April 23
Website Official website
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Late Baroque Towns of the Val di Noto (South-Eastern Sicily)
Name as inscribed on the World Heritage List
Location Italy
Type Cultural
Criteria i, ii, iv, v
Reference 398
UNESCO region Europe and North America
Inscription history
Inscription 2002 (20th Session)

Modica [mɔˈdika] (Sicilian: Muòrica, Greek: Μότουκα, Motouka, Latin: Mutyca or Motyca) is a city and comune in the Province of Ragusa, Sicily, southern Italy. The city is situated in the Hyblaean Mountains. Its architecture has been recognised as providing outstanding testimony to the exuberant genius and final flowering of Baroque art in Europe and, along with other towns in the Val di Noto, is part of UNESCO Heritage Sites in Italy.

According to Thucydides, the city was founded in 1360 BC or 1031 BC and was inhabited by the Sicels in the 7th century BC. It was probably a dependency of Syracuse. Modica was occupied by the Romans after the battle of the Egadi islands against the Carthaginians in the Punic Wars 241 BC, together with Syracuse and all of Sicily. Modica became one of the thirty-five decuman ("spontaneously submitted") cities of the island and was oppressed by the praetor Verres. It became an independent municipium, and apparently a place of some consequence. The city is also mentioned among the inland towns of the island both by Pliny and Ptolemy; and though its name is not found in the Itineraries, it is again mentioned by the Geographer of Ravenna.Silius Italicus also includes it in his list of Sicilian cities, and immediately associates it with Netum (now Noto Antico), with which it was clearly in the same neighborhood. The southeast of Sicily and Modica (according to the German historian L. Hertling) was rapidly Christianized, as the diocese of Syracuse boasts an apostolic foundation by St. Paul in 61 AD. In 535, the Byzantine general Belisarius expelled the Ostrogoths and established for Justinian I the government of the East-Roman Empire (also known as the Byzantine Empire) and the already Greek-speaking population fixed their culture until the Latinization of the Normans in the 11th century.


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