*** Welcome to piglix ***

Orta Nova

Orta Nova
Comune
Comune di Orta Nova
Orta Nova is located in Italy
Orta Nova
Orta Nova
Location of Orta Nova in Italy
Coordinates: 41°19′51″N 15°42′41″E / 41.33083°N 15.71139°E / 41.33083; 15.71139Coordinates: 41°19′51″N 15°42′41″E / 41.33083°N 15.71139°E / 41.33083; 15.71139
Country Italy
Region Apulia
Province / Metropolitan city Foggia (FG)
Government
 • Mayor Gerardo Tarantino
Area
 • Total 103 km2 (40 sq mi)
Elevation 70 m (230 ft)
Population (31 July 2015)
 • Total 17,793
 • Density 170/km2 (450/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Ortesi
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 71045
Dialing code 0885
Patron saint St. Anthony of Padua
Saint day June 13
Website Official website

Orta Nova is a town and comune about 25.4 kilometres (15.8 mi) from Foggia, in the region of Apulia, in southern Italy. It stretches to the southern part of the Tavoliere (Foggia's plain) on the right bank of the River Carapelle.

The origins of the name "Orta" are rather uncertain, as it the word may indicate: "crooked-born", from the Latin ortus, or "garden" from the Latin word hortus, or also simply "East".

The Romans built a courier post in the area, previously a territory of the Daunians.

In the early Middle Ages a hamlet, whose name is mentioned in a document dating back to 1184, was built on the ruins of the Roman post. This hamlet came under the control of the Benedictine abbey of Venosa.

Under the Italo-Norman rule the Palace of Orta had its Concergius—a knight noted for his war capabilities—charged with guarding a castle or palace. In 1269 Pietro Galesio became Contergius, followed Raolino Normando followed. With the arrival of Henry VI of Hohenstaufen, Orta and its hamlet were part of a territorial defending plan as some documents attest.

Instead of the hamlet, a castrum was built under Hanry's son, Frederick II, a sort of little country villa used for recreation. Here he had a castle built where he could hunt in the wood in its neighbourhood.

In 1271, after the Angevine conquest of southern Italy, renovations were started by a royal "carpentier", Jean de Toul. In 1282 the castle of Orta, together with other five in the area, is attested to be directly managed by the royal court.

From the 14th century until the Aragonese conquest a darken epoch follows, in which the first conflicts started with the local pasture of the Teutonic Knights and continued having bad harvest and epidemic dating back to 1348, when the local province — also called "Capitanata" or "Daunia" — was struck by the Black Death that reduced the number of inhabitants by 35%.

The Fiefdom of Orta was purchased by the Jesuits of the Roman College in 1611; they also purchased the fiefdom of Stornara, the property of Ordona and the feudal farms of Stornara and Carapelle. The Jesuits were expelled from the Kingdom of Naples in 1767 with the seizure of the lands of Orta Nova and the close territories of Ordona (Herdoniae), Stornara, Stornarella and Carapelle; they were switched by the Royal Household, whence the name of "5 Royal Lands" (the 5 Reali Siti) or five agricultural colonies.


...
Wikipedia

...