PATTI |
A few years before his death on 22 June 1101, the Grand Count and Apostolic Legate Roger I de Hauteville founded a Benedictine convent on the hill where Cathedral of Patti now stands. |
It was 1094 and that foundation marked the official date of the birth of the Tyrrhenian town: around the convent and the Norman abbey, there rapidly began to develop a rural village, the original nucleos of the modern town. |
Subsequentially, the Grand Count's son, King Roger II, made it the seat of a bishopric and conferred on it the rank of a royal town, and had a Church built there to receive the mortal remains of his mother, Queen Adelaide, who died in Patti 1118. |
After beeing sacked by Frederick II, who thus decided to punished it for
its fidelity to the Angeovians, Patti was rebuilt and endoved with strong defensive walls,
and then became one of the 52 towns forming the royal estate in Sicily. |
During the building of the motorway at Patti Marina a remains of a Roman
Villa came to light. |
Sicily | Tindari | Santuario | Patti | Itinerary | Italian version |