Lercara Friddi
Lercara Friddi is a comune in the Metropolitan City of Palermo, which is in the Italian region of Sicily, located about southeast of Palermo.
Geography
Lercara Friddi rises almost at the foot of Colle Madore and its Sican archeological site, between the Landro valley and the valley of Fiumetorto and Platani. Archeological discoveries showed that this Colle and the valley have been inhabited since the 11th century BC, first inhabited by the Sican people. It is located on the Palermo – Agrigento route, at a height of 670 metres above sea level. Lercara Friddi was home to many sulfur mines. When they closed in the 1950s many of the miners immigrated to Belgium, to work in the coal mines. It borders Castronovo di Sicilia, Prizzi, Roccapalumba, and Vicari.History
It was founded in 1583, as part of the new cities established by the Spanish administration of King Philip II of Spain to repopulate the abandoned feudaries, and was granted a licentia populandi on September 22, 1595, though people had lived in the area continuously from circa 1400. It was granted to Baldassarre Gomez de Amezcua; who was married to Francesca Lercaro, daughter of Leonello and Elisabetta Ventimiglia, who had some marriage dowries in the feudary of Friddi, Friddigrandi, and Faverchi, dedicated to the production of wine and wheat. The descendants of Baldassarre Gomez de Amezcua and Francesca Lercaro were the Counts of Lercara Friddi until 1956.Leonello Lercaro was a Genoese entrepreneur of Armenian origin, who came to Sicily in 1570 in search of better luck, and thanks to whose resourcefulness the original city nucleus was created. The family was Catholic, of Greek rite, and this can be seen in Lercara with the icon of the Madonna of Constantinople, found by the twelve-year-old Oliva Baccarella in 1807. The graffiti effigy, bearing the date of 1734, came presumably from a Lercarese church that followed the rite of the Lercari. The church, was found outdoors nearby stream: the popular tradition passes on that event as miraculous, from which were the origins of the patronal feast and the church of Maria Santissima of Constantinople.
For a long time, the major urban areas of Lercara Friddi were mainly places of worship: after the church of St. Gregory of Armenia, built by Leonello Lercaro between 1573 and 1580 in the area of Via dei Martiri, there was the church of Our Lady of the Rosary, built by Baldassarre Gomez de Amezcua between 1595 and 1604 on Pucci Street, the church of St. Anne, built by Francesca Lercaro between 1605 and 1610 on the same street of the same name, and the church of San Gregorio Traumaturgo, initially built by Raffaella Lercaro de Amezcua between 1627 and 1640 and then rebuilt several times until the early 19th century, corresponding to the upper part of Giulio Sartorio Street. By 1651, Lercara Friddi had a population of 281 residents.
The initial development of the settlement suffered from the dangerous conditions imposed on the settlers, but it found impulsed in 1618 with the arrival of Francesco Scammacca Gravina, heir to the Lercaro barony, who in addition to residing in the nascent center favored improvements such as new roads, beverage works and additional churches. In 1708, the barony of Lercara was elevated to the rank of principality.
In the book About Noble Sicily, written in 1754 by Francesco Maria Emanuele Gaetani, Lercara delli Friddi turns out to be "Baronial land with a mere and mixed empire inhabited by 1536 souls, for which there are 483 houses six Churches."
On 24 June 1800, Lercara Friddi was visited by the King of Sicily Ferdinand I , along with his wife, Queen Maria Carolina of Austria. They were hosted by Don Stefano Petta, Archpriest of Lercara, along with Don Marcello Sartorio.
In 1801 the poet Giovanni Meli mentions Lercara Friddi, in a passage of his reflection of the current state of the Kingdom of Sicily about agriculture and farmers: "...Those few, who remain in the villages, attached to their little families, finding themselves weak, and ill-fed, or falling into rhapsodization which between weakness, and contraction takes away the use of their knees, and legs or they do not have the strength to withstand the aerial vicissitudes of autumn, or the rigors of winter, hence the frequent epidemics, which depopulate the villages, and the countryside; as we have seen in this year that in Alcara alone of the colds between the space of a few months one thousand were missing, half dead and half fled for misery, and debts. And oh the great loss, which is this to the state! "
With the Sicilian Constitution of 1812 and the repeal of the feudality, Lercara Friddi was also given the title of "Free University."
It was the discovery of sulfur that changed the fortunes of the town, making it an important mining center, the only one in the province of Palermo, for the extraction and processing of Sicilian sulfur, spurring its growth from 1828. The development led to an unprecedented population increase.
In 1896, the Lercara Friddi Cemetery was moved from the main town square, to the outskirts of the city. Families who had relatives buried in the old cemetery had the opportunity to move their relatives to the new cemetery, but at the families cost. Only a few families paid. The families that didn't pay had their relatives moved for free, but they had no tombstone, only a small stone marker.
However, after the Unity of Italy the conditions of much of the population of the Mezzogiorno, still remained largely unsatisfactory. The Southern question saw the upsurge of brigandage, which in 1863 and 1876 also involved two members of the Rose-Gardners, who were kidnapped and freed upon payment of a ransom. In 1893, the year of the beginning of the crisis in the sulfur industry, several Lercarean miners complained of serious wage delays. And during the Sicilian Fasci, Lercara paid a toll of eleven victims in the Christmas Day protest.
The slow decline of the sulfur economy was associated with dramatic labor conditions, particularly child and female labor, denounced by Alfonso Giordano and Jessie White-Mario. Over half a century later, they were echoed by Carlo Levi in 1951 and the journalist and poet Mario Farinella.
Historical sites and monuments
Religious sites
- Church of Maria Santissima della Neve , Renaissance style
- Church of San Matteo , Baroque style
- Church of San Antonio di Padova , Neo-Gothic style
- Church of San Giuseppe , built in 1756 by the Princess Raffaella Scammacca Buglio with a Neo-Gothic facade and Baroque interior
- Church of Saint Rosalia
- Church of Maria Santissima dell'Aiuto
- Church of Saint Francis of Saverio
- Church of Maria Santissima di Costantinopoli
- Parish church of Saint Alfonso Maria of Liguria
- Chapel of the Institute of the Capuchin Nuns
- Altar of the Holy Cross
Civil buildings
Lercara is also home to the War Memorial, built in 1922 by sculptor Cosmo Sorgi, and several public monuments that, among others, celebrate the memory of distinguished local personalities.
Notable civil or historical buildings are:
- Casa di Calcedonio Catalano
- Palazzo Miceli
- Palazzo Scammacca
- Palazzo Sartorio
- Palazzo Romano
- Palazzo Rotolo , Baroque style
- Casa Favarò
- Palazzo Favarò
- Palazzo Riso-Ferraro
- Palazzo Palagonia
- Villa Lisetta
- Villa Rose-Gardner
Archeological sites
The archaeological finds started in 1992 when Lercarese Antonino Caruso handed over to the municipality a group of valuable finds, recovered accidentally, from Colle Madore. On this high ground near the town was "the temple of Aphrodite/tomb of Minos," according to the thesis of Danilo Caruso, A scholar who also attributed anonymous canvases, kept at the Cathedral and in San Matteo, to Zoppo di Gangi and the 19th-century painter Giuseppe Carta.
Coat of arms
The coat of arms of the municipality is blazoned with four bands of red and three bands of gold; the shield timbered by a prince's crown.Culture
The Municipal Library "Giuseppe Mavaro" houses "Costume in the Pup," by Vito Giangrasso, and the archaeological museum. The Lercarese 'cassa rurale' was founded by Giusto Favarò and Archpriest Giuseppe Marino.Demographic Evolution
The population of Lercara Friddi from 1651 to 2025.Colors=
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Mayors of Lercara Friddi
Below is a list of Mayors of Lercara Friddi from 1980 onwards:- Mayor Giuseppe Pasquale Ferrara
- Mayor Salvatore Cangialosi, Christian Democracy.
- Mayor Rosario Lo Bue, Christian Democracy.
- Francesco Gioacchino Giacovelli.
- Mayor Biagio Antonio Favarò, Christian Democracy.
- Mayor Michelangelo Castronovo, Italian Socialist Party.
- Commissioner Giovanbattista Leone.
- Mayor Biagio Antonio Favarò.
- Commissioner Pietro Tramuto.
- Mayor Giuseppe Pasquale Ferrara.
- Mayor Gaetano Licata.
- Mayor Giuseppe Pasquale Ferrara.
- Mayor Luciano Marino.
Archpriests
17th century
- Giuseppe Marchese
- Giovanni Facella
- Leonardo Melli
18th century
- Pietro d'Amico
- Giuseppe Lombardo
- Gioacchino Perollo
- Stefano Lorenzo Petta
19th century
- Francesco Ferrara
- Gaspare Giglio
- Mario Fiorentino
- Giacomo Paci
20th century
- Giuseppe Marino
- Giuseppe Giusto Favarò
- Gioacchino Garofalo
- Filippo Agliarloro
- Giuseppe Giordano
- Giuseppe Germanà
- Francesco Castelluzzo
- Rosario Catalano
- Mario Cassata
21st Century
- Massimo Pernice
Notable people
- Giusto Favarò, helped establish the Lercarese Cassa Rurale.
- Andrea Finocchiaro Aprile, politician
- Mauro Picone, mathematician
- Anthony Martin Sinatra, professional boxer and father of singer, Frank Sinatra
- Attilio Catalano, the father of Guy Williams
- Lucky Luciano, crime boss
- Jack La Rue, Italian-American Actor
- Biagio Favarò, Commander of the Order of Malta
- Pietro Scaglione, magistrate
- Calcedonio Favarò, helped establish the CARITAS Branch of Lercara along with his wife, Concetta Rolandi
- Nicolò Nicolosi, football player and manager
- Concetta Rolandi, first female doctor of Lercara Friddi, helped establish the Lercara Friddi CARITAS Branch, along with her husband, Calcedonio Favarò
- Frédéric François, singer-composer
- Salvatore Vicari, Italian footballer