Cerchio Explained

Cerchio
Official Name:Comune di Cerchio
Coordinates:42.0619°N 13.6025°W
Province: (AQ)
Mayor:Gianfranco Tedeschi
Area Total Km2:20.12
Population Footnotes:[1]
Population Total:1634
Population As Of:31 July 2015
Population Demonym:Cerchiesi
Elevation M:834
Day:29 June
Postal Code:67044
Area Code:0863

Cerchio (Abruzzese: Neapolitan: Circhië) is a comune and town in the province of L'Aquila in the Abruzzo region of southern Italy.

Geography

The village is situated on the lower slopes of Mt. Sirente, overlooking the Fucino plain. Present population is 1645 (2013). Patron saints of the town are S. Giovanni and S. Paolo (John and Paul).

History

Local legend says that the town arose from a small group of houses constructed around a theater (circo) set up by the Romans to celebrate the inauguration of Emperor Claudius, who drained the ancient Fucine lake. The Church of S. Bartolomeo is mentioned in a papal bull of 1300. During the medieval period the village was held by the Colonna and Piccolomini families of Rome, who granted it to Camilla Peretti in 1591, along with the County of Celano and the Barony of Pescina. Over the centuries the Fucino plain was resubmerged, until it was drained in the mid-nineteenth century by Alessandro Torlonia, 2nd Prince di Civitella-Cesi. Families from Cerchio then farmed the rich soils of the lake bed, working as tenant farmers, sharecroppers and day-laborers under the Torlonia Administration. The town was badly damaged by the earthquake of 1915.

See also

Notes and References

  1. All demographics and other statistics: Italian statistical institute Istat.