Formia Explained

Formia
Official Name:Comune di Formia
Coordinates:41.2667°N 50°W
Region:Lazio
Province:Latina (LT)
Area Total Km2:73
Population Total:37244
Population As Of:31 July 2021
Saint:St. Erasmus and St. John
Day:June 2 and June 24

Formia (ancient Formiae) is a city and comune in the province of Latina, on the Mediterranean, Italy. It is located halfway between Rome and Naples, and lies on the Roman-era Appian Way.

Mythology

According to the mythology the city was founded by Lamus, son of Poseidon, who was the king of the Laestrygones.[1]

History

Formiae was founded by the Italic population of the Aurunci.[2] It was called Formiae (derived from Hormia or Ormiai, after its excellent landing) by ancient authors.

It appeared for the first time in history in 338 BC when, after the Latin Wars, it received the Roman status of Civitas sine suffragio as it remained neutral, together with the city of Fondi.[3] Throughout antiquity the city of Caieta was also part of the Formian territory.[4]

It became a renowned resort during the Republican era for rich Romans to build elaborate villas and Horace called it "the city of the Mamurrae"[5] as the rich and noble equestrian family of Mamurra had stong interests there, including the villa-estate nearby at Gianola, which can still be seen. The impressive remains of Roman villas still stretch along the coast from the fishponds in the Nuovo Porto to Gaeta.

Cicero had a villa there.[6] He was assassinated on the Appian Way just outside the town in 43 BC[7] and his monumental tomb can also still be seen. The villa attributed to Cicero, now in the Villa Rubino, includes an elaborate nymphaeum and rooms decorated with frescoes and stucco. The hotel Villa Irlanda[8] contains a cryptoporticus with stucco of the monumental villa of Lucius Marcius Philippus (consul 56 BC), stepfather of Augustus.[9] Villa Caracciolo has a large court surrounded by rooms. Many marble sculptures have been removed from these villas, the majority of which are in the Museo Nazionale in Naples, notably a fine pair of Nereids riding on sea monsters.[10]

Remains of an amphitheatre and theatre can be seen. The enormous underground cistern dug 15 metres below ground was probably the biggest Roman urban cistern in the world until the Piscina Mirabilis was built at the end of the 1st c. BC.[11]

Sextus Julius Frontinus (40 – 104 AD), “Curator Aquarum” of all the aqueducts of Rome, had a villa in Formiae in which Aelianus met the emperor Nerva.[12]

The city was the site of St Erasmus's martyrdom around 303 AD, during the persecutions of Diocletian. St Erasmus later also became known as Saint Elmo, the patron saint of sailors. Paulinus of Nola and Therasia stopped at Formiae on their journey back to Nola after visiting Rome at Easter 408. There they read Augustine's letter 95 addressed to them.[13]

After the fall of the Western Roman Empire the city was sacked by "barbarians" and the population moved to two distinct burghs on the nearby hill, which were under the rule of Gaeta. Charles II of Anjou built a fortress in the maritime burgh, Mola di Gaeta. The other burgh was known as Castellone, from the castle erected there in the mid-14th century by Onorato I Caetani, count of Fondi.

The two villages were united again in 1863 under the name of Formia. The reunited city was badly damaged in 1943–44 in bombing operations and the Battle of Anzio.[14]

Geography

Formia lies on the Tyrrhenian Sea, in southern Lazio, close to the town of Gaeta and next to the borders of Campania region.

The municipality borders with Esperia (FR), Gaeta, Itri, Minturno and Spigno Saturnia. It includes the hamlets (frazioni) of Castellonorato, Gianola-Santo Janni, Marànola, Penitro and Trivio.

Main sights

The most famous monument of Formia is the mausoleum traditionally identified with the Tomb of Cicero: it is a 24adj=midNaNadj=mid tower on the old Appian Way, enclosed in a large 83by funerary precinct.

Other sights include:

Sport

Formia is the seat of the National Athletics School of the Italian National Olympic Committee, founded in 1955. Athletes such as Pietro Mennea and Giuseppe Gibilisco trained here. Formia is also a hub for cycling events of various types; road cycling and mountain biking All of which gives access to Parks in Gaeta and Formia; Parco Monte Orlando, Parco Regionale Riviera di Ulisse, Parco Naturale dei Monti Aurunci, and Tours to Rome via the Old Highway. Formia also has great water sports to enjoy; windsurfing and sailing.

Transportation

Formia itself is one of the most important transport hubs of southern Lazio. The Rome–Formia–Naples railway passes through Formia-Gaeta railway station, from which visitors and residents may travel by bus to Gaeta, Minturno, Spigno and other local towns.

Ferries and hydrofoils connect Formia to Ponza, Ischia and Ventotene.

Twin towns - sister cities

Formia is twinned with:[20]

People

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0062%3Aalphabetic+letter%3DL%3Aentry+group%3D2%3Aentry%3Dlamus-harpers Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898), Lamus
  2. Web site: Formia e la sua storia Formiae - ideato e sviluppato da WebProgens Ass. Culturale. 2022-02-16. Formiae. it-IT.
  3. Livy 8.14.10
  4. Web site: La Città di Formia – Sinus Formianus. 2022-02-16. it-IT. 2022-02-16. https://web.archive.org/web/20220216185938/https://www.sinusformianus.it/la-citta-di-formia/. dead.
  5. [Horace]
  6. Mayor launches appeal to save Cicero's villa from ruin https://www.ansa.it/english/news/2015/07/21/mayor-launches-appeal-to-save-ciceros-villa-from-ruin_55a57cf3-5104-4a1a-8e19-bc4cd3261dbd.html
  7. Plutarch Vit. Cic. 47-48
  8. Villa Irlanda Grand Hotel http://www.villairlanda.it/en/imperial-domus/
  9. Luigi Salemme, Il borgo di Gaeta: contributo alla storia locale, Torino, ITER, 1939
  10. Richard Stillwell et al. FORMIAE (Formia) Latium, Italy. The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0006:entry=formiae
  11. Cisternone romano https://www.formiae.it/siti/cisternone-romano/
  12. Allen, Alexander (1867), "Aelianus Tacticus", in Smith, William (ed.), Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. 1, Boston, p. 29
  13. Web site: CHURCH FATHERS: Letter 95 (St. Augustine). www.newadvent.org. 2019-10-03.
  14. History of Formia
  15. Villa of Mamurra (Formia) https://www.romanoimpero.com/2018/02/villa-di-mamurra-formia.html?hl=en
  16. Nicoletta Cassieri, Primi interventi di scavo archeologico e di conservazione nella villa romana di Gianola, in Formianum, III 1995
  17. Michele Stefanile e Fabrizio Pesando, Le ricerche dell’Università di Napoli “L’Orientale” nelle villae maritimae del Lazio meridionale: Gianola, Sperlonga, Gaeta, in Massimo Capulli (ed.) Il patrimonio culturale sommerso. Ricerche e proposte per il futuro dell’archeologia subacquea in Italia. Udine 2019, pp. 69-78
  18. Web site: Archaeological dig reveals ancient Roman home - English . 15 July 2015 .
  19. Web site: Mayor launches appeal to save Cicero's villa from ruin - English . 21 July 2015 .
  20. Web site: Città gemellate. welcometoformia.it. Formia. it. 2019-12-30.