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Alife (CE)

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This article is about the Italian town. For the study of life through human-made simulators, see Artificial life.
Comune di Alife
Image:Alife-Stemma.gif
Municipal coat of arms
Country Image:Flag of Italy.svg Italy
Region Campania
Province Caserta (CE)
Mayor Roberto Vitelli
Elevation 110 m
Area 63 km²
Population
 - Total (as of December 31, 2004) 7,372
 - Density 112/km²
Time zone CET, UTC+1
Coordinates 41°20′N 14°20′E
Gentilic Alifani
Dialing code 0823
Postal code 81011
Frazioni San Michele, Totari
Patron St. Pope Sixtus I
 - Day August 11

Alife is a town and commune in the province of Caserta (Campania), Italy. It is located in the Volturno valley, and is a flourishing center of agricultural production.

[edit] History

The name of Alife has Samnite origin, although a settlement in the hills around the city existed probably since the Iron Age. After the First Punic War, it became a Roman municipium, with the name of Alliphae.

A bishopric was present in Alife in the 5th century AD, but in the following century it disappeared. The city was a Lombard possession, as part of the Duchy of Benevento and, later, of the Principality of Capua. The bishop was reinstated in 969, four years after the city became an independent county.

In 1132, the Norman Count Ranulf (one of the most outstanding military leaders of medieval Italy) began the construction of the cathedral. At this time, Alife, together with other centers of northern Campania, was almost independent from Capua, and began governing itself. This, of course, caused increasing strife with the central power of the Norman Kingdom of Sicily (created by Roger II in 1130). In 1135, the city was occupied by Sicilian troops; but, two years later, Count Ranulf had his vengeance, obtaining the title of Duke.

However, in 1138, the city was again captured, largely destroyed and occupied by a Sicilian contingent. In 1169, the counts obtained again autonomy; in 1178, the city was handed over to Richard Caetani of Fondi. The Quarrel family returned in 1191, after the descent of Emperor Henry VI, but was ousted forever in 1197, and the city assigned to the German family of Schweisspeunt. Alife was subsequently ruled by several baronal families of the Kingdom of Naples, who did little to improve its conditions. The neighbouring area became increasingly marshy, and the city decayed, being almost wholly abandoned after the 13th century. Many of the citizens took refuge in the surrounding hills.

In 1561, the Spanish king Philip II had the city destroyed as punishment to of its seignor, Ferrante II Diaz Garlon, who had had a part in the assassination of the king's sister. The cathedral edifice crumbled down in the 1688 earthquake. Alife started to recover only after the abolition of feudalism in 1806; in 1861 it became part of the newly formed Kingdom of Italy.

[edit] Main sights

Alife's main attractions include:

[edit] Transportation

eo:Alife

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