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BRINDISI (anc. Brundisium, q.v.)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 572 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BRINDISI (anc. Brundisium, q.v.)  , a seaport
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town and archiepiscopal see of Apulia, Italy, in the province of Lecce, 24 M . N.W. by
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rail from the town of Lecce, and 346 M. from Ancona . Pop . (1861) 8000; (1871) 13,755; (1901) 25,317 . The chief importance of Brindisi is due to its position as a starting-point for the East . The inner harbour, admirably sheltered and 27 to 30 ft. in
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depth, allows ocean steamers to lie at the quays . Brindisi has, however, been abandoned by the large steamers of the
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Peninsular &
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Oriental Steam Navigation
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Company, which had called there since 187o, but since '898 call at
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Marseilles instead; small express boats, carrying the mails, still leave every week, connecting with the larger steamers at
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Port Said; but the number of passengers leaving the port, which for the years 1893—1897 averaged 14,728, was only 7608 in 1905, and only 943 of these were carried by the P . & O. boats . The harbour railway station was not completed until 1905 (Consular Report, No . 3672, 1906, pp . 13 sqq.) . The port was cleared in 1905 by 1492 vessels of 1,486,269 tons .

The imports represented a value of £629,892 and the exports a value of £663,2or---an increase of 084,077 and £57,807 respectively on the figures of the previous

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year, while in 1899 the amounts, which were below the
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average, were only £298,400 and £253,000 . The main imports are
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coal,
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flour,
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sulphur,
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timber and metals; and the main exports, wine and
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spirits, oil and dried fruits . Frederick II. erected a castle, with huge round towers, to guard the inner harbour; it is now a convict prison . The
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cathedral, ruined by earthquakes, was restored in 17431749, but has.sdme remains of its mosaic pavement (1178) . The baptismal church of S . Giovanni al Sepolcro (11th century) is now a museum . The town was captured in 836 by the
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Saracens, and destroyed by them; but was rebuilt in the rrth century by Lupus the protospatharius,
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Byzantine governor . In 1071 it fell into the hands of the
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Normans, and frequently appears in the
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history of the
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Crusades, Early in the 14th century the inner port was blocked by Giovanni Orsini, prince of Taranto; the town was devastated by pestilence in 1348, and was plundered in 1352 and 1383; but even greater damage was done by the
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earthquake of 1456 . (T .

End of Article: BRINDISI (anc. Brundisium, q.v.)
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