Online Encyclopedia

SASSARI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 227 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SASSARI  , a

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town and archiepiscopal see of Sardinia, capital of the province of Sassari, situated in the N.W. corner of the island, 122 M. by
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rail S.E. of
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Porto Torres on the north coast, and 212 M . N.W. of
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Alghero on the west coast, 762 ft. above sea-level . Pop . (1906) 34,897 (town); 41,638 (commune) . The Aragonese castle and the Genoese walls have been demolished in
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recent times, and the town has a
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modern aspect, with spacious streets and squares . The
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cathedral has a
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baroque
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facade; but traces of Romanesque
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work (12th century) can be seen at the sides and in the campanile . The see was transferred from Porto Torres in 1441 . S . Maria di Betlemme has a good facade and Romanesque portal of the end of the 13th (?) century (D . Scano, in L'Arte, 1905, 134) . In the municipal collection are a few pictures of
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interest . The museum in the university has an interesting collection of antiquities, largely formed by G .

Spano, from all parts of the island, and belonging to the prehistoric, Phoenician and

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Roman periods . To the east of the town is the Fontana del Rosello, which supplied the town with
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water before the construction of the aqueduct, the water being brought up in small barrels by donkeys . Sassari is connected by rail by a branch (282 m . E.S.E. to Chilivani) with the main
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line from Cagliari to Golfo degli Aranci, and with Porto Torres and Alghero . To the
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district near Sassari belong some of the most picturesque costumes of the island . The date of the origin of the town is uncertain; but it was no doubt founded as the result of migrations from Porto Torres . This can hardly have occurred during the 11th century, when we find the giudici of Torres or Logudoro residing either at Porto Torres or at Ardara; but it must have occurred before 1217, when a
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body of Corsicans, driven out of their island by the cruelties of a
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Visconti of Pisa, took
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refuge at Sassari, and gave their name to a
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part of the town . About this time we find one of the giudici residing at Sassari for a whole summer, no doubt to escape the
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malaria . The giudici continued to exist at least until 1275, and perhaps till 1284, but about 126o Sassari seems to have shaken itself
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free, and in 1275 and 1286 we find Pisa treating Sassari as a free commune . In 1288, four years after the defeat of
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Meloria, Pisa ceded Sassari to Genoa; but Sassari enjoyed
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internal autonomy, and in 1316 published its statutes (still extant), which are perhaps in part the
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reproduction of earlier ones . These, however, did not last long, for in 1323 Sassari submitted to the Aragonese king, and lost its independence . Sassari was sacked by the French in 1527, and disastrous pestilences are recorded in 1528, 1580 and 1652 .

In 1795 Sassari was the centre of the reaction of the barons against the popular ideas sown by the French Revolution; an insurrection of the

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people led by one Angioi lasted only a short while, and led to reactionary
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measures . See P . Satta-Branca, Il Comune di Sassari
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nei secoli XIII e XIV (Rome, 1885) . (T .

End of Article: SASSARI
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SASSANID, or SASSANIAN DYNASTY (Or SASANIAN)
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SASSINA (or Sarsina, the modern form)

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