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TAORMINA (ancient Tauromenium)

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 402 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TAORMINA (ancient Tauromenium)  , a
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town on the E. coast of Sicily, in the province of
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Messina, from which town it is 30 M . S.S.W. by
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rail . Pop . (1901) 4110 . It has come into
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great favour as a winter resort, especially with
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British and German visitors, chiefly on account of its
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fine situation and beautiful views . It lies on an abrupt hill 65o ft. above the railway station, and was founded by the Carthaginian Himilco in 397 B.C. for a friendly tribe of Sicels, after the destruction, by Dionysius the Elder of Syracuse, of the neighbouring city of
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Naxos . In 395 Dionysius failed to take it by assault on a winter's
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night, but in 392 he occupied it and settled his mercenaries there . In 358 the exiles from Naxos, after wandering up and down Sicily, at last found a home there . Its commanding site gave it considerable importance . It was the city at which both Timoleon and Pyrrhus first landed . During the First Punic War it belonged to the
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kingdom of Hiero, and after his
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death it enjoyed an exceptionally favoured position with regard to Rome, being like Messana and Netum, a civitas foederala . During the first Servile War it was occupied by Eunous and some of his followers, but was at length taken by the consul Publius Rupilius in 132 .

It was one of the strongholds of Sextus Pompeius, and after defeating him

Augustus made it into a colonia as a measure of precaution, expelling some of the older inhabitants . In the time of Strabo it was inferior in population, as we should expect, to Messana and Catana; its marble, wine and mullets were highly esteemed . In A.D . 902 it was taken and burnt by the
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Saracens; it was retaken in 962, and in 1078 fell into the hands of the
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Normans . The ancient town seems to have had two citadels; one of these was probably the hill above the town to the W. now crowned by a
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medieval castle, while the other was the hill upon which the theatre was afterwards constructed (E . A .
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Free-man,
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History of Sicily, iv . 5o6) . There are some remains of the city walls, belonging to more than one period . It is indeed possible that one fragment of wall belongs to a period, before the foundation of the city, when the Naxians had a fortified
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port here (Evans in Freeman, op. cit., iv . 109 n . 1) .

The

church of
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San Pancrazio, just outside the
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modern town, is built into a temple of the 3rd century B.C., the S. wall of the
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cella of which is alone preserved . Inscriptions prove that it was dedicated to
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Serapis . The other ruins belong in the main to the
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Roman period . The most famous of them is the theatre, largely hewn in the rock, which, though of Greek origin, was entirely reconstructed . The seats are almost entirely gone, but the stage and its adjacent buildings, especially the wall, in two storeys, at the back, are well preserved: some of its marble decorative details were removed for
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building material in the
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middle ages, but those that remained have been re-erected . The view from the theatre is of exceptional beauty, Mount Etna being clearly seen from the
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summit to the
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base on the S.W., while to the N. the rugged outlines of the coast immediately below, and the mountains of
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Calabria across the sea to the N.E. make up one of the most famous views in the
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world . There are also remains of a much smaller theatre (the so-called Odeum), and some large cisterns; a large bath or tank which was apparently open, known as the Naumachia,
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measures 4261 ft. in length and 391 in width: only one of its long sides is now visible, and serves as a foundation for several houses in the main street of the modern town . The aqueducts which supplied these cisterns may be traced above the town . There are remainsof houses, tombs, &c., of the Roman period, and fine specimens of Romanesque and
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Gothic architecture in the modern town . See Rizzo, Guida di Taormina e dintorni, Catania, 1902 . (T .

End of Article: TAORMINA (ancient Tauromenium)
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