Mondello

Mondello
View of Mondello from Mount Pellegrino
View of Mondello from Mount Pellegrino
Mondello is located in Italy
Mondello
Mondello
Location of Mondello in Italy
Coordinates: 38°12′03″N 13°19′23″E / 38.20083°N 13.32306°E / 38.20083; 13.32306
CountryItaly
RegionSicily
ProvinceMetropolitan City of Palermo
ComunePalermo
Elevation
5 m (16 ft)
Population
 (2013)
 • Total
12,150
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
90151
Dialing code091

Mondello (Sicilian: Munneḍḍu) is a seaside district of the city of Palermo in the autonomous region of Sicily, in Southern Italy.

It lies on a sandy bay delimited by two hills called Mount Gallo (or Rooster) and Mount Pellegrino (or Pilgrim), in the northernmost area of the city. In the administrative subdivision, it falls within the 7th municipal division (or circoscrizione) of Palermo and it is annexed to the surrounding neighborhoods of Addaura and Partanna, with which it forms the 22nd major neighborhood (or quartiere) of the city, Partanna-Mondello.[1][2]

Archaeological evidence of settlement in the area dates back to the Upper Paleolithic and Chalcolithic.[3] Later, during the time period of ancient history, Mondello Bay was a passage point for sailors from different cultures, such as the Western Phoenicians, the ancient Greeks and the Romans.[4][5]

During the Roman Republic, intense deforestation activities on Mount Pellegrino altered the normal flow of water in the south-eastern section of the bay. This caused the birth of a swamp in the area at the base of the mountain, known as Valdesi, which characterized the landscape until the 19th century.[6]

In medieval times a small village arose on the northern edge of the bay. The community prospered economically due to the abundant profits from fishing and agriculture. In the 15th century a tuna fishery was built, which quickly became the most successful business in the village. In that period the military defense of the place became necessary due to the frequent attacks by Barbary corsairs.[7]

In the late 18th century, part of the area was annexed to La Favorita Royal Estate, the private estate of King Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies.[8] The site, which today is the largest urban park in Palermo, divides the district of Mondello from the city center and the roads built inside it represent the main connection between the two areas.[9]

In the early 20th century, Mondello became a luxury seaside resort for the aristocracy and the bourgeoisie. In 1911, the Municipality of Palermo reached an agreement with an Italian-Belgian company for the construction of a new district in the area aimed to the wealthier social classes.[10] The new neighborhood was planned according to the canons of the garden city movement and its construction involved the leading architects of the Palermo modernist school, such as Ernesto Basile and his students.[11] A number of Liberty style villas on the seafront promenade have made it one of the gems of Art Nouveau in Europe.[12][13]

Later, Mondello Beach grew into a tourist destination and it is currently considered the main seaside resort of Palermo, although the district remains essentially a residential area.

Toponymy

[edit]

Historical evidences show that Mondello's name has been in regular use since at least the 16th century, but its etymological origins remain uncertain. According to the version most accredited by researchers, it appears to be an Italian alteration of the Arabic Al Mondellu, which means "The Swamp", because during the Islamic domination of Sicily, between the 10th and 11th centuries, the area was known for the presence of a marsh on the south-eastern side of the bay. It is known that Muslim sailors referred to the small port of Mondello Bay as Marsa 'at Tin, which means "Port of Mud".[14]

History

[edit]

Ancient history

[edit]
Replica of the paleolithical drawings in the cave of Addaura

The area has been settled since the Upper Paleolithic. Prehistoric tribes used the caves in the mountains surrounding Mondello as dwellings and, in some cases, as places of shamanic ritual[15].

During the Chalcolithic, with the changing climatic and social conditions, several villages with annexed necropolises arose in the vicinity of the current inhabited centre.

Around the 7th century BC the bay was regularly visited by Phoenician sailors, as demonstrated by the discovery of a sanctuary dedicated to the ancient goddess Isis in a cave on Mount Gallo known as Cave Regina (or Cave Queen), which was used as a place of worship since the prehistoric age[16][17].

The Greek historian Polybius mentioned that the Carthaginian general Hamilcar Barca used Mondello as a landing point for his fleet during the First Punic War, in the 3rd century BC[18].

During the years of Roman domination, the intense deforestation of Mount Pellegrino caused the formation of a swamp in a section of the area known as Valdesi, on the southern side[19].

Medieval history

[edit]
Medieval defensive tower in the borough's main square

In medieval times a small village arose on the northern edge of the bay. The community prospered economically due to the abundant profits from fishing and agriculture.

In the 15th century a tuna fishery was built, which quickly became the most successful business in the village.

Modern history

[edit]

Until the beginning of the 20th century, Mondello was an unhealthy marsh enclosed by two headlands: the Mount Pellegrino described by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe as "the most beautiful promontory in the world"[20] and Mount Gallo. The ancient fishing village laid at the foot of the latter. It was also home to a tonnara (or almadraba), one of many scattered along the West coast of Sicily. The tonnara is no longer active.

At some point, a Palermitan nobleman had the idea to drain the swamp. Prince Francesco Lanza di Scalea, with the help of a Belgian real estate company, built a plant for the drainage of swampy waters to the sea. The newly rehabilitated areas, previously occupied by the swamp, underwent a process of expansion and evolution from the 18th to the 20th centuries.

After the reclamation of Valdesi's swamp, the area attracted the interest of numerous entrepreneurs from all over Western Europe due to its landscape qualities.

From 1912 onwards, Mondello became the seat of the high bourgeoisie and the aristocracy. The nobility of the city fostered the construction of several exclusive and aristocratic circles, the construction of villas and the exploitation of lush gardens.[citation needed] King Ferdinand of Bourbon called it "a corner of paradise". Eventually, the beach of Mondello was born.

Geography

[edit]
Mondello-Valdesi Beach

Mondello lies on a semicircular bay on the north-western coast of Palermo, which shoreline extends for about 0.93 miles (1.5 km) and is bathed by the waters of the Tyrrhenian Sea. It binds two cliffs called Mount Gallo and Mount Pellegrino, where the city's two main nature reserves are located[21].

The neighborhood is separated from the city center by La Favorita Park, founded at the end of the 18th century by King Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies and which today represents the largest urban garden in Palermo with an area of 400 hectares[22].

Attractions

[edit]
Antico Stabilimento Balneare of Mondello

Mondello is characterized by a sandy bay that binds the two promontories, called Monte Gallo and Mount Pellegrino, with a coastline of white sand that nowadays is approximately 1.5 kilometers long. The Natural Reserve of Capo Gallo and the reserve of Monte Pellegrino are nearby. Today the area is known for its beach, and for its Art Nouveau villas, which characterize the architecture of the burough, making it a landmark in the history of international modernism.[citation needed]

Bibliography

[edit]
  • P.Hardy, A. Bing, A. Blasi, C. Bonetto, K. Christiani, Italy, pp. 759–60, Lonely Planet.
  • W. Dello Russo, Spiagge in Sicilia, Sime Books.
  • Michelin, M. Magni, M. Marca, Sicilia, p. 90, La Guida Verde 2013
  • Sicilia, p. 39, Lonely Planet, EDT 2013

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Le Otto Circoscrizioni di Palermo - Un profilo statistico" [The Eight Municipalities of Palermo - A Statistical Profile] (PDF) (in Italian).
  2. ^ "La Settima Circoscrizione" [The Seventh Municipality]. Sito istituzionale del Comune di Palermo (in Italian). Retrieved 2025-01-23.
  3. ^ "Caves of Addaura in Palermo - Sicily". www.enjoysicilia.it. Retrieved 2025-01-14.
  4. ^ Tusa, Sebastiano. "La nave del tesoro" [The treasure ship]. palermoweb.com. Retrieved 2025-01-24. [The dispersion area of the archaeological material is about 200 m² and is located at a depth of between 5 and 12 m. The sandy seabed is frequently interrupted by rocky reliefs and depressions, sometimes covered by sand and debris, inside which the main accumulations of material were found. These depressions are better visible after storm surges due to the mistral. The shape of the gulf, the currents that cross it and the spring storms cause significant movements of sand masses that often cause the unearthing of archaeological finds. The finds discovered, notably heterogeneous among themselves due to the stratifications that occurred over the centuries, cannot be traced back to a single chronological dimension. In fact, materials from different eras coexist.]
  5. ^ "Tre anfore romane trovate nel mare di Mondello" [Three Roman amphorae found in the sea of Mondello]. la Repubblica (in Italian). 2021-04-20. Retrieved 2025-01-24.
  6. ^ Schirò, Samuele (2020-12-15). "Mondello, da palude a paradiso ritrovato" [Mondello, from a swamp to a rediscovered paradise]. Palermo Viva (in Italian). Retrieved 2025-01-24. [In the following centuries, in Roman times, the expansion of the city increased the demand for land in which to produce food, as well as wood to build buildings and boats. This need caused a massive deforestation of the surrounding areas, which caused a progressive flow of debris towards the sea through the numerous waterways that flowed into that gulf. Over the years, the accumulation of debris meant that the water could no longer flow freely into the sea, thus forming the vast swamp that characterized the area until the early 1900s.]
  7. ^ Lo Cascio, Pippo. "Due torri a difesa della Tonnara" [Two towers defending the tuna fishery]. www.storiamedievale.net (in Italian). Retrieved 2025-01-14.
  8. ^ "Parco della Favorita - I Luoghi del Cuore" [The Favorita Park - Places of Heart]. Fondo Ambiente Italiano (in Italian). [The areas involved were part of Mount Pellegrino, the flat area today identified precisely as "La Favorita" and the marshes of Mondello.]
  9. ^ "Parco della Favorita". Balarm.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2025-01-24. [Two long avenues, named after Hercules and Diana, cross the park in parallel; originally they were the privileged path of noble walks, today they are highly trafficked communication routes, because they act as a connection between Palermo and Mondello.]
  10. ^ "Les Tramways de Palerme - Titolo finanziario storico" [Les Tramways de Palerme - Historical Financial Title]. scripomuseum.com (in Italian). 2017-01-12. Retrieved 2025-01-23. [In 1911, the Municipality of Palermo signed an agreement with the Belgian company Les Tramways de Palerme to build and operate electric traction lines up to Mondello: these lines were inaugurated in 1912. In 1929, during the fascist regime, the two networks (that of the “Belgian” and that of the SSTO) were unified under the management of the Union of Electric Traction and Transport of Sicily (UTETS).]
  11. ^ "Sicilian Liberty - Italianate Art Nouveau - Best of Sicily Magazine". www.bestofsicily.com. Retrieved 2025-01-14. Architect Ernesto Basile followed in his father's footsteps, to be joined by Vincenzo Alagna and others. Two particular areas are dominated by the Art Nouveau: Via Libertà and the streets running off it between Politeama and the Giardino Inglese, and Mondello (a seaside district outside town).
  12. ^ "Palermo – Mondello – Stile Liberty architecture". The Gannet. 2022-08-23. Retrieved 2025-01-14.
  13. ^ "Portale del Turismo - Comune di Palermo". Portale del Turismo - Comune di Palermo (in Italian). Retrieved 2025-01-14.
  14. ^ "La storia di Mondello" [The history of Mondello]. mondelloitalobelga.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2025-01-23. [During the centuries of Muslim domination, it was known by the name of “Marsa 'at Tin” which literally translated means “port of mud” due to the marshy characteristics of the place.]
  15. ^ "Grotta dell'Addaura – Mondello (PA) - Prehistory in Italy". Preistoria in Italia. Retrieved 2025-01-11.
  16. ^ "Monte Gallo - Grotta Regina - Sicily on the Net". Sicilia in Rete. Retrieved 2025-01-12.
  17. ^ "La Grotta Regina". il Titolo (in Italian). 2021-02-17. Retrieved 2025-01-12.
  18. ^ Vacanti, Claudio (2020-01-01). "Operazione Heirkte. Monte Pellegrino e la campagna di Amilcare in Sicilia". Nuova Antologia militare (in English and Italian).
  19. ^ Schirò, Samuele (2020-12-15). "Mondello, da palude a paradiso ritrovato | www.palermoviva.it" (in Italian). Retrieved 2025-01-11.
  20. ^ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Italienische Reise - Sizilien.
  21. ^ "Travel Guide to Mondello, Sicily – The Thinking Traveller". www.thethinkingtraveller.com. Retrieved 2025-01-11.
  22. ^ "Parco della Favorita". fondoambiente.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2025-01-11.