The Murgia dei Trulli, with its communes of Martina
Franca, Locorotondo, Cisternino, and Alberobello, is located in the Apulian
interior at the upper part of the heel of Italy. Although trulli are
scattered throughout
the region, more than 1,500 of them are in the Monti and
Aja Piccola quarters, on the western hill of Alberobello. This unique conical
house form is significant in the history of architecture because it perpetuated
well into the twentieth century a construction technique practiced throughout
the northern Mediterranean since prehistoric times.
The name derives from truddu, Greek for “cupola.” The clustered stone
dwellings of Alberobello, small by modern Italian housing standards, are built
by roofing almost square or rectangular bases (although some tend toward a
circle) with approximately conical cupolas of roughly worked flat limestone
slabs, stacked without mortar in corbeled courses. These gray roofs, no two of
which are quite the same, are normally crowned with a whitewashed pinnacle in
the form of a sphere standing on a truncated inverted cone. Some are painted
with symbols: astrological signs or Christian ones, and even some of older
pre-Christian significance. As is often the case with vernacular architecture,
geometrical precision is not a priority: nothing is truly right-angled, nothing
truly plumb. Bernard Rudofsky describes the roof as a retrocedent wall, because
it also encloses habitable space that is traditionally used for storage.
Typically, the inside of the roof is a parabolic dome, formed by packing the
gaps between the larger structural stones. The walls of the ground floor are
thick enough—they can be up to 10 feet (3.27 meters) in older houses—to include
alcoves for a hearth or cupboards, or even a curtained-off recess for a bed.
Doorways are low, and the interior, though whitewashed, is usually quite dingy
because the windows are small, possibly for structural reasons. Curved walls
make furnishing difficult. More recent trulli, the last of which were built in
the 1950s, are interconnected with others to gain more living space.The oldest documented Alberobello examples date from the fifteenth century, coinciding with the foundation of a permanent agricultural community centered in the town. However, the essential building technique and the consequent house form are much older. The type, clearly related to the prehistoric nuraghi of Sardinia and the rather more sophisticated Mycenaean tholos, has been archeologically linked to both the nomadic pastoral Early Bronze culture and permanent agrarian communities in the Apennine region. Remarkably, similar constructions can be found in the middle of Scotland and on the west coast of Sweden.
A plausible and somewhat romantic tradition dates the development of trulli as the house form of Alberobello to a single historical event. It is said that in the eighteenth century the local ruler Count Girolamo II of Acquaviva compelled the peasant farmers to build their houses with mortarless stone roofs. Because drywall structures were tax-exempt, and because they could be (relatively) easily dismantled before the regular visits of inspectors from Naples, he chose this method of tax avoidance. Although the people were freed from his regulation by a decree from Ferdinando IV of Bourbons in May 1797, the house form persisted, perhaps because of rural conservatism. Trulli are no longer built by the traditional technique and in the traditional style, but some of the master builders are still living, and the craft skills have not yet been lost. After the mid-1950s the “romantic” trulli were noticed by tourists and real-estate agents, and that has been to the detriment of many of them. Since the inclusion of the Alberobello precinct on UNESCO’s World Heritage List in 1996, serious archeological study has been undertaken, and the old craft skills have been applied to an extensive restoration program.
ReplyDeleteDo you need Personal Loan?
Business Cash Loan?
Unsecured Loan
Fast and Simple Loan?
Quick Application Process?
Approvals within 24-72 Hours?
No Hidden Fees Loan?
Funding in less than 1 Week?
Get unsecured working capital?
Email:(perfectfinancialcredite@gmail.com)
Application Form:
=================
Full Name:................
Loan Amount Needed:.
Purpose of loan:.......
Loan Duration:..
Gender:.............
Marital status:....
Location:..........
Home Address:..
City:............
Country:......
Phone:..........
Mobile / Cell:....
Occupation:......
Monthly Income:....
where did you hear about us ;
perfectfinancialcredite@gmail.com)