Molfetta - Duomo di San Corrado
Molfetta - Duomo di San Corrado
Molfetta - Duomo di San Corrado
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto
Molfetta - Duomo di San Corrado
Molfetta - Duomo di San Corrado
Molfetta - Duomo di San Corrado
Molfetta - Duomo di San Corrado
Molfetta - Duomo di San Corrado
Molfetta - Duomo di San Corrado
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Concattedrale di Bitonto
Bitonto - Torrione angioino
Bitonto - Chiesa del Crocifisso
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Molfetta - Duomo di San Corrado
Molfetta was probably been founded by the Greeks around the 4th century BC. Later it was Roman and after the fall of the Roman Empire, it was ruled by the Goths, who reinforced the city walls in the response of raids of Saracene pirates. The settlement developed under the alternate dominion of the Byzantines and Longobards. The Normans occupied Molfetta mid 11th century. Under the Norman rule, Molfetta became, just like Bari and Brindisi, an important starting point during the period of the crusades. Hospitals got erected to care for returning crusaders and hospices to host people heading to the "Holy Land".
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The "Duomo di San Corrado" was erected between the second half of the 12th and the first half of the 13th century on a cliff overlooking the sea. First dedicated to Santa Maria Assunta, it is now dedicated to "San Corrado", patron saint of Molfetta.
San Conrado (aka "Conrad of Bavaria", "Konrad von Bayern") was a son of Henry the Black, Duke of Bavaria. Conrad was a disciple of Bernard of Clairvaux and a Cistercian monk. He journeyed to the "Holy Land" with the purpose of living there as a hermit but had to return. Returning to Apulia he stopped near Bari, where he lived as a hermit.
The Duomo is a very special example of Apulian Romanesque architecture, as it is the largest of the Romanesque churches with the central nave covered with three domes. Some of the pillars along the nave have capitals. Here are two birds drinkig from a chalice.
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The "Duomo di San Corrado" was erected between the second half of the 12th and the first half of the 13th century on a cliff overlooking the sea. First dedicated to Santa Maria Assunta, it is now dedicated to "San Corrado", patron saint of Molfetta.
San Conrado (aka "Conrad of Bavaria", "Konrad von Bayern") was a son of Henry the Black, Duke of Bavaria. Conrad was a disciple of Bernard of Clairvaux and a Cistercian monk. He journeyed to the "Holy Land" with the purpose of living there as a hermit but had to return. Returning to Apulia he stopped near Bari, where he lived as a hermit.
The Duomo is a very special example of Apulian Romanesque architecture, as it is the largest of the Romanesque churches with the central nave covered with three domes. Some of the pillars along the nave have capitals. Here are two birds drinkig from a chalice.
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