Logudoro
The Logudoro (meaning "Golden Place") is a large traditional region Sardinia, Italy. The name of Logudoro today is linked to the Logudorese dialect, which covers a large area of northern-central Sardinia.[1][2]
The first denomination of the area is contained in an 1064 document on behalf of Barisone, who requested a foundation of a monastery in his Kingdom of Ore (in renno, quo dicitur ore).[3][4] The current name is thought to have originated from corrupt blending of the kingdom's alternative name Logu de Torres.[1]
In the Middle Ages it was the centre of Judicate of Logudoro, one of the four quasi-kingdoms in which Sardinia was divided. The first capital of the area was Ardara, later replaced by Sassari. From this period there are numerous countryside Romanesque basilicas. After the conquest of the giudicato by the House of Aragon, Logoduro declined, until the decision to move the seat of the governor to Cagliari made it marginal. Later, under the Savoy rule as part of the Kingdom of Sardinia, it gave shelter of bands of anti-governative brigands.
Mostly composed of soft volcanic terrains, it is the most fertile area of the island. For this reason it was settled since early Prehistoric times, as shown by the presence of numerous nuraghe. During the Roman domination it was one of the main grain supplier of the Empire, and was the seat of several legions, which guarded it from the never-Romanized population of the inner areas.
In the early 20th century the construction of roads and railways brought more prosperity, but at the same time destroyed the large forest heritage of the region. The demographic pressure and the reduced competitivity of the local grain production in the Italian market pushed numerous Logoduresi to emigrate in the 1950s, first in the main Sardinian cities and then to the Italian northern mainland.
References
- Raimondo Bacchisio Motzo (1934). "Italian Encyclopedia entry". Retrieved 2020-01-21.
- Adolfo Cecilia (1970). "Dantesca Encyclopedia entry". Retrieved 2020-01-21.
- Antón Santamarina (1999). Estudios de sociolingüística románica: linguas e variedades minorizadas. Univ Santiago de Compostela. p. 405. ISBN 9788481217728. Retrieved 2020-01-21.
- Michelle Hobart (2017). A Companion to Sardinian History, 500–1500. Brill. p. 188. ISBN 9789004341241. Retrieved 2020-01-21.