Alberobello Travel Guide
Edit This The best resource for sights, hotels, restaurants, bars, what to do and seeThe historical centre with its ‘trulli’ (as the houses are called, sing. 'trullo') has been declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The trulli are old, round buildings of limestone blocks built without mortar (but mortar has usually been added more recently in inhabited trulli). The conical roofs are made up of flat stones ('chianche'). Today one can still visit the little houses set amidst almonds and olive trees and see people making ceramics according to the way it used to be done some 500 years ago.
Marvellous, unique and typical of the Bari and Otranto province, but why? Some say that the counts of the area forced the colonists to make dry dwellings that could be easily pulled down in case one of the tax inspectors would come over to collect the money from permanent dwellers. Another version is that because one only had to pay for permanent houses, the white stone on top of the roof could be easily removed as to show to the inspector that the house hadn’s been finished yet. The same white pinnacles that might either mark the hand of the builder of the house, have been fallen out of the sky as a sign of the (worshipped) sun or simply look good as the finishing touch on the roof. Historians and archaeologists, however, consider this type of building to be of Neolithic origin and reminiscences of simple huts.
Contributors
January 12, 2007 change by ingvar (3 points)
February 06, 2007 change by rubenkeilin
July 04, 2007 change by lpx
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