Avola Hoard on display in the British Museum. The foundation of the city in an area previously inhabited by the
Sicani and invaded by the
Sicels in the 13th-12th centuries BC, is perhaps connected to the city of
Hybla Major. Hybla was the name of a pre-Greek divinity, later identified with the Greek
Aphrodite. The
Greeks colonized there in the 8th century. An important
hoard of Ancient Greek gold
jewellery and over 300 coins was found in the vicinity of Avola in 1914. Estimated to date between 370 and 300 BC, the extant items of ornate jewellery are now housed in the
British Museum and comprise a pair of bracelets with double snake-heads, a finger-ring and an ear-ring with the figure of
Eros. When the
Romans conquered Sicily in 227 BC, the city of
Syracuse maintained some autonomy in the control of the area, which lasted until the
Second Punic War (212 BC). Hybla disappeared in the early Middle Ages, and the territory started to be repopulated during the
Islamic domination of Sicily (9th-11th centuries). However, the village near what is now Avola appeared only during the
Norman or
Hohenstaufen rule (12th-13th centuries). The town became the feudal domain of the Pignatelli family. Like much of south-eastern Sicily, Avola was destroyed by
an earthquake in 1693, and was refounded in a new location of the coast, under the design of friar architect
Angelo Italia, having a geometric and regular plan. The town of
Grammichele, also destroyed by the earthquake, was also relocated and rebuilt along a hexagonal layout. Along the main road that goes to Syracuse is situated a megalithic monument, so-called "pseudo-
dolmen" because of natural origin but adapted, in the prehistory, to experimental architectural elaboration. During World War II Avola, like all of Sicily, was a hotbead of anti-Mussolini sentiment and anti-fascist sentiment more generally. Because of the strongarm tactics that the Mussolini regime used to subdue Sicily, the fascist regime was very unpopular on the island, the town of Avola was no exception to this. When British and American forces arrived in Sicily the Sicilians did not regard them as conquering invaders but rather greeted them as "emancipators come to lift the evil burden of fascism from their shoulders." All across Sicily the invading forces were greeted with relief and often with unbridled enthusiasm.
World War II During World War II, Avola was the place of one of the first Allied landings during the
Allied invasion of Sicily. The town, defended by Major Umberto Fontemaggi's 374th Coastal Battalion (part of the
206th Coastal Division), was attacked by three battalions of the
151st Infantry Brigade (part of the British
8th Army led by
General Montgomery) and captured after several hours of fighting on 10 July 1943. General Montgomery's plan was to send a three-brigade front between Avola and Cassibile in the Gulf of Noto. It was to be led by
Miles Dempsey's
British 13th Corps. The plan was that as soon as Dempsey's forces had succeeded in establishing a beachhead they were to push northwards along the coast as quickly as possible, with the goal being to link up with other British forces in the effort to capture the Sicilian coastal towns of Syracuse, Augusta, Catania and airfields around the River Simeto. During the fighting in and around Avola between Montgomery's British soldiers and Mussolini's fascist soldiers there was an incident in which around seventy-five American paratroopers landed outside of the town, far away from where the British were already engaged in combat. The American GIs were over fifty miles away from their intended landing zone and decided to improvise, which in this case meant attempting to take the town by force on their own. They immediately became bogged down in a massive firefight and realized they had "bit off more than they could chew". In the course of the firefight the American GIs became pinned down in a square. At this point Major-General
Sidney Kirkman's British
50th division "came to the rescue" by using a Bren carrier and blasted away the Italian forces who had pinned the Americans down. The Americans realized however that their ordeal would not be over until they could properly identify themselves so that the British wouldn't mistake them for Germans or Italians. They put their helmets on the end of sticks and waved them above the firing line while yelling that they were American. One British soldier exclaimed "What the bloody 'ell are you Yanks doing 'ere?" This incident led to the British and Americans making sure that in future operations their forces all used the same password so that they could more easily identify one another in combat. When the British military's
Durham Light Infantry division took over the center of the town they raised their regimental flag over Avola, as soon as the local people recognized that they were the Allies and not more Germans the local people welcomed the British and American soldiers with open arms.
Modern times On December 3, 1968, during the time period known as the
Hot Autumn, Avola was the scene of an infamous massacre, when police opened fire on demonstrating day-labourers demanding the renewal of their contract. Two were killed and many wounded. This scene was depicted in the film 'Il Grande Sogno'. == Cuisine ==