Barletta developed long before the Roman era, known by Greeks and Romans respectively as Bardulos or Barulum. In the Middle Ages it was a stronghold of the
Normans and
Lombards, becoming an important staging post for the
Crusaders and the
Teutonic Knights and
Templars as well as the
Knights of St.John. Following the
Muslim conquest in the
Holy Land, the
Archbishops of Nazareth took refuge in Barletta (permanently in 1327). After immigration from the nearby Canne increased its population due to the destruction of Cannae by the
Normans, Barletta lived its periods of greatest splendour under
King Frederick II and then subsequently the
Angevin kings of Naples. At the beginning of the 16th century, during the guerilla war between the French and the Spanish over possession of Southern Italy, the city was the theater of a historical victory of Italian knights over French prisoners, in what became known as the
Challenge of Barletta (13 February 1503). This took place during the occupation of the city by
Gonzalo de Cordoba, and served as a handy diversion for his restive siege-bound army. Later the city served as a fortress for the Spanish rulers of southern Italy. In 1528 it was sacked by French troops under
Odet de Foix. The city was the capital of its district and the seat of the lower prefecture for the 120 years between 1806 and 1927 and sided with the French under
Joachim Murat during the Napoleonic War. During and after the
Unification, Barletta was as poor as was most of the South of Italy. Consequently, hygiene and health were particularly bad. Various types of disease plagued the population, such as
tuberculosis,
diarrhea,
pneumonia,
small pox,
malaria, etc. An estimated 15% of the population was affected by
trachoma. The most dreaded of the diseases brought by poverty was cholera. Outbreaks of cholera took place in the city in 1836, 1854, 1865, 1866, 1867, 1886 and finally 1910 when the bacillus was brought back to Barletta by Barlettan fishermen, and killed tens of thousands all over southern Italy. Barletta also has a religious dark side to it when the very last Protestants to be burned alive at the stake took place in 1866. "The Papists came out of Santo Sepolcro, in their rampage to martyr Protestants as they screamed, "Death to the Protestants!'" (London
Times, 9 April 1866) A 100 year anniversary plaque to the five Protestant martyrs can be seen at the Evangelical Baptist Church (Italian, "Chiesa Evangelica Battista") of Barletta. During
World War I a minor naval battle took place off Barletta and the Italian Nembo-class destroyer
Turbine was sunk by the
Austro-Hungarian light cruiser
Helgoland and destroyers
Csepel,
Tátra and
Lika on 24 May 1915. During
World War II, the city was the site of the first episode of Italian conflict with German troops, when a battalion of Fallschirmjäger (parachutists) was sent from Foggia to Barletta to destroy the port before the British 8th Army could arrive, the Italian garrison surrendered after a brief struggle, thereby earning the Gold Medal of Military Valour and of Civilian Merit. After the war it was the site of a
DP camp. The city hosts
Monumental Cemetery of Barletta. == Main sights ==