Origins In ancient times there was a fortified town on Mount Bonifato, in fact they have found different specimens. With the passing of time, this town has passed different phases of population and depopulation and for a long time it was inhabited simultaneously with
Alcamo (which stands at the foot of the mount), before its disappearing. In particular, it was inhabited since the last part of the
Bronze Age, and Elyms,
Romans and Byzantines settled there. From the quotations by
Licofron, we know that in ancient times this residential area was called Longuro. With the same name they also indicated the mount, which according to other suppositions was also called "Aereo" and "Longarico" The old town was defended by a wall on three sides and was composed by unicellular houses (that is having a single room). Among the remains of the old town there is the “Funtanazza”, an ancient architectonic work which probably was a
water reservoir; (or Bùnifat or Bonifacio), from the name of the Roman knight who became its owner. In 1243, owing to an order given by
Frederick II, after some cases of rebellion, there was an event of depopulation, but in 1333 it was repopulated under
Frederick III’s rule. Since 1340 it was a possession of the baron Raimondo Peralta and later of Guarnieri Ventimiglia. The son Enrico Ventimiglia succeeded Guarnieri Ventimiglia: he declared that he had the
castle of Ventimiglia (or
castle of Bonifato) built as a protection from possible attacks. According to some different interpretations, the castle would date back, on the contrary, to a previous period. In 1243 the castle was destroyed by order of Federico II, and rebuilt in 1391 by the Ventimiglia family at their own expense. Bonifato was definitively abandoned in 1338; its inhabitants finally settled in Alcamo because of the difficulty of getting there and the distance from the road network. In 1779 the ruins of the castle were inserted in the
Piano di conservazione dei Beni Culturali della Sicilia (Preservation Plan of the Cultural Heritage of Sicily) by Gabriele Lancillotto Castello, Prince of Torremuzza. == Archeological research ==