Thucydides mentions
Kentoripa (Κεντόριπα) (also called
Kentoripai) as a city of the
Sicels that was Hellenized in the 5th century BC. It became an ally of the
Athenians at the time of their expedition against
Syracuse, and maintained its independence almost uninterruptedly (though it fell under the power of
Agathocles) until the
First Punic War when it immediately submitted to the Romans. It was thus granted
Latin Rights before the rest of Sicily and was a (free city exempted from tax). In the 3rd and 2nd centuries BC
Centuripe Ware was a distinctive class of
Sicilian vase painting, with the unusual feature of fully coloured painting in
tempera applied after firing was complete.
Cicero described it, perhaps with some exaggeration, as being by far the largest and richest city of Sicily, and as having a population of 10,000, engaged in the cultivation of an extensive territory. It appears to have suffered much in the war against
Sextus Pompeius because of its loyalty to Octavian, but Octavian reconstructed and gave the inhabitants Roman citizenship. The Imperial Roman age has left the most impressive monumental remains. Grandiose monumental ruins, a rich complex of sculptures, numerous inscriptions: a whole series of elements seem to mark the accomplishments of a local family that, in the 2nd century, came to express a consul, a son of one of the components of the entourage of the emperor
Hadrian. A large number of monumental remains were lost forever due to the neglect of the past and systematic theft and plundering for collectors and collections of every where. It gradually declined in the late Empire. Emperor
Frederick II entirely destroyed the city in 1233 in punishment for its rebellion, the inhabitants deported to Augusta. King
Charles I of Anjou razed it completely to the ground, and the city was rebuilt only in 1548 by
Francesco I Moncada, the future Prince of Paternò. The city was known as
Centorbi until 1863. In 1943 during World War II and the
liberation of Sicily the
Battle of Centuripe saw the town captured spectacularly from the defending Germans by the
38th (Irish) Infantry Brigade although it suffered some damage. == Demographics ==