Fondi has an ancient history, beginning with early settlements about 1000 BC: later the area was settled by the
Italic tribes of
Aurunci and, subsequently,
Volsci. According to the legend, it would have been founded by
Hercules in memory of the killing of
Cacus. The first historical reference to Fondi dates to 338 BC, at the time of the
Latin War, when its inhabitants (together with those of the nearby
Formia) gained minor
Roman citizenship status (
civitas sine suffragio). After a failed attempt of revolt led by
Vitruvius Vaccus (330 BC), Fondi remained a Roman prefecture; later (188 BC) it received full citizenship, with a government led by 3
aediles. The importance of Fondi lay in its position across the old
Via Appia. Begun in 312 BC, it was for more than two millennia the main roadway from Rome to southern Italy. Today the historical centre and surrounding wall of Fondi still form a square, as in the Roman camp walls, whose
decumanus was formed by the city tract of the Via Appia. Pope
Soter was born in the city around the turn of the first and second centuries. After the
Gothic War and the
Lombard conquest of Italy, Fondi remained a dominion of the
Eastern Roman Empire. Later a part of the
Papal States, in 846 it was burnt out by the
Saracens coming from their fortress of
Garigliano: they settled there until they were defeated in the
Battle of Circeus of 877, and Fondi was passed to the
Duchy of Gaeta. In 1140 Fondi passed to the
Dell'Aquila family, of
Norman heritage, and then, in 1299, to the powerful
Caetani barons (in the person of
Loffredo Caetani, nephew of
Pope Boniface VIII), who for two centuries made Fondi the centre of their power, and a centre of artistic development as well. Here in 1378 the powerful Count
Onorato I Caetani summoned the
conclave in which the cardinals elected
Clement VII against
Urban VI (
Western Schism). The Caetani lost Fondi after
Charles VIII of France's expedition to southern Italy, and it was assigned to the condottiero
Prospero Colonna. Under the
Colonna the city met another period of artistic and cultural splendour, thanks of the court held by
Giulia Gonzaga, who lived in Fondi between 1526 and 1534. In 1534, Fondi was sacked by
Barbarossa, who was seeking to kidnap the beautiful Giulia and bring her as a gift to his emperor
Suleiman. However, she managed to escape, but many other inhabitants were enslaved in the
Barbary slave trade. Another sack followed in 1594, starting the decline of the city, which had in the meantime passed to the
Carafa of
Stigliano. In 1720 Fondi was acquired by the
di Sangro family. In 1818 the declining city, surrounded by malaria-infested marshes
malaria and
brigandage, lost the bishopric seat existing there since the very early years of Christianity. After the
Armistice of 8 September 1943, the anti-Fascist novelist
Alberto Moravia and his wife
Elsa Morante took refuge in Fondi; the experience inspired Moravia's book
La Ciociara ("The Woman from Ciociaria") (1958). ==Economy==