From the Neolithic to the Ancient Times The territory around San Marzano was already inhabited in the Neolithic (5th millennium BC), as confirmed by numerous finds. Near the Sanctuary of the Madonna delle Grazie, there are caves excavated as tombs, dating back to the late Bronze Age (1300-800 BC) and then reused in the early Middle Ages (500–1050) as underground dwellings. In the Contrada Neviera (the area near the sanctuary) the remains of a massive wall were discovered which may have been the border line between the Greek area (Chora Tarantina) and the indigenous (Messapian) area of Oria. In the
Roman period (8th century BC-7th century AD), the territory of San Marzano was located on the border with Oria Messapica and was under the jurisdiction of the territory of
Taranto. In the area of the Masseria Casa Rossa there was a "Pagus" (village). Furthermore, numerous archaeological finds existed in Contrada Pezza Padula, such as coins and the remains of a countryside villa, perhaps belonging to a patrician. Occasional findings of tombs from the
early medieval period with funerary furnishings as well as some
Byzantine coins are preserved in the National Archaeological Museum of Taranto.
San Marzano in the Middle Ages It is known that the San Marzano di San Giuseppe area was inhabited during the Middle Ages. Due to the continuous incursions of the
Saracens, which lasted from the 8th century until around the year 1000, the inhabitants retreated to the nearby scattered caves and communities in the hinterland, where they could live more peacefully. In the centuries before the arrival of the Albanians, there is almost no information on the feudal succession of San Marzano. In 1465, the fiefdom, together with the Principality of Taranto, was incorporated into the
Kingdom of Naples by Joanna of Aragon, widow of Ferdinand I and heir to the Principality and partially assigned in small fiefdoms to families of proven Aragonese faith.
Demetrio Capuzzimati and the Albanian Settlement Towards the end of the 15th century and the beginning of the 16th century, many hamlets in Taranto Albania, destroyed by the soldiers of
Giorgio Castriota Scanderbeg during the revolt of the local barons (1459–1462), were rebuilt and settled by the soldiers themselves. At the beginning of the 16th century, the fiefdom of San Marzano belonged to Stefano di Mayra di Nardò, Lord of the hamlet of
Sava. In 1504, Mayra sold the uninhabited fiefdom to Francesco Antoglietta, 8th baron of Fragagnano. By 1508, some Corfiot and
Epirote families from the nearby village of Fragagnano had settled in the lower part of San Marzano. , in San Marzano In 1530, San Marzano was bought by
Demetrio Capuzzimati. In 1536, Capuzzimati also acquired in emphyteusis from the clergy of Taranto the adjacent fiefdom "de li Riezzi" (Rizzi), where the medieval Castrum Carrellum was located. For this concession Capuzzimati would have had to pay the Taranto clergy 50 ducats in silver pugs annually. The merger of the two fiefdoms created the current San Marzano. In that period, the territory was populated by numerous
Epirote families who, in addition to their language of origin, brought with them their customs, cultural practices and faith to their new homeland. Capuzzimati immediately began the construction of the feudal palace. ==Geography==