The origin of the name Tricarico is unknown. It might derive from the
Greek τρία
treis ("three") and
cara (
head/
skull in Hellenistic-era Greek: η κάρα, τό κάρα, η κάρη). That is "
having three heads". According to a slightly different hypothesis, it could have originally been
Triacricon, deriving from the
Greek words
tria/
treis and
acron/
acra, which during Antiquity and Early Middle Ages meant both an "apex/summit", and a "citadel", with
Triacricon thus meaning a city made by connecting "
three citadels". These three
acra/citadels were no other than the site of the 9th c
Arabic castle of
Saracena in the north, the site of a 9th-10th c
Byzantine Rocca fortificata in the south,
improved during the 11th-12th c by the
Normans, and then, during the 13th c, by the
Hohenstaufen, and also the site of the
14th c Palazzo Ducale in the middle. Probably the three sites were simultaneously fortified even before the successive
occupations. ==History==