Donnafugata Castle (Italian: Castello di Donnafugata [kaˈstɛllo di ˌdɔnnafuˈɡaːta]) is 15 kilometers (9.3 miles) from Ragusa in Sicily, Italy.
Donnafugata Castle | |
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Native name Castello di Donnafugata (Italian) | |
Location | District of Donnafugata, Ragusa, Sicily, Italy |
Nearest city | Ragusa |
Coordinates | 36°52′55″N 14°33′49″E / 36.88194°N 14.56361°E |
Built | 14th century |
Although the origins of Donnafugata Castle can be traced to the 14th-century most of its current Neo-Classical and Neo-Gothic appearance belongs to the 19th.[1]
Toponymy
editThe name is possibly the result of a linguistic corruption of the Arabic toponym عين الصحة ('Ayn al-Ṣiḥḥat, i.e. Source of Health). In Sicilian it turns into Ronnafuata.[citation needed]
Alternatively, Donnafugata could translate from Italian as approximately "fugitive woman" or "woman who fled". Based on this interpretation, one legend claims that Queen Blanche of Navarre, widow of King Martin I of Aragon, was in hiding from Count Bernardo Cabrera , who wanted to marry her and assume leadership over Sicily. She hid in Donnafugata Castle until it was taken under siege by Cabrera, during which Giovanni Moncada helped her flee and hide again in the Steri Palace in Palermo.[2] While this story may be true, it is not whence the castle's name originates.[citation needed]
Another source claims that the name Donnafugata refers to Queen Maria Carolina, wife of Ferdinand IV, who was confined to a palace in Santa Margherita di Belice by Lord William Bentinck, British military governor of Sicily from 1811-1816.[3]
References
edit- ^ "Donnafugata: masseria fortificata, casina neoclassica, castello neogotico, riflessioni su una mutazione".
- ^ Quatriglio, Giuseppe (1997). "Chapter IV: One Queen and Many Barons". A Thousand Years in Sicily (4th ed.). Legas / Gaetano Cipolla. p. 70. ISBN 0-921252-17-X.
- ^ "Donnafugata Tour: Santa Margherita - Sicily Day Tours".
External links
edit- Media related to Donnafugata Castle at Wikimedia Commons
- Donnafugata Castle on Ragusa municipal website Archived 2014-02-03 at the Wayback Machine
- Donnafugata Castle on hermes-sicily.com