place

Palazzo Vermexio

Baroque architecture in SicilyBuildings and structures completed in 1633Houses completed in the 17th centuryPalaces in Siracusa
Palazzo del Senato, Ortygia, Syracuse, Province of Syracuse, Sicily, Italy panoramio
Palazzo del Senato, Ortygia, Syracuse, Province of Syracuse, Sicily, Italy panoramio

Palazzo Vermexio is a 17th-century Baroque monumental building, located facing Piazza Duomo in the island of Ortigia in Siracusa, region of Sicily, Italy. It presently serves as city hall.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Palazzo Vermexio (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Palazzo Vermexio
Via Saverio Landolina, Syracuse

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Palazzo VermexioContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.06043 ° E 15.29328 °
placeShow on map

Address

Bijouets

Via Saverio Landolina
96100 Syracuse
Sicily, Italy
mapOpen on Google Maps

Palazzo del Senato, Ortygia, Syracuse, Province of Syracuse, Sicily, Italy panoramio
Palazzo del Senato, Ortygia, Syracuse, Province of Syracuse, Sicily, Italy panoramio
Share experience

Nearby Places

Siege of Syracuse (877–878)
Siege of Syracuse (877–878)

The siege of Syracuse from 877 to 878 led to the fall of the city of Syracuse, the Roman capital of Sicily, to the Aghlabids. The siege lasted from August 877 to 21 May 878 when the city, effectively left without assistance by the central Byzantine government, was sacked by the Aghlabid forces. Following their first landing in Sicily in the late 820s, the Aghlabids had tried several times, without success, to capture Syracuse. They were able to gradually take over the western half of the island, however, and, in 875, a new and energetic governor, Ja'far ibn Muhammad, was appointed, determined to capture the city. Ja'far began the siege in August 877 but soon left it in charge of his son Abu Ishaq, while he retired to Palermo. The Arabs were well-supplied with siege weapons, while the inhabitants of Syracuse were left largely unsupported by the Byzantine fleet, which was busy with transporting marble for a new church in Constantinople and was then delayed by adverse weather. Consequently, the besieged populace faced great hardships and famine as described in detail by the eyewitness account of Theodosios the Monk. Finally, the Aghlabids managed to effect a breach in the seaward walls and on 21 May 878 managed to break through it into the city. The defenders and much of the populace were massacred, while others, including Theodosios, were taken prisoner. The Byzantine patrikios, who commanded the defense, surrendered with a few of his men, but they were executed after a week, while a handful of soldiers escaped and brought the news east to the fleet that had belatedly set sail to aid the city. The Muslims were unable to capitalize upon this success due to internal rivalries, which even led to a full-scale civil war. Small-scale warfare with the Byzantines continued without any side gaining a decisive advantage until the arrival of the deposed Aghlabid emir Ibrahim II, who in 902 rallied the Sicilian Muslims and captured Taormina, effectively completing the Muslim conquest of Sicily, although a few fortresses remained in Byzantine hands until 965.