Abstract:
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[EN] Otranto is one of the biggest ancient settlements in the Salento (Puglia), in the easternmost part of the
Italian peninsula. This location has always affected the city’s history, which has a stratified system ...[+]
[EN] Otranto is one of the biggest ancient settlements in the Salento (Puglia), in the easternmost part of the
Italian peninsula. This location has always affected the city’s history, which has a stratified system of
defence. As a result of the Turkish invasion of 1480, the city was completely destroyed. During the
counter-offensive of 1481 the city was reconquered by the Aragonese, who are credited with the reconstruction of the city and its defences, building high walls with circular towers (still visible and well conserved), which housed artillery pieces on the various floors of the casemates. Around the mid sixteenth
century the existing defensive structures were enriched with bastions including the imposing pentagonal
structure that incorporates the circular tower of the late fifteenth century, the so-called Torre Matta, facing the harbour. As part of recent recovery measures, the enormous room inside the bastion was completely emptied. This entailed removing all the accumulated material which, over the years, had come to
fill the entire space. This material obscured the external wall of the fifteenth century tower enclosed
within the bastion, of which, at the beginning of the work, only the stone corbels and the blind arches at
the top were visible. The material had also prevented access via the only original entrance, on the southeast side, which was on the level of the moat. The stratified deposits to be removed were about 18 m
deep, and the operation served to bring to light the entire room and the tower, making it possible for the
first time to appreciate the relationship between the walls. To record the geometry of the individual architectural features, a 3D laser scan was performed, integrated with direct surveys. A three-dimensional
model was created in order to enable virtual visits and disseminate knowledge of the monument.
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