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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Beach of Capocotta
Spiaggia di Capocotta
Coordinates: 41°39′52″N 12°24′11″E / 41.66458°N 12.40297°E / 41.66458; 12.40297
LocationMetropolitan City of Rome Capital, Lazio (Italy)
Part ofLitorale Romano State Nature Reserve
Offshore water bodiesTyrrhenian Sea
Area
 • Total45 hectares (110 acres)

The beach of Capocotta is the area of the Roman coast between Castel Porziano (near Ostia) and Torvaianica (from km 7,600 to km 10,100 of the 601 State Highway), one of the best preserved stretches of dunes in Italy.
With an extension of 45 hectares (110 acres),[1] since 1996 it is part of the Litorale Romano State Nature Reserve.[2]

History

The Capocotta estate, whose former name probably was Capocorso,[3] is attested for the first time as an autonomous entity in the 15th century, when it belonged to Camillo Capranica.

It then passed to the Borghese during the 17th century; according to the 1803 Land Register, it covered a surface of about 760 hectares (1,900 acres).

At the beginning of the 20th century, it became the private property of the Royal House, which thus intended to enlarge the adjacent Castelporziano Estate, loaned to the ruling family but owned by the Italian state.

After the end of the monarchy, the estate followed the fate of the private possessions of the House of Savoy and three-quarters of it became a property of the heirs of Victor Emmanuel III.

The planned construction of a residential district in the area was averted in 1985, when, on the initiative of environmental movements and the then President Sandro Pertini, 1,000 hectares (2,500 acres) of it were annexed to the Castelporziano estate – whose use had been granted to the President of the Republic after the war,[4] thus restoring the historical unity of the ancient territory of Laurentum.[5]

What today is referred as the beach of Capocotta is therefore, in a narrow sense, the coastal strip of the old latifundium not included in the presidential estate; this justifies the name of former Capocotta Estate for the locality.

Environment

Capocotta naturist oasis

The beach of Capocotta is an LGBT tourist landmark.

The dune area of Capocotta is of considerable environmental, but also anthropological and social interest: the beach is in fact recognized by the international naturist movement[6] and is a meeting point for the Roman LGBT community.[7]

Environmental disputes

In recent years, the different interests that revolve around Capocotta have given rise to some controversies. The Control Commission of the Litorale Romano State Natural Reserve of the Ministry of the Environment, on the invitation of the Italian Naturists Union ("Lazio" section), sent a request for clarification to the Municipality of Rome and the State Forestry Corps on the fact that some demolitions of illegal settlements on government land, already ordered since 1999, had not been carried out yet.[8]

The attention of environmentalists for this area of the coast is high as well: the problems deriving from anthropogenic pressure are added to those due to the erosion of the beach caused by swells, such as the ones of 2001, with 50 meters of "eaten" coastline and collapsed dunes,[9] and 2008, following which the Lazio Region allocated 24 million euros in 2009.[10]

In popular culture

  • The legend associated with Capocotta was narrated by the Romanesco poet Augusto Sindici at the end 19th century.
  • The name of the beach became known to the Italian public for a very famous murder case, the Montesi case, which would have inspired Federico Fellini's film La Dolce Vita.[11][12]
  • With reference to the same case, the song Nuntereggae più (1978) by the singer-songwriter Rino Gaetano mentions the name of the beach.
  • More recently, Alberto Arbasino makes reference to it in several passages of his novel Fratelli d'Italia.
  • The hip-hop group Flaminio Maphia mentions it in the text of their reinterpretation (2010) of Vamos a la playa, a well-known song by Righeira.
  • In June 2017, director Raffaele Passerini screened the world premiere of the film Il Principe di Ostia Bronx (Kiné)[13] at the Biografilm Festival in Bologna.[14] The film and the archive material are almost entirely shot on the beach of Capocotta.

In the 1970s, Pier Paolo Pasolini used the beach as the location of one of its "corsair" interviews.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Aree protette". Legambiente. Archived from the original on February 11, 2009.
  2. ^ Decree of the Ministry of Environment March 29, 1996.
  3. ^ As reported by Lucas Holstenius; see "chapter V, by Laurenzio, Lavinio and Lauro-Lavinio". Dissertazioni della Pontificia Accademia Romana di Archeologia. Vol. 2. p. 506.
  4. ^ "La Tenuta di Castelporziano". on the website of the Presidence of Italian Republic.
  5. ^ O. Amore; G. Alfani; M. Di Tullio; L. Mocarelli (2013). "Tipologie ambientali e gestione delle risorse nel Lazio. La "Marittima nel lunghissimo periodo". Storia economica e ambiente italiano (ca. 1400–1850). Franco Angeli Editore. pp. 252–253. ISBN 9788856847086.
  6. ^ "Oasi Naturista di Capocotta".
  7. ^ "Coppia gay cacciata dalla spiaggia a Capocotta. L'Arcigay chiede i danni". Il Messaggero. August 11, 2010. Archived from the original on June 6, 2014. Retrieved October 28, 2020.
  8. ^ "Ambiente". Archived from the original on May 8, 2006.
  9. ^ "Capocotta, una montagna di rifiuti sotto l'ultima mareggiata". Corriere della Sera. March 18, 2001.
  10. ^ "C'era una volta una spiaggia: le mareggiate hanno cancellato il litorale". April 22, 2009.
  11. ^ Philip French (February 17, 2008). "Italian cinema's sweet success". The Observer. Retrieved April 8, 2010.
  12. ^ Karen Pinkus, The Montesi Scandal: The Death of Wilma Montesi and the Birth of the Paparazzi in Fellini's Rome, University of Chicago Press, 2003
  13. ^ "Il Principe di Ostia Bronx | Kiné—doc". Kiné—doc (in Italian). April 3, 2017. Retrieved June 12, 2017.
  14. ^ "Biografilm Festival | International celebrations of lives". www.biografilm.it (in Italian). Retrieved June 12, 2017.

Bibliography

Environment

  • Alexandra Bernitsas (curated by), Capocotta ultima spiaggia: proposta per il parco naturalistico-archeologico del litorale romano, catalog of the exhibition by the Municipality of Rome – Department of Culture and Italia Nostra – Rome, Quasar, 1985 ISBN 88-85020-62-3.
  • Various authors, Stato delle dune del litorale laziale compreso fra Castel Fusano e Capocotta, edited by AIAS (Associazione Italiana amatori delle piante succulente), s.l., s.n., 2004.
  • Massimo Biondi, Loris Pietrelli, Birdwatching sul litorale romano: elenco preliminare degli uccelli che frequentano il litorale da Maccarese a Capocotta (stesura aggiornata al novembre 1987), LIPU – Delegation of Ostia Lido, Municipality of Rome – XIII District, Municipality of Rome – Department of Culture, Rome, Arti grafiche San Marcello, 1987.

Montesi case

  • Karen Pinkus, The Montesi Scandal: The Death of Wilma Montesi and the Birth of the Paparazzi in Fellini's Rome, University of Chicago Press, 2003.
  • Francesco Floris, L'ultimo re di Capocotta, Florence, Edizioni Leonardo, 1954.

Literature

  • Augusto Sindici, La Capocotta: 12. leggenda della campagna romana, in Nuova Antologia, nr. 34, file 664, August 16, 1899.
  • Alberto Arbasino, Fratelli d'Italia, Adelphi, 1990. ISBN 88-06-25106-6.

External links

This page was last edited on 14 November 2023, at 01:13
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