Sant'Agata de' Goti is a comune (municipality) and former Catholic bishopric in the Province of Benevento in the Italian region Campania, located about northeast of Naples and about west of Benevento near the Monte Taburno.
The comune of SantâÂÂAgata deâÂÂGoti was built over the site of the city of Saticula, and artefacts that belonged to the Samnites have been found in the territory of SantâÂÂAgata. In 343 BC, Aulus Cornelius Cossus, a Roman General, constructed a castra, which was a military base for Roman soldiers used in winter. The city of Saticula became a Roman colony following the Second Punic War.
The Castrum of Sant'Agata, which originated from the settlement of Saticulan populations after 42 BC, became an important strategic centre under the Byzantines before passing under Lombard control in the 6th century, becoming a gastaldia of the Duchy of Benevento. Despite subsequent Frankish domination in the 8th and 9th centuries, the city retained a certain degree of autonomy, culminating in the creation of the Diocese of Sant'Agata de' Goti in 970.During the Norman period, starting in the 11th century under the Drengot family, the city underwent a radical urban transformation: a powerful fortified wall was built, exploiting the pre-existing quarries, making it an almost impregnable stronghold, fiercely contested between local barons, such as Rainulfo Drengot, and the Sicilian crown of Roger II, who took definitive control of it in 1139.
After a period under Swabian rule, the fiefdom of Sant'Agata de' Goti was granted by Queen Joanna I to the d'Artus family, natural descendants of Charles II of Anjou. Despite tragic internal events, culminating in the beheading of Charles II d'Artus for his involvement in the murder of Andrew of Hungary, the family retained control of the territory until the extinction of the line with Ladislaus d'Artus in 1401. Subsequently, in 1432, Queen Joanna II donated the fief to the Catalan nobleman Baldassarre De la Rath, whose family retained possession even during the transition to the Aragonese kingdom, until the marriage of Caterina de la Rath to Andrea Matteo Acquaviva, Duke of Atri and a well-known humanist prince, which sealed the union of the fief with the vast estates of the Acquaviva family.
From the 16th to the 18th century, the fiefdom of Sant'Agata de' Goti underwent intense dynastic struggles, passing from the Della Ratta family (Italianisation of the name De la Rath, with figures such as Francesco Della Ratta, husband of Donna Altobella Gesualdo, who attempted to regain control in 1585) to the Cossa family and finally, in 1696, to the Carafa della Stadera di Maddaloni, who retained possession until the abolition of feudalism, renovating the castle and turning it into their home.At the same time, the Cathedral greatly increased its economic and religious power in the area, while the city underwent significant urban and industrial development under the Bourbons: in the second half of the 18th century, infrastructure such as the Ferriera Nova along the Isclero River was built, promoted by Charles of Bourbon, and important public works were carried out, including the municipal villa in Piazza della Torricella and various public wash houses. This period of modernisation led to the creation of new squares and patrician residences. In 1566 the diocese of SantâÂÂAgata deâÂÂGoti nominated Felice Peretti (future Pope Sixtus V) as bishop. Peretti led the modernisation of the town. In 2004 the town was awarded the âÂÂorange flagâ by the Italian Touring Club.