Enlightenment · Europe · Disaster

1693

Sicily Earthquake Kills Sixty Thousand

1693

A pair of massive earthquakes struck the Val di Noto in southeastern Sicily, leveling Catania, Ragusa, and dozens of towns across the island's limestone plateau. An estimated sixty thousand people perished beneath baroque churches and Norman walls. The reconstruction that followed, in exuberant late-baroque style, gave Sicily some of the most theatrical architecture in Europe.