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Castelgrande is part of the Comunita' Montana di Marmo Melandro,[3] previously part of the Comunita' Montana di Marmo Platano.
History.
Origins and the Norman-Swabian period.According to some hypotheses, the origins of Castelgrande date back to the early Middle Ages: Nicola Cianci di Leo Sanseverino believes, in fact, that they date back to the 10th century as a result of the devastation carried out by the Saracens who "destroyed the two lands of S. Pietro a Piegara and S. Varva, the first to the southeast and the other to the north of Muro and Castelgrande"; Francesco Masi also places the origins of Castelgrande between the 9th and 10th centuries, at the time of the reconquest of much of Lucania by the imperial forces underBasil I of Macedon.Towards the end of the Lombard rule, the territory of Castelgrande belonged toGuy of Sorrento, the lastgastald ofConza, who in 1058/1059 gave his daughter Maria in marriage toWilliam of Hauteville (1027-1080), thus favoring the transition of the new Norman ruling class. William inherited from Guy all the possessions in the Principality of Salerno and received from his brotherHumphrey of Hauteville, Count of Puglia and Calabria, the great County of the Principality (1060-1156) as well as the title of comes ofEboli, where the seat of the county court was placed. The territory of Castelgrande, located along the Laviano - San Fele route, guarded the border with the County of Conza, located to the north. Around 1080 Robert, firstborn of William of Hauteville, succeeded his father in the County of the Principality of Salerno. Unlike Muro, Pescopagano, Bella, and San Fele, Castelgrande is not mentioned in theCatalogus Baronum (mid-12th century), which, according to Giacomo Racioppi, is consistent with a Norman-era foundation, while according to Angelo Racaniello and Nicola Cianci di Leo Sanseverino, its origins would be earlier and the absence of Castelgrande in the Catalogus would be explained by the fact that it was part of the royal demesne and therefore not subject to any feudal lord.
The first known mention of Castelgrande dates back to the so-calledStatutum de riparatione castrorum (1231-1240), in which it is established that the maintenance of the castrum Petre Pagane (Pescopagano) must be provided by: "hominem eiusdem Terre, Tufarie, Castelli de Grandis, Plancani", that is, the same men from Pescopagano, those from Tufaria (San Lorenzo in Tufara), from Castelgrande, from Plancano (Cianciuoli, a place near Laviano).