Paolotti Hypogeum
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Description
Carved into the rock, the Ipogeo dei Paolotti of Grottaglie features a millstone, mangers and wells for collecting oil. This complex is located within the Paolotti monastery, which still retains a beautiful painted cloister, one of the few intact in Apulia. The earliest hypogea also included tombs in the cistern church and a system of caves behind the church consisting of various cavities, some of considerable size, formerly used as workshops for tanners an oil mill and a neviera. In the caves behind the church that can now be visited, there was a tannery that used the tanks to soak and treat hides. Inside the cave rooms are preserved the mangers that were used for the animals, mainly pigs that were then slaughtered.
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Grottaglie
The church is a typical example of Salento Baroque with its characteristic ‘tufa’ face. The cloister is decorated with frescoes and, if there is a chance, the underground oil mill is definitely worth a visit.
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