Florinas (SS)

Florinas

Explore the enchanting municipality of Florinas, located in the province of Sassari, Sardinia. With a population of 1514 inhabitants, Florinas is a place rich in history and culture deeply rooted in the world of wine.

Inhabited since Nuragic times, Florinas saw its importance grow during the Roman era, becoming a significant oppidum. In the Middle Ages, it was part of the Judicate of Torres and was the capital of the homonymous curatoria.

At the fall of the judicate in 1259, the area became a battleground between Pisans and Genoese. After the Battle of Meloria in 1284, it definitively passed to the Genoese Doria family and later to the Malaspina family, who erected an imposing castle there.

Around 1350, Florinas came under Aragonese rule, being united with the barony of Ploaghe. This union lasted until 1839 when, with the abolition of feudalism, it was redeemed from the Aymerich family, the last feudal lords of the region. The municipality actively participated in Sardinian revolutionary uprisings against feudal lords in 1794-95.

Standing majestically in Piazza del Popolo is the church of Assunta, dating back to the 18th century. A place steeped in history and spirituality that narrates Florinas’s past events.

The variant of Sardinian spoken in Florinas is northern Logudorese. A dialect carrying ancient and authentic roots deeply tied to this land’s winemaking tradition.