The Cathedral of Troia is one of the most important Romanesque buildings in Italy and almost nobody outside of architecture specialists knows it exists. Built between 1093 and 1200 on a hill at the edge of the Subappennino Dauno looking over the Tavoliere plain, the cathedral combines elements of Apulian Romanesque, Byzantine, and Arab-Norman decorative traditions in a way that reflects the extraordinary cultural synthesis of Norman southern Italy. The bronze portal (cast in 1127 by the artist Oderisius da Benevento) has 24 panels of extraordinary figural relief. The rose window above is a unique surviving example in Puglia. The town's heresy trials in the 14th century ended with a papal commissioner forgiving everyone involved. Puglia guide
Plan my Italy trip →Region: Puglia, province of Foggia (Subappennino Dauno) | Population: ~7,000 | Cathedral: Built 1093–1200, UNESCO tentative list | Bronze portal: Oderisius da Benevento, 1127 | Altitude: 439 m a.s.l. | Distance from Foggia: 22 km
The Cathedral of Troia (Cattedrale dell'Assunta) was begun by the Normans in 1093 on the site of an earlier church and completed in stages through the 12th century. It represents the specific cultural synthesis of Norman rule in southern Italy: the Normans who conquered the region in the mid-11th century were not culturally dominant over the populations they governed — they adapted to and incorporated the existing Byzantine, Lombard, and Arab artistic traditions into their own building programmes. The Troia cathedral shows this synthesis in concentrated form: the Apulian Romanesque base structure (the same school that produced the Trani Cathedral, the Barletta Cathedral, and the Ruvo di Puglia Cathedral), with Byzantine decorative stonework in the blind arcades, and an extraordinary Arab-influenced rose window that is the only surviving example of this type in Puglia.
The rose window (the large circular window in the upper facade) is a complex geometric tracery in carved stone — the interlaced pattern of the tracery is specifically Arab-derived in its mathematical structure, the same tradition as the Cosmati pavements of Rome and the geometric decorative programmes of Arab-Norman Sicily. The window has 11 openings arranged in a radial pattern with secondary geometric elements — the complexity of the carving programme represents months of specialist stonework. No other Puglia Romanesque facade rose window of this type and complexity survives intact.
The main bronze portal of the Troia Cathedral was cast in 1127 by the artist Oderisius da Benevento. The portal has 24 panels arranged in 6 rows of 4, with figural relief depicting: scenes from the life of Christ (the upper section); saints and apostles (the middle section); and allegorical and narrative scenes of uncertain iconographic programme (the lower section). The quality of the casting and the depth of the relief is exceptional for the date — 1127 is early for a programme of this ambition in southern Italian bronze casting. The portal represents the beginning of the Apulian bronze casting tradition that reaches its peak with the Barisano da Trani portals at Ravello and Monreale a few decades later. The iconography includes a signature panel identifying Oderisius as the maker — one of the early examples of named artist identification in Italian medieval art.
In the 14th century, Troia was the site of a heresy investigation by a papal inquisitor — the specific heresy investigated being Catharism (the dualistic Christian heresy that had spread from Languedoc into Italy, presenting a significant theological and political challenge to the papacy throughout the 12th–14th centuries). The Troia investigation concluded in an unusual way: the papal commissioner, having investigated the specific beliefs of the town's accused, determined that the deviations from orthodoxy were matters of local tradition and misunderstanding rather than deliberate heresy, and forgave the accused with penances rather than condemnation. This outcome was uncommon in the 14th-century inquisitorial context and reflects either the specific mildness of the commissioner or the specific nature of the Troia community's religious life. The episode is documented in the diocesan archives and cited in studies of southern Italian heresy.
Troia is 22 km from Foggia — 25 minutes by car on the SS160. By train: no direct rail to Troia; the nearest station is Foggia (intercity rail from Naples 2.5 hours, from Rome 3.5 hours) with a bus or taxi connection. The cathedral is free to enter and open daily (hours approximately 9am–12pm and 4pm–7pm, variable); the bronze portal is the exterior feature, visible at any hour. The view from the hill over the Tavoliere plain (the vast flat agricultural plain of northern Puglia) is the second major reason to visit — the hill position gives a 180-degree panorama from the Apennines to the plain. Combine with Bovino (8 km south, a perfectly preserved small hilltop village with Roman roots) and Lucera (20 km north, with the extraordinary Arab castle built by Frederick II for his Saracen soldiers) for the full Subappennino Dauno circuit. Puglia guide →
Troia in the Foggia province Subappennino Dauno zone is famous for its Cathedral — one of the finest Romanesque buildings in southern Italy, with the bronze portal (cast 1127 by Oderisius da Benevento, 24 figural relief panels) and the extraordinary Arab-influenced rose window (the only surviving example of this type and complexity in Puglia). The cathedral combines Apulian Romanesque structure with Byzantine and Arab-Norman decorative traditions characteristic of Norman southern Italy. The hill position gives panoramic views over the Tavoliere plain.
Troia is 22 km from Foggia — approximately 25 minutes by car via the SS160. By public transport: the SITA bus service from Foggia connects to Troia (check current timetables at the Foggia bus station); approximately 35–40 minutes. There is no direct train station in Troia. From Bari: 175 km, approximately 2 hours by car via the A14 and SS90. A car is strongly recommended for combining Troia with the surrounding Subappennino Dauno villages (Bovino, Lucera, Orsara di Puglia).
The Subappennino Dauno (also called the Monti Dauni or the Appennino Dauno) is the hilly zone of northwestern Puglia — the transition between the high Apennines and the flat Tavoliere plain, in the province of Foggia. It is one of the least-visited areas of Puglia (most Puglia tourism concentrates on the Salento, Ostuni/Valle d'Itria, and the Gargano coast) but has a distinctive character: hilltop villages with intact medieval centres (Troia, Bovino, Orsara di Puglia), spectacular Apennine-edge views over the Tavoliere plain, and a specific mountain-agricultural cuisine (funghi, truffles, lamb, aged cheeses) distinct from the coastal Puglia food tradition.
Norman Puglia architecture (11th–12th century) is the specific building tradition produced when the Norman rulers of southern Italy combined Lombard Romanesque structural forms with Byzantine decorative programmes and Arab geometric ornament. The key characteristics: blind arcade decoration on facades (vertical shallow niches separated by thin columns); bronze portals with figured relief (Trani, Troia, Barletta); rose windows with geometric tracery (Troia is the finest example); and the specific quality of the Apulian limestone carving. Key buildings: the Trani Cathedral (begun 1098, on the seafront), the Barletta Cathedral (11th–13th century), the Ruvo di Puglia Cathedral (12th century), and the Troia Cathedral. The sequence forms the Puglia Romanesque tourist circuit of the Murge and Tavoliere zones.
Lucera (20 km north of Troia) is famous for the Castello di Lucera — a massive 13th-century fortified complex built by Frederick II of Hohenstaufen (Holy Roman Emperor and King of Sicily) to house approximately 20,000 Saracen (Arab Muslim) soldiers and their families, whom he relocated from Sicily to prevent local uprisings. The Muslim community of Lucera maintained its mosques, baths, and religious life inside the fortified enclosure for several decades until the Angevin rulers destroyed it in 1300. The ruins of the castle (one of the largest medieval military constructions in southern Italy) are accessible and free. The specific historical story — the Holy Roman Emperor maintaining a Muslim military colony in 13th-century Catholic Italy — is one of the most unusual episodes in medieval Italian history.
Troia is worth visiting for the Cathedral (one of the finest Romanesque buildings in southern Italy, with the bronze portal and the Arab-influenced rose window) and the panoramic hill position over the Tavoliere plain. It rewards visitors with genuine interest in Italian Romanesque architecture or Norman southern Italy. The town is small (1–2 hours) and most rewarding when combined with the surrounding Subappennino Dauno (Bovino and Lucera make a full day circuit). Not a mass-tourism destination; specifically valuable for architectural tourists who have already covered the more famous sites.
The Subappennino Dauno food tradition is mountain-Apulian rather than coastal: funghi (wild mushrooms from the Apennine foothills, particularly porcini and ovuli); tartufo nero (black truffle, produced in the Monti Dauni zone in limited quantities); lamb and kid (agnello e capretto, the defining meat of the Apennine pastoral tradition); caciocavallo podolico (the mature, smoked, pear-shaped cheese made from Podolica cattle milk — the finest and most expensive Italian cow cheese, produced in the Subappennino zone); and the local handmade pasta traditions (troccoli, a thick spaghetti-like pasta cut on a ribbed rolling pin, with lamb ragu or wild mushroom sauce). The Orsara di Puglia village (15 km from Troia) is specifically known for its seasonal mushroom and truffle cuisine.
Troia Cathedral + Lucera Muslim castle + Bovino hilltop village + Trani seafront cathedral — the Norman Puglia circuit.
Plan my Puglia trip →The Norman Romanesque cathedral circuit in Puglia: the Cathedral of Trani (50 km east of Troia, begun 1098, directly on the seafront above the Adriatic — one of the most dramatically positioned cathedrals in Italy; the crypt dates from 6th century); the Cathedral of Barletta (60 km east, 11th–13th century, adjacent to the famous Colossus of Barletta — the largest surviving bronze statue from antiquity outside Constantinople); the Cathedral of Ruvo di Puglia (70 km southeast, 12th century, the finest Apulian Romanesque facade after Trani in terms of carved ornament); and the Cathedral of Bitonto (80 km southeast, 12th–13th century, with a specific ambo and carved portal of high quality). The full Romanesque Puglia circuit covers all five cathedrals plus Troia in a 2-day drive.
Bovino is a small hill town 8 km south of Troia, in the same Subappennino Dauno zone, with a remarkably intact medieval centre and a specific archaeological history — the Roman Vibinum was an important road junction town on the Via Traiana (the Roman road connecting Benevento to Brindisi). The medieval Cathedral of Bovino (11th century, with significant Romanesque carvings) and the Castello Ducale are the principal monuments. Bovino received the Borghi Belli d'Italia designation (one of Italy's Most Beautiful Villages). The combination of Troia (22 km north) + Bovino (8 km south) + Lucera (28 km north of Troia) makes the complete Subappennino Dauno circuit for a single car day from Foggia or Bari.
Apulian Romanesque (also called Puglia Romanesque) is the specific regional variant of Romanesque architecture developed in the Norman Kingdom of Sicily (which included all of southern Italy) from approximately 1050–1200 AD. Key characteristics: the use of local Apulian limestone, which has a warm ivory colour and allows fine carving; the use of blind arcading (vertical shallow arched niches) as the primary exterior decorative element; the specific treatment of the entrance portal with multiple orders of carved arch mouldings; bronze doors with figured relief panels (Trani, Troia, Barletta are the primary examples); and the incorporation of Byzantine mosaic and Arab geometric decorative elements within the Romanesque structural framework. The result is an architecture more ornamentally varied and more culturally hybrid than northern Italian Romanesque — the direct product of Norman rule over populations of Byzantine, Arab, Lombard, and Jewish heritage.