Redirected from Matera
Apart from an economy which has traditionally been based on agriculture, in the late 1990s the major means of support of Matera, and of other cities around it, is the production of drawing-room furniture.
At the beginning of the 21st century, the town has about 60,000 inhabitants.
Matera is mostly famous in the world for its ancient town and its ancient typical houses, the so-called "Sassi[?] di Matera" (meaning "stones of Matera") which is a prehistorical (troglodyte) settlement, and is suspected to be one of the first human settlements in Italy. This ancient town lays over a small canyon, which has been dug in the course of years by a small water stream, called "Gravina".
This town has many peculiar, unique characters:
A memorable chapter on Matera, describing the really poor life of people in the south of Italy at the beginning of the twentieth century, is in the book "Cristo si è fermato ad Eboli[?]" (Christ stopped at Eboli[?]) by Carlo Levi[?]
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