The “Parata dei Turchi” should be intended as genuine historical reenactment; Through the figures, the characters, the costumes, the accessories, the weapons, three precise historical periods are told: the Middle Ages, the Renaissance and the Nineteenth Century. The Parade, i.e. the long sequence of figures, animals and other characteristic elements is divided in frameworks, in Italian “Quadri”. These frameworks are three and each one represents a specific period, in sequence (from the beginning) the Nineteenth Century, the Renaissance and the Middle Ages. Attending the Parade therefore is equivalent to the vision of a film projected backwards, from the latest events to the most remote ones. The styles, the chromatic aspects and the setting of each of the frameworks distinguishes them from the others. The central framework, corresponding to Renaissance, is divided in five smaller sections, every section recalls an event or a important episode of the history of Potenza or of the Patron Saint San Gerardo. Here in the following the structure of the Parade in detail:
The very first framework refers to social and cultural context of the nineteenth century, described in detail by the Potentine historian Raffaele Riviello who reported with great accuracy the structure of the people consisting of nobles, bourgeois, religious, craftsmen and peasants who awaited the traditional celebrations of the Patron Saint. The Potentine people identified themselves in the celebration by interpreting the components of the Parade through well-defined disguises, costumes and roles. The costumes in particular are highly sought and specific, providing a picture of the complex social structure of nineteenth-century, from the noble and wealthy classes to the popular people to whom were reserved the roles of the Turkish soldiers, the Latin swordsmen and the peasants. Today, this framework is characterized by numerous figures that take part in the procession with highly sought and elegant costumes, made as prescribed by Disciplinary (White Book of Parade) following precise stylistic guidelines by professional tailors.
The second framework is the largest and most articulated section of the Parade, it is divided into 5 minor sections that tell specific moments or episodes. The five sections belonging to this framework clearly inspired by Renaissance represent the following elements: I – “The Turks and their life”, II – “The Turkish army”, III - “San Gerardo defeat the Turks”, IV – “The liberation of the City”, V – “The arrival in Potenza of the Count Don Alfonso De Guevara”. This section is characterized by a great variety of clothes and costumes, weapons, musical instruments, flags, drapes and other decorative elements.
Each of the five sections in which the 1500s framework is divided is characterized by some distinctive elements, recalling important events or facts:
The third and the last framework of the Parade is set in the years in which Gerardo della Porta lived, after which he became the Patron Saint of Potenza, so corresponding to natural closure to the Parade. This framework stages a picture of the life in the medieval period of Potenza characterized by a deep feeling of faith and devotion towards the figure of the Saint. A small procession is staged typically inspired by Middle Ages highlighting several religious figures, such as friars and priests, the popular class made of farmers and craftsmen and, in particular, the knights of “San Giovanni di Gerusalemme” (Saint John of Jerusalem), a monastic-knightly Order founded after the First Crusade and devoted to the assistance and rescue of the persecuted and oppressed Christian faithful. The “Tempietto di San Gerardo” (Temple of San Gerardo) brought by shoulder by “Portatori del Santo” (Bearers of the Saint) closes the Parade. This wooden simulacrum symbolizes the figure of San Gerardo who descends among Potentine people along the streets of the City the day before the anniversary of the Saint (May 30). The Parade ends when the Temple arrives at the Cathedral of San Gerardo, located in the Historic Centre of Potenza.