Bronte is a town and comune of Sicily. Bronte is located slightly northwest of Mount Etna, on the side of the valley of the Simeto river. It is about 30 kilometers west of the coast.
In 1799, King Ferdinand III created Bronte as a Duchy, and rewarded admiral Horatio Nelson with the title of Duke for the help he had provided him in bloodily repressing the revolution in Naples and so in recovering his throne. As well as being made a Duke, Nelson was given as a fief the Castello Maniace, which at the time was the remains of a Benedictine Monastery. The Castle passed into the Bridport family when the 1st Viscount Bridport married the then Duchess of Bronte, who was Admiral Nelson’s niece. The Bridports continued to live in the castle until 1982 when the current Viscount sold the property to the province of Catania. A recent book has been written about the Duchy: Nelson’s Duchy: A Sicilian Anomaly by Michael Pratt. Today it is a local tourist attraction in Maniace, yet has been run down since the family left. In 1860, during Garibaldi’s Expedition of the thousand, there was a riot. The peasants had hoped for – and did not get from Garibaldi – an immediate relief from the grievous conditions to which they were forced by the landowners. They revolted in several localities, and at Bronte, on August 4, 1860, Garibaldi’s friend Nino Bixio bloodily repressed one of these revolts with two battalions of Redshirts.
Bronte’s name derives from that of one of the First Cyclopes and it means “The Thunderer”. Legend has it that the Cyclopes lived under Mount Etna, where they crafted weaponry for Zeus and other Gods. Bronte is mostly reliant on farming for its economy. A major part of its farming is pistachio nuts.