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Assisi in Italy
stretches out on the slopes of the Monte Subasio, above the plain
where the Topino and Chiascio rivers flow.
Although it can boast Roman origins, its present-day appearance,
because of the buildings and also the urban structure, is surely due
to the city's development during the Middle Ages. Assisi's oldest
nucleus, which is protected by a defensive apparatus made up of
eight fortified entrance portals and a long belt of town walls,
which are still perfectly preserved, is topped by two castles on
peak of the mountain: the Major Castle, reconstructed by the
Cardinal Albornoz in 1367 and the Minor Castle. Apart from religious
buildings too important to not be considered solely the heritage of
Assisi such as the basilica of
San
Francesco, the tourist
can also visit the churches of
Santa Chiara
and
San Pietro.
The first was constructed in the Gothic style between 1257 and 1265,
the second is a little older and decorated with an elegant middle
portal with three rose-windows. The Cathedral, dedicated to the
Patron Saint
San Rufino,vaunts
a splendid and unaltered facade with sculptures and reliefs; the
interior, however, has undergone much reconstruction during the
centuries which have distorted the original project dating back to
the 13th century. On the Town Square situated on the ancient Forum,
you will find the Priors' Palace (1337), the Palace of the People's
Captain (12th century) and the temple of Minerva, built during the
augustean period with pronaos, columms and corinthian capitals which
are still intact. Nearby, places which are connected with the life
of St. Francis can be visited, sich as the Eremitage of the Prisons,
immersed in a thick wood of oaks and ilex on the slopes of the
Subasio Mountain, and the convent of St. Damian, which was built up
around the oratory were, according to tradition, the Cross spoke to
the Saint. Finally, in the plain, the impressive
Santa Maria degli
Angeli was
built according to the plans of Alessi between 1569 and 1679 to
protect theCappella della Porziuncola,
which was the first simple meeting-place of the Francescan
brotherhood. All those who have the good luck of visiting this
splendid town have to agree with who says that the beauty of town
goes beyond a short, and necessarily incomplete list of works of art
more or less extraordinary, but is however to be found in the
atmosphere of places which the story and the faith of the Saint have
rendered unique all over the world.
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