pavia, un breve giro della città
TRANSCRIPT
http://www.authorstream.com/Presentation/sandamichaela-1859928-pavia5/
Dating back over 2,000 years, the city of Pavia (pop. 71,000) served as the capital of Lombard and Carolingian Empires from ca. 600AD - 1100AD.
The construction (presently still unfinished in some minor details) of The Cathedral of Pavia was begun in the 15th century on the site of two pre-existing Romanesque cathedrals (Santo Stefano and Santa Maria del Popolo). The cathedral houses the remains of St. Sirus, first bishop of Pavia..
The cathedral was begun in 1488 under architect Cristoforo Rocchi, soon replaced by Giovanni Antonio Amadeo and Gian Giacomo Dolcebuono.
The original project, with a nave and two aisles flanked by semicircular niches and a large central dome, was influenced by Bramante, some details of it later appearing in St. Peter's Basilica in Rome. Also Leonardo da Vinci is known to have contributed to the project.
The central dome, with an
octagonal plan, is 97 m tall. It is
the fourth in Italy in size,
after St. Peter's, the Pantheon and Florence
Cathedral. The Cathedral
houses the Christ Crown's
Thorns.
On the background the majestic octagonal dome of Pavia's Cathedral. In close up the Broletto Palace, the oldest in all Lombardy, which was in the middle age the symbol of the municipal independence. Next to the cathedral was the Civic Tower (Torre Civica).
Next to the cathedral was the Civic Tower (Torre Civica), known in 1330 and enlarged in 1583, which collapsed on March 17 1989, killing several people. Both Broletto and the Civic Tower were for more than a thousand years the symbol of the autonomy and authority of the Free Commune. The former as the seat of the powers, of the election meetings and sometimes of the Notaries and Merchants’ Corporations; the latter, symbol built toward the sky to call and gather the people with the sound of its bells and to reassert the Commune’s power just beside the Cathedral.
The Broletto Palace and Pavia's Cathedral
It is a composition that cannot be
conceived separately even if between the
two monuments there is a distance of
several metres. The Broletto is the oldest building in Lombardy
belonging to the Commune Age. Its name comes from “Brolio” that is the area in which the people of a Free
Commune used to gather. For almost a
thousand years it has been the heart of
Pavia
Palazzo del Broletto
The Regisole ("Sun King") was
a bronze classical or Late
Antique equestrian monument,
highly influential during the Italian Renaissance but
destroyed in 1796.
The Regisole ("Sun King") was originally erected at Ravenna, but was removed to Pavia in the Middle Ages, where it stood on a column before the cathedral, as an emblem of communal pride and Pavia's deep connection with imperial Rome
According to different modern scholars the subject was possibly Theodoric the Great, King of the Ostrogoths (reigned 471-526), or it was "probably a Roman work of the third century AD", or "possibly Septimius Severus, with several later modifications" (he was emperor 193-211)
After the French Revolution, the Regisole was destroyed by the Jacobin Club in Pavia in 1796, since it was considered a symbol of monarchy.In 1937 sculptor Francesco Messina was entrusted with the execution of a copy, according to ancient reproductions. The new Regisole, a 6-meter high bronze statue placed on a base of travertine, was relocated to the front of the Cathedral of Pavia and solemnly inaugurated on December 8, 1937.The most recent monograph of its history is Cesare Saletti, Il Regisole di Pavia, 1997.
La Cupola Arnaboldi (1882) Corso Mazzini
Arnaboldi Gallery was built by the Mayor of Pavia, count Bernardo
Arnaboldi Cazzaniga,
between 1880 and 1882, perhaps inspired by the
magnificent Gallery of Milan in
1867.
Arnaboldi Gallery in Pavia was place for
commercial and
agricultural trading and
was also known as the indoor market.
Arnaboldi Gallery is
composed of a single central
octagonal room, covered by a glass and iron Dome, two short tunnels for entrance
and exit and a portico to the
square of linen.
"Piazza della Vittoria" (Victory Square) in the hearth of Pavia, is about 700 years old.
Piazza della Vittoria Pavia
Piazza della Vittoria Pavia
Victory Square
The walls and the bastions were demolished between the end of the last century and the beginning of the present one. Some parts of them can still be seen; All that remained of the huge medieval fortifications of the famous battle between King Francis I of France and the German emperor Charles V. The Battle of Pavia, fought on the morning of 24 February 1525, was the decisive engagement of the Italian War of 1521–26.
Fresco Chiesa di S.Teodoro
Pomegranate (Punica granatum)
the monument to the Cairoli family, heroes during the Risorgimentodedicato dalla Patria 1900 opera dello scultore Enrico Cassi Piazza del lino
Palazzo Mezzabarba the Town HallThe residence of Mezzabarba Counts was planned following the Late Baroque style (Rococò) by architect Giovanni Antonio Veneroni in the years 1728-1730 and it became seat of the Town Hall in 1875.
The statue of Augustus Caesar in Town Hall Square is a replica of the original statue that depicts Caesar Octavian, later called Augustus Caesar, born in 63 BC and died in A.D. 14 in Nola near Naples.
From the entrance and the hall rich in columns, it is possible to reach the hall on the first floor (presently the Council Hall) painted with mythological themes by Giovanni Antonio Borroni from Cremona. Some other halls still preserve painted decorations and sometimes curious pieces of furniture.
The statue that we admire in Piazza Municipio is cast in bronze and is perfect in every detail. It was donated to the Municipality of Pavia in 1936 by the Head of the Government at the time, Benito Mussolini during his visit to Pavia to usher in the new City Hall and the Imperial Bridge just been completed.
Orto Botanico
Teatro Fraschini
San Michele Maggiore can be considered the prototype of other important medieval churches in Pavia such as San Pietro in Ciel d'Oro and San Teodoro
Basilica di San Michele Maggiore, striking example of Lombard-Romanesque style.
The church of the Franciscan Preaching Friars was begun in 1228 and ended in 1298. The apse, shaped as a Greek cross, is built on five large spans covered by pointed arches cross-vaults. The long nave has a wooden truss roof. The building material is terracotta bricks like other churches in Pavia.
San Francesco Il Gotico lombardo
San Francesco
Il Gotico lombardo
Piazza San Francesco
d'Assisi
Parco dei bersaglieri
Parco dei bersaglieri
Garibaldi and the Resorgimento
monument (by Egidio Pozzi di
Milano)
Giuseppe Garibaldi (1807 –1882) was an Italian general
and politician. He is considered, with Camillo Cavour,
Victor Emmanuel II and Giuseppe
Mazzini, as one of Italy's "fathers of the fatherland".
Text: InternetPictures: Internet & Melinda HorvatCopyright: All the images belong to their authors
Presentation: Sanda Foişoreanuwww.slideshare.net/michaelasanda
Sound: Giulio Briccialdi - Solo Romantico Op.72