Monteleone di Spoleto Italy, Medieval Town In Umbria Region
Exploring Monteleone di Spoleto in Italy, a lovely medieval town in the central region called Umbria. The town's weekly street market was going on while I was walking around.
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Filmed on July 18, 2017
Produced by Paolo De Santis
Top 10 Best Things To Do in Spoleto, Italy
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List of Best Things to do in Spoleto, Italy
Duomo di Spoleto
Piazza del Duomo
Giro dei Condotti
The Tower's Bridge
Museo Archeologico Nazionale
La Rocca
Basilica di San Salvatore
Teatro Romano
Chiesa di San Ponziano
Casa Romana di Vespaia Polla
MONTELEONE D'ORVIETO Borgo Medioevale - HD
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Monteleone di Orvieto è un antico borgo medioevale posto all’estremo nord della provincia di Terni, arroccato su uno dei colli che separano l’Orvietano da Città della Pieve, da cui si possono ammirare le colline e i monti toscani e laziali e la Valle del Chiani; fu per questa sua posizione strategica che Orvieto, intorno al 1050, decise di insediarvi un castello a guardia dei suoi confini settentrionali.
Dell’originario Castello, saccheggiato e distrutto dai fiorentini nel 1643, oggi rimangono da ammirare la porta di accesso, alla base della Torre mozza, il Torrione con le sue mura di difesa, in Teatro comunale dei “Rustici”, piccolo gioiello architettonico, ricavato nel 1732 da un palazzo medioevale, i vicoli caratteristici, il pozzo medievale, ed altre costruzioni situate nella piazza principale del paese, tutti collocati all'interno del vecchio borgo. Sono inoltre da vedere: la Torre Civica (1890), la Chiesa del SS. Crocifisso (1637), con all’interno un bellissimo altare barocco e la Chiesa dei SS. Apostoli Pietro e Paolo che ha al suo interno un affresco raffigurante una “Madonna con bambino con ai lati i Santi Pietro e Paolo”, una Pietà della scuola di Pietro Vannucci, detto il Perugino, (fine XV secolo) e una Cripta con i resti di San Teodoro Martire.
Monteleone vanta anche altri illustri natali fra i quali: Consiglio Dardalini, mastro vetraio, che nel 1321 fu incaricato da Lorenzo Maitani di provvedere alle necessità di vetri e materiali musivi per l’Opera del Duomo di Orvieto e Piero Bilancini, poeta e scrittore vissuto nell’800 che seguì le orme del Carducci.
Terni Tourist Attractions: 15 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit Terni? Check out our Terni Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in Terni.
Top Places to visit in Terni:
Cappella Di San Brizio, Duomo di Orvieto, Chiesa San Giovenale, Cascata delle Marmore, Pozzo della Cava, Orvieto Sotterranea, Torre del Moro, Narni Centro Storico, Carsulae - Parco Archeologico, Pozzo di San Patrizio, Sacro Speco di San Francesco, Rocca Albornoz di Narni, Chiesa di Sant'Andrea, Umbria Outdoor, Museo Claudio Faina
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Places to see in ( Terni - Italy )
Places to see in ( Terni - Italy )
Terni is a city in the southern portion of the Region of Umbria in central Italy. The city is the capital of the province of Terni, located in the plain of the Nera river. It is 104 kilometres northeast of Rome. It was founded as an Ancient Roman town.
During the 19th century, steel mills were introduced and led the city to have a role in the second industrial revolution in Italy. Because of its industrial importance, the city was heavily bombed during World War II by the Allies. It still remains an industrial hub and has been nicknamed The Steel City and the Italian Manchester. Terni also advertises itself as a City of Lovers, as its patron saint, Saint Valentine, was born and became a bishop here, and the remains are preserved in the basilica-sanctuary in his honour.
In the 14th century Terni issued its own constitution, and from 1353 the walls were enlarged, and new channels were opened. As with many of the Italian communes of the Late Middle Ages, it was beset by civil unrest between the partisans of the Guelphs and Ghibellines, and later between the Nobili and Banderari (Terni's borghesi). Later it joined the Papal States. In 1580 an ironwork, the Ferriera, was introduced to work the iron ore mined in Monteleone di Spoleto, starting the traditional industrial connotation of the city. In the 17th century, however, the population of Terni declined further due to plagues and famines.
The city has three important industrial hubs: the first one is the Stainless Steel Area, called AST (part of the group ThyssenKrupp) and is a wide area located in the east part of Terni. West of the town, there is a second industrial hub, known as Area Polymer, with four different chemical multinational industries. The third industrial hub is Italeaf, which controls TerniEnergia, a company listed on STAR segment of Borsa Italiana, that is active in the renewable energy sector, and promotes and develops technological star-ups in cleantech sector.
Terni is connected with the A1 motorway, the European route E45 and National Road Flaminia by the RATO, a motorway junction. Terni railway station is part of the Ancona–Orte railway, and is also a junction station for two secondary lines, the Terni–Sulmona railway (which links Terni with L'Aquila) and the Terni–Sansepolcro railway (FCU) (which serves Perugia). One of the most important national freight stations is located nearby.
Main Sights of Terni :
Roman amphitheater, once capable of 10,000 spectators, built in 32 BC.
Porta Sant'Angelo, one of the four Ancient Roman Gates to the city, much restored.
Terni Cathedral (Duomo, Cattedrale di Santa Maria Assunta) (17th century). Built over one of the most ancient Christian edifices of the city, it has today Baroque lines. In the interior is one organ designed by Gian Lorenzo Bernini. The belfry is from the 18th century. The façade has two mediaeval gates: one of them has the profile of a sabot once used to measure the citizen's shoes in order to ensure that they did not exceed a fixed limit of decency.
San Francesco – 13th-century church
The Basilica of S. Valentino.
Palazzo Mazzancolli is one of the few remains of the Middle Ages past of the city.
Palazzo Gazzoli (18th century), housing the City's Gallery with works by Pierfrancesco d'Amelia, Benozzo Gozzoli, Gerolamo Troppa and Orneore Metelli.
Palazzo Spada (16th century), designed by Antonio da Sangallo the Younger. It is the current Town Hall.
Lancia di Luce (Lance of Light), by the sculptor Arnaldo Pomodoro.
The Romanesque churches:
Sant'Alò (11th century).
San Martino.
San Salvatore.
Nearby, at the confluence of the Velino and Nera Rivers, is the Cascata delle Marmore, a 165-metre-high (541-foot) waterfall.
( Terni - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Terni . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Terni - Italy
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Polino Italy, Day Trips From Rome!
Exploring Polino, a small town in the Umbria region of central Italy.
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Filmed on July 20, 2017
Produced by Paolo De Santis
Andria - Piccola Grande Italia
E' uno dei capoluoghi della provincia pugliese di Barletta-Andria-Trani, ha più di novantanovemila abitanti. Sorge ai margini occidentali della Terra di Bari, alla destra dell'Ofanto, a pochi chilometri dal mare, a nord dell'Alta Murgia. Fa parte del Parco dell'Alta Murgia.
Places to see in ( Spoleto - Italy )
Places to see in ( Spoleto - Italy )
Spoleto is a city in Umbria, Italy. It’s surrounded by hills, olive groves and vineyards. Dating from the 12th century, Spoleto Cathedral has a porticoed facade embellished by a mosaic. Inside is a cycle of frescoes by the medieval artist Filippo Lippi. The National Archaeological Museum complex displays items from the Bronze Age and Roman times. It also includes the restored Roman Theater.
Presided over by a formidable medieval fortress and backed by the broad-shouldered Apennines, their summits iced with snow in winter, Spoleto is visually stunning. The hill town is also something of a historical picnic: the Romans left their mark in the form of grand arches and an amphitheatre; and the Lombards made it the capital of their duchy in 570, building it high and mighty and leaving it with a parting gift of a Romanesque cathedral in the early 13th century. Today, the town has winged its way into the limelight with its mammoth Spoleto Festival (Festival dei Due Mondi) a 17-day summer feast of opera, dance, music and art.
Spoleto (Latin Spoletium) is an ancient city in the Italian province of Perugia in east-central Umbria on a foothill of the Apennines. It is 20 km (12 mi) S. of Trevi, 29 km (18 mi) N. of Terni, 63 km (39 mi) SE of Perugia; 212 km (132 mi) SE of Florence; and 126 km (78 mi) N of Rome. Spoleto was situated on the eastern branch of the Via Flaminia, which forked into two roads at Narni and rejoined at Forum Flaminii, near Foligno. An ancient road also ran hence to Nursia. The Ponte Sanguinario of the 1st century BC still exists. The Forum lies under today's marketplace. Located at the head of a large, broad valley, surrounded by mountains, Spoleto has long occupied a strategic geographical position. It appears to have been an important town to the original Umbri tribes, who built walls around their settlement in the 5th century BC, some of which are visible today.
Under the empire it seems to have flourished once again, but is not often mentioned in history. Martial speaks of its wine. Aemilianus, who had been proclaimed emperor by his soldiers in Moesia, was slain by them here on his way from Rome (AD 253), after a reign of three or four months. Rescripts of Constantine (326) and Julian (362) are dated from Spoleto. The foundation of the episcopal see dates from the 4th century: early martyrs of Spoleto are legends, but a letter to the bishop Caecilianus, from Pope Liberius in 354 constitutes its first historical mention. Owing to its elevated position Spoleto was an important stronghold during the Vandal and Gothic wars; its walls were dismantled by Totila.
The Festival dei Due Mondi (Festival of the Two Worlds) was founded in 1958. Because Spoleto was a small town, where real estate and other goods and services were at the time relatively inexpensive, and also because there are two indoor theatres, a Roman theatre and many other spaces, it was chosen by Gian Carlo Menotti as the venue for an arts festival. It is also fairly close to Rome, with good rail connections. It is an important cultural event, held annually in late June-early July.
The Roman theater, largely rebuilt. The stage is occupied by the former church of St. Agatha, currently housing the National Archaeological Museum. Ponte Sanguinario (bloody bridge), a Roman bridge 1st century BCE. restored Roman house with mosaic floors, indicating it was built in the 1st century, and overlooked the Forum Square.
Ponte delle Torri, a striking 13th-century aqueduct, The majestic Rocca Albornoziana fortress, built in 1359–1370 by the architect Matteo Gattapone of Gubbio for Cardinal Albornoz. The Palazzo Racani-Arroni (16th century) has a worn graffito decoration attributed to Giulio Romano. Palazzo della Signoria (14th century), housing the city's museum. The majestic Palazzo Vigili (15th-16th centuries) includes the Torre dell'Olio (13th century), the sole mediaeval city tower remaining in Spoleto. Temple of Clitumnus lies between Spoleto and Trevi
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Turismo na Calábria: Tropea e outras praias!
Tropea e outras praias do sul da Itália, um dos lugares mais lindo do mundo, com mar azul cristalino!
Etruscan Well in Italian Store
In Napoli, while constructing the Navy Exchange complex on the U.S. Naval Base there, the contactors unintentionally excavated several Etruscan sites, including the Etruscan Well in this video (this is the Commissay grocery). Naturally these sites could not be destroyed, so they were built around and preserved under plate glass. Interesting mix of old civiliation on top of new civilization.