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Liguria Riviera delle Palme:
Borghetto, Pietra Ligure


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Savona itineraries:
Savova
Savova foods
Whale Watching
Riviera delle Palme:
Alassio
Albenga
Andora
Bergeggi
Borghetto S. Spirito
Borgio Verezzi
Celle Ligure
Finale Ligure
Noli
Pietra Ligure
Spotorno
Varazze
Varigotti
Riviera dei Fiori:
Apricale
Cervo
Toirano


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Muretto di Alassio
Muretto di Alassio - Photo (c) Mr. AEL

Savona - the Riviera delle Palme and its small towns

Borghetto Santo Spirito
Borghetto Santo Spirito - Photo (c) foto_franz

Borghetto Santo Spirito: Founded in 1288 by the Commune of Albenga, which ringed it with walls to make it a defensive outpost on the eastern seashore, Borghetto took its name from the monastic hospice of Santo Spirito, established in the twelfth century. It was a fief of the Doria family and then came under the rule of the republic of Genoa in the first half of the fourteenth century.

A few remains of the thirteenth-century walls have been incorporated into some of the town’s houses. The parish church of San Matteo, built at the beginning of the seventeenth century, has a campanile in the baroque style. It houses a wooden statue of St. Matthew by Maragliano, a statue of St. Mary of the Olivari, a painting of the Martyrdom of St. Matthew by G. Badracco which includes a seventeenth-century view of Borghetto Santo Spirito and another depicting the Martyrdom of St. Apollonia by D. Fiasella. The Borelli Castle at Capo Santo Spirito was built in the nineteenth century over a seventeenth-century monastery of the Minim Fathers and is surrounded by a splendid pine wood.

An insider tip from Laura, touristic guide:

Borghetto Santo Spirito has been the subject of speculation constructions in the years 1960-70, and is not really the best destination on the coast.

Pietraligure
Pietra Ligure - Photo (c) Znachor

Pietra Ligure: Situated on the Riviera to the west of Capo Caprazoppa, it was a Byzantine stronghold with the name of Castrum Petrae, perched like an eagle’s aerie in a picturesque setting on a wild and isolated limestone crag (“la Pietra”) to the east of the present town.

In the twelfth century the castrum passed to the bishop of Albenga, who had it rebuilt, and in 1385 it was sold to Genoa by Pope Urban VII. Recently the fortress has been consolidated and its rooms used to house exhibitions of porcelain, prints and antique furniture. It also contains an extensive library with a bar and restaurant. The oldest of the monuments documenting Pietra Ligure’s history is the oratory of the Bianchi, dating from the tenth century and now used as an auditorium, located on the characteristic Piazza Vecchia or Piazza del Mercato.

It used to be the parish church, dedicated to the town’s patron saint, Nicholas, and was restructured in the baroque era. The interior is divided into a nave and two aisles with columns made of local stone. It now houses oil measures from the republic of Genoa and the remains of a medieval well that used to be located in the square in front. The campanile still has the sacred bell that, according to tradition, was rung by the hand of St. Nicholas to announce the end of the outbreak of plague in 1525. The present parish church of San Nicoḷ dates from the second half of the eighteenth century: the interior, roofed by a fine, frescoed vault, is a huge rectangular space surrounded by chapels of different sizes. It contains a collection of pictures and a wooden choir from the sixteenth century, which used to be in Marseilles Cathedral.

In addition to being a popular summer vacation resort, Pietra Ligure is famous for its shipyard and hospital facilities, which include the complex of Santa Corona, a renowned rehabilitation center.

An insider tip from Laura, touristic guide:

Pietra Ligure has been the subject of speculation constructions in the years 1960-70, and is not really the best destination on the coast.

Text in part courtesy of APT Riviera delle Palme



(c) 1997-2008 E. Massetti
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