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Arezzo


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Arezzo
Arezzo - Photo (c) Chiara Gandolfi

Arezzo

The ancient Arezzo, situated in the north-eastern part of Etruria proper on the hills overlooking the Clanis valley, and held by some sources to have been one of the twelve major cities known as lucumonie, was considered by Strabone as the most inland of the Etruscan cities.

Its position made it a natural center for the agricultural population scattered over the fertile Valdichiana, and as an organized settlement it may have developed as an outpost of Chiusi at the time of the greatest Etruscan expansion northwards (sixth century BC).

The city grew up on a low upland set between the hills of San Pietro and San Donato, at the center of the obligatory routes towards the north and east (Emilia Romagna) and towards the south (Lazio and Umbria).

There is relatively little archaeological data relating to this city in the archaic and late-archaic period.

We can assume that the urban nucleus developed between the end of the sixth and the beginning of the fifth century BC.

Effectively, within the city there are numerous important sanctuaries which must have been worthy to house, among other things, famous bronzes such as the Chimera, and which were adorned with terracottas of great aesthetic value as a result of the presence of an acclaimed local coroplastic school (Piazza S. Jacopo; Via Roma).

Nor is there any shortage of small bronzes, also produced by Arezzo workshops (archaic series and votive collections of the Fonte Veneziana), which possibly used the metal quarried in the mines of the nearby Monti Rognosi.

Corresponding to the urban area was the spacious necropolis of Poggio del Sole, also set up in the sixth century BC and used in subsequent periods up to the Roman age.

The sources however begin to refer to Arezzo in an homogenous manner starting from the sixth century BC.

La Chimera di Arezzo
La Chimera - Photo (C) J. C. Cuesta

Arezzo Market
Arezzo Antique market
Photo (c) Tpkadesign

In this period the city took on a precise urban layout. It undoubtedly possessed a ring of walls made of large blocks of stone, some stretches of which have come to light in recent excavations (Piazzetta S. Niccolò).

This ring marked out a relatively small perimeter, a boundary later surpassed by the construction of several buildings beyond the walls (the sanctuary della Catona and the constructions of Piazza S. Francesco).

At the same time the boundaries of the agricultural district subject to the direct influence of the city also had to be defined.

This territory must have extended southwards over the Valdichiana as far as what is now Sinalunga, northwards as far as Casentino, westwards to the peak of Pratomagno, descending as far as San Giovanni, and eastwards through the Valtiberina.

In parallel, there was a great expansion of building within the city itself, witnessed not only by the presence of numerous terracottas, both architectural (S. Croce; Via Roma; Catona) and votive (Società Operaia votive collection), but also by the templar constructions of Viale Buozzi and by the ceramic finds of both local production (black-painted) and imported.

Visit Arezzo in one day... >>>

Text courtesy of APT Arezzo



(c) 1997-2008 E. Massetti
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