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The provincial capital, PERUGIA
is the most obvious base to kick off a tour of Umbria. It's an oddly mixed
town, with a medieval centre and not a little industry: Buitoni, the pasta
people, are based here, and it's also where Italy's best chocolate, Perugina,
is made. It can get very busy in summer, but there's a day's worth of
good sightseeing to be done and the presence of the the Italian University
for Foreigners, set up by Mussolini to improve the image of Italy abroad,
lends a dash of cosmopolitan style.
Perugia hinges on a single
street, Corso Vannucci, a broad pedestrian thoroughfare constantly buzzing
with action. At the far end, the austere Piazza Quattro Novembre is backed
by the plain-faced Duomo, recently reopened after damage caused by the
1983 earthquake, although the interior, home to the so-called Virgin's
"wedding ring", an unwieldy one-inch-diameter piece of agate
that changes colour according to the character of the person wearing it,
isn't especially interesting. The Perugians keep the ring locked up in
fifteen boxes fitted into one another like Russian dolls, each opened
with a key held by a different person; it's brought out for public viewing
every July 30.
The
centrepiece of the piazza is the Fontana Maggiore, sculpted by the father-and-son
team Nicola and Giovanni Pisano and describing episodes from the Old Testament,
classical myth, Aesop's fables and the twelve months of the year. Opposite
rises the gaunt mass of the Palazzo dei Priori, worth a glance inside
for its frescoed Sala dei Notari (daily 9am1pm & 37pm;
free). A few doors down at Corso Vannucci 25 is the Collegio di Cambio
(MarchOct TuesSat 9am12.30pm; NovFeb Thurs &
Fri 8am2pm, Wed & Sat 8am2pm & 47pm; L2000),
the town's medieval money exchange, frescoed by Perugino. The palace also
houses the Galleria Nazionale di Umbria (TuesSat 9am1.30pm
& 37pm, Sun 9am1pm; L8000), one of central Italy's best
galleries a twelve-room romp through the history of Umbrian painting,
with work by Perugino and Pinturrichio along with one or two stunning
Tuscan masterpieces (Fra Angelico, Piero della Francesca) and early Sienese
works (Duccio).
The
best streets to wander around to get a feel of the old city are either
side of the Duomo. Via dei Priori is the most characteristic, leading
down to Agostino di Duccio's colourful Oratorio di San Bernardino, whose
richly embellished facade is far the best piece of sculpture in the city.
From here you can wander through the northern part of the centre, along
Via A. Pascoli, to the Arco di Augusto, whose lowest section is now one
of the few remaining monuments of Etruscan Perugia. The upper remnant
was added by the Romans when they captured the city in 40 BC. On the other
side of town, along Corso Cavour, is the large church of San Domenico,
one of whose chapels holds a superb carved arch by Agostino di Duccio,
and, to the right of the altar, the tomb of Pope Benedict XI, an elegant
piece by one of the period's three leading sculptors: Pisano, Lorenzo
Maitini or Arnolfo di Cambio no one knows which. There are also
some impressive stained-glass windows, the second biggest in Italy after
those in Milan Cathedral. In the church's cloisters, the Museo Archeologico
Nazionale dell'Umbria (TuesSat 9am1.30pm & 2.307pm,
Sun 9am1pm; L5000) has one of the most extensive Etruscan collections
around. Further on down the Corso Cavour, advertised by a rocket-shaped
bell tower, the tenth-century basilica of San Pietro is the most idiosyncratic
of all the town's churches. Its choir has been called the best in Italy,
and there is a host of works by Perugino and others.
Perugia was a very important
Etruscan city with marvellous buildings such as the Etruscan Arch or the
Etruscan Well. The Roman emperor Ottaviano conquered the city and gave
it a new name: Augusta Perusia. After the fall of the Roman Empire, the
city became independent town with a own council, but often divided into
fierce fights against families like the Baglioni. This family was the
only which contended the city with the Papal States in 1531. The pope
Paolo III, as a symbol of his power, decided to build the Rocca Paolina,
a huge rock above the old city. This power finished in 1860, year of the
unification of Italy.
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