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AREZZO (anc. Arretium)

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Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 457 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AREZZO (anc. Arretium)  , a
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town and episcopal see of Tuscany, Italy, the capital of the province of Arezzo, 54 M . S.E. of Florence by
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rail . Pop . (1901) town, 16,780; commune, 46,926 . It is an attractive town, situated on the slope of a hill 84o to 970 ft. above sea-level, in a fertile
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district . The walls by which it is surrounded were erected in 1320 by Guido Tarlati di Pietramala, its warlike bishop, who died in 1327, and is buried in the
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cathedral; they were reconstructed by Cosimo I. de' Medici between 1541 and 1568, on which occasion the
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bronze statues of Pallas and the
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Chimaera, now at Florence, were discovered . The town itself is fan-shaped, the streets, which contain some
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fine old houses with projecting eaves and many towers, radiating from the citadel (Fortezza), which was constructed in 1502, and dismantled by the French in 'Soo . The cathedral, close by, is a fine specimen of
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Italian
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Gothic begun in 1277, but not completed internally until 1511, while the
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facade was not begun until 1880 . The interior is spacious and contains some fine 14th-century sculptures, those of the high altar, which contains the tomb of St Donatus, the
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patron saint of Arezzo, being the best; very good stained-glass windows of the beginning of the 16th century by Guillaume de Marcillat, and some terra-cotta reliefs by Andrea della Robbia . Another fine church is S . Maria della Pieve, having a campanile and a facade of 1216, the latter with three open colonnades
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running for its whole length above the doors . The interior was restored to its
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original style in 1863-1865 .

The Romanesque

choir and apse belong to the 11th century, the rest of the interior is
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con-temporary with the facade . In the square behind the church is a
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colonnade designed by Vasari . In the cloisters of S . Bernardo, on the site of the ancient amphitheatre, is a remarkable view of
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medieval Rome . S . Francesco contains famous frescoes by Piero de' Franceschi, representing scenes from the legend of the
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Holy
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Cross, and others by Spinello Aretino, a pupil of
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Giotto . There are several other frescoes by the latter in S . Domenico . Among the Renaissance buildings the churches of S . Maria delle Grazie and the Santissima Annunziata may be noted . The collection of
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majolica in the municipal museum is very fine, and so is that of the Funghini
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family . In the
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middle ages Arezzo was generally on the Ghibelline side; it succumbed to Florence in 1289 at the
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battle of Campaldino, but at the end of the century recovered its strength under the Tarlati family .

In 1336 it became subject to Florence for six years, and after

intestine struggles, finally came under her
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rule in 1384 . Among the natives of Arezzo the most famous are the
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Benedictine monk Guido of Arezzo, the inventor of the
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modern
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system of musical notation (died c . 1050), the poet Petrarch, Pietro Aretino, the satirist (1492-1556), and Vasari, famous for his lives of Italian painters . The town never possessed a distinct school of artists . See C . Signorini, Arezzo, Cittd y Provincea, Guida illustrata (Arezzo, 1904) . (T .

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