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BRESCIA (anc. Brixia)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 498 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BRESCIA (anc. Brixia)  , a city and episcopal see of
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Lombardy, Italy, the capital of the province of Brescia, finely 'situated at the
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foot of the
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Alps, 52 M . E. of Milan and 40 M . W. of Verona by
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rail . Pop . (1901)
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town, 42,495; commune, 72,731 . The plan of the city is rectangular, and the streets intersect at right angles, a peculiarity handed down from
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Roman times, though the
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area enclosed by the
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medieval walls is larger than that of the Roman town, which occupied the eastern portion of the
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present one . The Piazza del Museo marks the site of the forum, and the museum on its north side is ensconced in a Corinthian temple with three cellae, by some attributed to Hercules, but more probably the Capitolium of the city, erected by
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Vespasian in A.D . 73 (if the inscription really belongs to the
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building; cf . Th . Mommsen in Corp . Inscrip .
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Lat. v .

No . 4312,

Berlin, 1872), and excavated in 1823 . It contains a famous
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bronze statue of Victory, found in 1826 . Scanty remains of a building on the south side of the forum, called the
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curia, but which may be a
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basilica, and of the theatre, on the east of the temple, still exist . Brescia contains many interesting medieval buildings . The castle, at the north-east angle of the town, commands a
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fine view . It is now a military prison . The old
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cathedral is a round domed structure of the loth (?) century erected over an early Christian basilica, which has
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forty-two ancient columns; and the Broletto, adjoining the new cathedral (a building of 1604) on the north, is a massive building of the 12th and 13th centuries (the
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original town hall, now the prefecture and law courts), with a lofty tower . There are also remains of the convent of S . Salvatore, founded by
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Desiderius, king of Lombardy, including three churches, two of which now contain the fine medieval museum, which possesses good ivories . The church of S . Francesco has a
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Gothic
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facade and cloisters .

There are also some good

Renaissance palaces and other buildings, including the Municipio, begun in 1492 and completed by Jacopo Sansovino in 1554—1574 . This is a magnificent structure, with fine ornamentation . The church of S . Maria dei Miracoli (1488—1523) is also noteworthy for its general effect and for the richness of its details, especially of the reliefs on the facade . Many other churches, and the picture gallery (Galleria Martinengo), contain fine
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works of the painters of the Brescian school, Alessandro Bonvicino (generally known as Moretto), Girolamo Romanino and Moretto's pupil, Giovanni Battista Moroni . The Biblioteca Queriniana contains early
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MSS., a r4th-century MS. of
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Dante, &c., and some rare
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incunabula . The city is well supplied with
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water, and has no less than seventy-two public fountains . Brescia has considerable factories of iron wale, particularly fire-arms and weapons (one of the government small arms factories being situated here), also of woollens, linens and silks, matches, candles, &c . The stone quarries of Mazzano, 8 m. east of Brescia, supplied material for the monument to Victor Emmanuel II. and other buildings in Rome . Brescia is situated on the main railway
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line between Milan and Verona, and has branch
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railways to Iseo,
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Parma, Cremona and (via Rovato) to Bergamo, and steam tramways to Mantua,
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Soncino, Ponte Toscolano and Cardone Valtrompia . The ancient
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Celtic Brixia, a town of the
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Cenomani, became Roman in 225 B.c., when the Cenomani submitted to Rome . Augustus founded a
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civil (not a military) colony here in 27 B.C., and he and Tiberius constructed an aqueduct to supply it .

In 452 it was plundered by

Attila, but was the seat of a duchy in the Lombard period . From 1167 it was one of the most active members of the Lombard
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League . In 1258 it fell into the hands of Eccelino of Verona, and belonged to the Scaligers (della Scala) until 1421, when it came under the
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Visconti of Milan, and in 1426 under Venice . Early in the 16th century it was one of the wealthiest cities of Lombardy, but has never recovered from its
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sack by the French under Gaston de
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Foix in 1512 . It belonged to Venice until 1797, when it came under
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Austrian dominion; it revolted in 1848, and again in 1849, being the only Lombard town to rally to Charles Albert in the latter
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year, but was taken after ten days' obstinate street fighting by the Austrians under Haynau . See Museo Bresciano Illustrato (Brescia, 1838) . (T .

End of Article: BRESCIA (anc. Brixia)
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