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CORTONA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 207 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CORTONA  , a

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town and episcopal see of Italy, in the province of Arezzo, 18 m . S. by E. from the town of Arezzo by
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rail . The ancient and
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modern names are identical . Pop . (1901) of town, 3579; commune, 29,296 . The highest point of Cortona, a
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medieval castle (Fortezza), is situated 2130 ft. above sea-level on a hill commanding a splendid view, and is approached by a winding road . It is surrounded by its ,ancient
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Etruscan walls, which for the greater
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part of the circuit are fairly well preserved . They are constructed of parallelepipedal blocks of
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limestone, finely jointed (though the jointing has often been spoilt by weathering), and arranged in
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regular courses which vary in
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size in different parts of the enceinte . Near the N.W. angle some of the blocks are 7 to 82 ft. long and 21 ft. high, while on the W. side they are a good
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deal smaller—sometimes only r ft. high (see F . Noack in Romische Mitleilungen, 1897, 184) . Within the town are two subterranean vaulted buildings in good
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masonry, of uncertain nature, some other remains under modern buildings, and a concrete ruin known as the "Bagni di Bacco." The museum of the Accademia Etrusca, a learned
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body founded by Ridolfino Venuti in 1726, is situated in the Palazzo Pretorio; it contains some Etruscan
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objects, among which may be specially noted a magnificent
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bronze lamp with 16 lights, of remarkablyfine workmanship, found in 174o, at the
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foot of the hill, two votive hands and a few other bronzes, and a little gold jewellery . The library has a good MS. of
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Dante .

The

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cathedral, originally a Tuscan Romanesque
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building of the Ilth-12th centuries, is now a
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fine Renaissance
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basilica restored in the 18th century, containing some paintings by Luca Signorelli, a native of the place . Opposite is the baptistery, with three fine pictures by Fra Angelico . S . Margherita, just below the Fortezza, is an ugly modern building occupying the site of a
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Gothic church of 1294, and containing a fine
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original rose window and reliefs from the tomb of the saint by Angelo e Francesco di
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maestro Pietro d'Assisi . Other
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works by Signorelli are to be seen else-where in the town, especially in S . Domenico; Pietro Berettini (Pietro da Cortona, 1596–1669) is hardly represented here at all . Below the town is the massive tomb chamber (originally subterranean, but now lacking the
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mound of the earth which covered it) known as the Grotta di Pitagora (grotto of Pythagoras) . To the E. is the church of S . Maria del Calcinaio, a fine early Renaissance building by Francesco di Giorgio Martini of
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Siena, with fine stained glass windows . The foundation of Cortona belongs to the legendary period of Italy . It appears in
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history as one of the strongholds of the Etruscan power; but in
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Roman times it is hardly mentioned . Dionysius's statement that it was a colony (i .

26) is probably due to confusion . See G .

Dennis, Cities and Cemeteries of
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Etruria (
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London, 1883), ii . 394 seq . ; A . Della Celia, Cortona Antica (Cortona, 1900) . (T .

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