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PERUGIA (anc. Perusia)

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Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 279 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PERUGIA (anc. Perusia)  , a city and archiepiscopal see of Italy, the capital of the province of Perugia (which forms the entire compartimento of Umbria) situated 1444 ft. above sea-level . Pop . (1906), 22,321 (
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town); 65,527 (commune) . The town is finely situated upon a
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group of hills nearly T000 ft. above the valley of the Tiber . Its outline is very irregular; from the centre of the town, at the junction of several ridges, parts of it extend for a considerable distance along their summits, being divided from one another by deep valleys . This is the extent enclosed by the
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medieval walls; within them are consider-able remains of the lofty terrace walls of the Eutruscan period . The so-called Arco di Augusto is a town
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gate with a Decorated superstructure, perhaps of the
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Etruscan period, bearing the inscription
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Augusta Perusia; above this again is a Renaissance loggia . The superstructure of a similar gate (Porta Marzia), which was removed in 1540 to make way for the citadel, but is depicted in a fresco by Benedetto Bonfigli (between 1461 and 1477), was re-erected in the substruction walls of the citadel itself . It bears the inscription Colonia Vibia Augusta Perusia, so that the town must have become a colony in the reign of the emperor C . Vibius Trebonianus Gallus (A.n . 251-253), who was a native of it . Four other gates of the Etruscan period can still be traced (F .

Noack in Romische Mitteilungen, 1897, 166 sqq) . In the

garden of the church of S . Elisabeth was found in 1876 a
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fine mosaic in black on a white ground representing
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Orpheus in the midst of the beasts (Notizie degli scavi, 1876, 181; 1877 309) . The citadel was erected by Pope Paul III. in 1540-1546, after the plans of Antonio da Sanga]lo the younger, and demolished in 186o (see Bacile di Castiglione in L'Arte, 1903, 347) . The Piazza del Duomo is at the north of the Corso . On one side stands the
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cathedral of
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San Lorenzo, a
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Gothic structure of the 14th and 15th centuries, in the plan of a Latin
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cross, with
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nave and aisles of equal height; on the other the Palazzo del Municipio, presenting two fine Gothic facades, of the 14th century (though the
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building was not completed till 1443), with the figures of the Perugian griffin and the
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Guelph lion above the outside stair; and in the centre the marble fountain constructed in 1277-1280 by Arnolfo di Cambio, and adorned with statues and statuettes by Niccolo and Giovanni Pisano . The cathedral contains the
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burial-place of Urban IV. and Martin IV.—the remains of Innocent III. were removed to Rome in 1892 and placed in the
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basilica of S . Giovanni in Laterano—and the Virgin's
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wedding -ring; and at the north-east corner is a sitting statue of Pope
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Julius III. by Vincenzo Danti, erected in 1555 by the
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people of Perugia in gratitude for the restoration of their civic privileges . On the decoration of the Sala del Cambio, or old
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exchange, Perugino put forth the full force of his genius . Most of the movable paintings have since 1863 been collected in the Pinacoteca Vannucci, established in the Palazzo del Municipio; besides a considerable number of pieces by Perugino, there are specimens of Niccole, Alunno, Bonfigli, Pinturicchio, &c . A very interesting and important
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exhibition of Umbrian
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art was held here in 1907 . The pictures, the
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needlework with some splendid pieces of embroidery from S .

Francesco at Assisi, the
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vestments of Pope Benedict XI., and the
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majolica of Perugia and Deruta, a
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village to m. south, were especially noteworthy (see U . Gnoli, L'Arte umbra alla mostra di Perugia, Bergamo, 1908) . The illuminated
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MSS. of the communal library, the cathedral and the church of S . Pietro, from the 7th century onwards, were also exhibited . The formation of the Pinacoteca Vannucci has impaired the
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interest of several churches but in others it remains undiminished . San Domenico, a Gothic edifice originally designed by Giovanni Pisano but rebuilt in 1614, contains the monument of Pope Benedict XI . (attributed, but probably wrongly, to Giovanni Pisano by Vasari), and in its east front a Gothic window with stained glass by Fra Bartolommeo of Perugia (1441) . San Pietro de' Cassinensi (outside the Porta
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Romana) is a basilica with nave and aisles, founded in the beginning of the rth century by San Pietro Vincioli on the site of a building of the 6th century, and remarkable for its conspicuous
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spire, its ancient granite and marble columns, its walnut stall-
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work of 1535 by Stefano de' Zambelli da Bergamo, and its numerous pictures (by Perugino, &c.) . The oratory of S . Bernardino has an early Renaissance polychrome
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facade, richly sculptured, of 1457-1461, by Agostino d'Antonio di Duccio of Florence . S . Severo contains Raphael's first
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independent fresco (1505), much damaged by restoration .

The circular church of S . Angelo, with sixteen

antique columns in the interior, probably
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dates from the
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middle of the 6th century . The university dates from 1307, and has faculties of law, science and
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medicine; it had 318 students in 1902-1903 . It contains an important museum of Etruscan and
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Roman antiquities . Three miles to the S.S.E. the Etruscan
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necropolis of the ancient city was discovered in 1870 . The large tomb of the Volumni (3rd century B. e.) hewn in the rock, with its carved cinerary urns, is interesting . The ancient Perusia first appears in
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history as one of the twelve confederate cities of
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Etruria . It is first mentioned in the account of the war of 310 or 309 B.C. between the Etruscans and the Romans . It took, however, an important
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part in the
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rebellion of 295, and was reduced, with Vulsinu and Arretium, to seek for peace in the following
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year . In 216 and 205 it assisted Rome in the Hannibalic war, but afterwards it is not mentioned until 41–40 B.C., when L .
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Antonius took
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refuge there, and was reduced by Octavian after a long siege . A number of lead bullets used by slingers have been found in and around the city (Corpus inscr.
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lat. xi .

1212) . The city was burnt, we are told, with the exception of the temples of

Vulcan and
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Juno —the massive Etruscan terrace-walls, naturally, can hardly have suffered at all—and the town, with the territory for a mile round, was allowed to be occupied by whoever chose . It must have been rebuilt almost at once, for several bases exist, inscribed Augusto sacr(um) Perusia restituta; but, as we have seen, it did not become a colony until A.U . 251-253 . It is hardly mentioned except by the geographers until the middle of the 6th century, when it was captured by Totila after a long siege . In the Lombard period it is spoken of as one of the
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principal cities of Tuscia . In the 9th century, with the consent of Charles the
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Great and Louis the Pious, it passed under the popes; but for many centuries the city continued to maintain an independent
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life, warring against many of the neighbouring lands and cities—Foligno, Assisi, Spoleto,
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Montepulciano, &c . It remained true for the most part to the Guelphs . On various occasions the popes found asylum within its walls, and it was the meeting-place of the conclaves which elected Honorius II . (1124), Honorius IV . (1285), Celestine V . (1294), and Clement V .

(1305) . But Perugia had no mind simply to subserve the papal interests . At the

time of Rienzi's unfortunate enterprise it sent ten ambassadors to pay him honour; and, when papal legates sought to coerce it by
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foreign soldiers, or to exact contributions, they met with vigorous resistance . In the 15th century power was at last concentrated in the Baglioni
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family, who, though they had no legal position, defied all other authority . Gian Paolo Baglioni was lured to Rome in 1520 and beheaded by Leo X.; and in 1534 Rodolfo, who had slain a papal legate, was defeated by Pier
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Luigi Farnese, and the city, captured and plundered by his soldiery, was deprived of its privileges . The citadel was begun six years later " ad coercendam Perusinorum audaciam." In 1797 Perugia was occupied by the French; in 1832, 1838 and 1854 it was visited by earthquakes; in May 1849 it was seized by the Austrians; and, after a futile insurrection in 1859, it was finally
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united, along with the rest of Umbria, to Piedmont, in 1860 . See G . Conestabile, I Monumenti di Perugia etrusca e romana (Perugia, 18J5) ; M . Symonds and L . Duff Gordon, Perugia (" Medieval Towns Series "), (1898) ; R . A . Gallenga Stuart, Perugia (Bergamo, 1905; W .

Heywood, Hist. of Perugia (1910) . (T .

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