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See also: town and episcopal see of See also: Emilia, See also: Italy, the capital of the province of See also: Piacenza, 422 M
.
S.E. of Milan and 91 M
.
N.W. of Bologna by See also: rail
.
Pop
.
(1906), 39,786
.
It lies on the Lombard plain, 217 ft. above See also: sea-level, near the right See also: bank of the Po, which here is crossed by road and railway See also: bridges, just below the confluence of the See also: Trebia
.
It is still surrounded by walls with bastions and See also: fosse in a circuit of 4 M
.
The See also: cathedral was erected between 1122 and 1233, in the Lombard Romanesque See also: style, under the direction of Santo da Sambuceto, on the site of a See also: church of the 9th century which had been destroyed by
See also: earthquake
.
The west front has three doors with curious pillared porches
.
The campanile is a massive square brick tower 223 ft. high; the iron cage attached to one of its windows was put up in 1495 by Ludovico it See also: Moro for the confinement of persons guilty of treason or See also: sacrilege
.
The crypt is a large church supported by one See also: hundred columns
.
The entire edifice has been restored since 1898, and the frescoes by Guercino and See also: Caracci, which decorate parts of its roof, though See also: good in themselves, are inappropriate to its severe style
.
Sant' Antonino, which was the cathedral church till 877, is supposed to have been founded by St Victor, the firstSee also: bishop of Piacenza, in the 4th century, and restored in 903; it was rebuilt in 1104, and altered in 1857
.
It was within its walls that the deputies of the Lombard See also: League swore to the conditions of See also: peace ratified in 1183 at See also: Con-stance
.
The See also: Gothic brick See also: vestibule (I1 Paradiso) on the See also: north See also: side is one of the older parts of the See also: building
.
See also: San See also: Francesco, a spacious Gothic edifice begun by the Franciscans in 1278, was erected on the site of the palace of Ubertino Landi, a See also: leader of the Ghibelline party
.
S
.
Savino, a See also: fine Romanesque building of A.D
.
903 (well restored in 1903), contains a mosaic pavement of this See also: period with curious representations, including one of a See also: game of See also: chess
.
S
.
Sisto, which See also: dates from 1499, and takes the place of the church founded in 874 by Angilberga (See also: consort of the emperor See also: Louis II.), lost its chief attraction when
See also: Raphael's Sistine Madonna (now in See also: Dresden) was sold by the monks in 1754 to See also: Frederick See also: Augustus III
.
Its place, however, is occupied by a copy by Avanzini, and there are also several good intarsias by Bartolomeo da Busseto
.
S
.
Sepolcro and S
.
Maria della Campagna are both good earlySee also: Renaissance churches; the latter is See also: rich in frescoes by See also: Pordenone
.
S
.
Anna, dating from 1334, was the church of the barefooted See also: Carmelites
.
Of the secular buildings the most interesting is the Palazzo Communale, begun in 1281, one of the finest buildings of its kind in Italy
.
The square in front is known as the Piazza dei See also: Cavalli, from the two See also: bronze equestrian statues of Ranuccio (162o) and his See also: father See also: Alexander,
See also: prince of See also: Parma, governor of the See also: Netherlands (1625)
.
Both were designed by Francesco Mocchi
.
The Palazzo dei Tribunali and the Palazzo degli Scoti are fine early Renaissance brick buildings with terra-cotta decorations
.
The huge Farnese palace was begun after Vignola's designs by See also: Margaret of See also: Austria in 1558, but it was never completed, and since 1800 it has been used as barracks
.
Other buildings or institutions of note are the old and the new bishop's palace, the fine theatre designed by Lotario Tomba in 1803, the See also: great hospital dating from 1471, the library presented to the commune in 1846 by the See also: marquis Ferdinando Landi, and the Passerini library founded in 1685
.
The Museo Civico, formed in 1903, contains collections of antiquities (though many of the See also: Roman antiquities of Piacenza have passed to the museum of Parma), some good Flemish tapestries and a few pictures
.
The See also: castle erected by Antonio da See also: Sangallo the younger has been demolished
.
Piacenza is the junction of the Milan and Bologna See also: line with that from See also: Voghera and See also: Turin
.
From Codogno, 7 m• to the north, a branch line runs toSee also: Cremona
.
By road Piacenza is 88 m. north=See also: east of Genoa
.
The town has an See also: arsenal, a technical and arts school, and various industries—iron and See also: brass See also: works, foundries, See also: silk-throwing, printing works and See also: flour-mills
.
Piacenza was made a Roman colony in 218 B.C
.
While its walls were yet unfinished it had to repulse an attack by the Gauls, and in the latter See also: part of 2,8 it afforded See also: protection to the remains of the Roman army under Scipio which had been defeated in the great See also: battle on the Trebia
.
In 205 it withstood a protracted siege by See also: Hasdrubal
.
Five years later the Gauls burned the city; and in 190 it had to be recruited with three thousand families
.
In 187 it was connected with See also: Ariminum and the See also: south by the construction of the Via Aemilia
.
Later on it became a very important road centre; the continuation north-wards of the Via Aemilia towards Milan, with a branch to See also: Ticinum, crossed the Po there, and the Via See also: Postumia from Cremona to Dertona and Genoa passed through it
.
Later still Augustus reconstructed the road from Dertona to Vade, and into Gallia Narbonensis, and gave it the name of Julia See also: Augusta from Placentia onwards
.
The rectangular arrangement of the streets in the centre of the town, through which passes the Via Aemilia, is no doubt a survival from Roman times
.
Placentia is mentioned in connexion with its capture by See also: Cinna and a defeat of the forces of See also: Carbo in the neighbourhood (82 B.C.), a See also: mutiny of See also: Julius Caesar's garrison (5o B.C.), another mutiny under Augustus (40 B.C.), the defence of the city by Spurinna, See also: Otho's general, against See also: Caecina, See also: Vitellius's general (A.D
.
69), and the defeat of Aurelian by the Marcomanni outside the walls (A.D . 271) . In 546See also: Totila reduced Piacenza by See also: famine
.
Between 997 and 1035 the city was governed by its bishops, who had received the title of count from Otho III
.
At Roncaglia, 5 M. to the east, the emperor See also: Conrad II. held the See also: diet which passed the Salic See also: law
.
In the latter part of the 12th century it was one of the leading members of the Lombard League
.
For the most part it remained See also: Guelph, though at times, as when it called in Galeazzo See also: Visconti, it was glad to See also: appeal to a powerful Ghibelline for aid against its domestic tyrants
.
In 1447 the city was captured and sacked by Francesco See also: Sforza
.
Having been occupied by the papal forces in 1512, it was in 1545 See also: united with Parma (q.v.) to See also: form an hereditary duchy for Pierluigi Farnese, son of See also: Paul III
.
In 1746 a battle between the Franco-See also: Spanish forces and the Austrians was fought under the city walls, and in 1796 it was occupied by the French
.
In 1848 Piacenza was the first of the towns of See also: Lombardy to join Piedmont; but it was reoccupied by the Austrians till 1859
.
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