Online Encyclopedia

SUSA (anc. Segusio, q.v.)

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 162 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SUSA (anc. Segusio, q.v.)  , a city and episcopal see of Piedmont, Italy, in the province of
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Turin, from which it is 33 M . W. by
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rail . Pop . (1901), 3607 (
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town); 5023 (commune) . It is situated on the Dora Riparia, a tributary of the Po, 1625 ft. above sea-level, and is protected from the
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northern winds by the Rocciamelone . Among the
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medieval buildings of Susa the first place belongs to the church of
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San Giusto, founded in 1029 by Olderico Manfredi II. and the countess Berta, and in 1772 raised to be the
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cathedral . It has a
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fine brick campanile and brick decoration, and contains a
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bronze triptych of 1358 in niello, with the Virgin and Child . In the Valle di Susa, about 14 M. east of it, towards Turin, near S . Ambrogio di Torino, is the monastery of S . Michele with a Romanesque church, situated on a rocky mountain (998-1002) . After the time of Charlemagne a marquisate of Susa was established ; and the town became in the 11th century the capital of Adelaide countess of Savoy, who was
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mistress of the whole of Piedmont . On his retreat from
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Legnano in 1176 Barbarossa set fire to Susa; but the town became more than ever important when Emmanuel Philibert fortified it at
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great expense in the 16th century .

It was, however, dismantled by

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Napoleon I. in 1796 .

End of Article: SUSA (anc. Segusio, q.v.)
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