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VERCELLI (anc. Vercellae)

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 1017 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VERCELLI (anc. Vercellae)  , a
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town and archiepiscopal see of Piedmont, Italy, in the province of
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Novara, 13 m . S . W. of that town by
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rail . Pop . (1901) 17,922 (town), 30,470 (commune) . It is situated 430 ft. above sea-level on the
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river Sesia, at its junction with the Canterana . Vercelli is a point at which
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railways diverge for Novara,
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Mortara, Casale Monferrato and Santhia (for
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Turin) . The walls by which Vercelli was formerly surrounded have been demolished, and their place is now occupied by boulevards, from which a
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fine view of the
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Alps (especially the
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Monte Rosa
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group) is obtained . The streets are for the most
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part tortuous and narrow; there is a large market-place (Piazza Cavour) with a statue of Cavour (1861) . The
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cathedral is a large
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building dating from the 16th century; its library contains a number of rare ancient
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MSS., especially the Codex Vercellensis, one of the most important MSS. of the old Latin version of the Gospels, written in the 4th or 5th century by Eusebius, bishop of Vercelli . A museum close by contains
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Roman antiquities . The churches of S .

Andrea (a large and fine Romanesque
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Gothic building dating from 1219—1224, with an interior in the French Gothic style), S . Paolo, S . Caterina and S . Cristoforo possess valuable examples of the
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work of Gaudenzio Ferrari (1471—1546) and of his follower Lanini .
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Silk-spinning is important, and Vercelli is one of the
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principal
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Italian centres of the exportation of cereals and especially of rice . There are corn and rice mills of large
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size, while cotton and woollen mills and factories of artificial manure, &c., have attained importance . Vercellae was originally the chief city of the Libici (a Ligurian tribe) and afterwards became a Roman municipium of some importance . It stood at the junction of roads to Eporedia, Novaria and Mediolanum, Laumellum (for Ticinum) and perhaps Hasta . No ancient remains exist above ground, but many inscriptions, tombs and other antiquities have been found . Remains of the theatre and amphitheatre were seen in the 16th century, and remains of ancient streets have more recently been found during drainage operations . There were apparently four principal streets all leading to the centre of the town where the Forum must have been situated . Of the walls, however, nothing is known except from
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medieval documents (cf .

L . Bruzza, Iscrizioni antiche Vercellesi,

Rome, 1874) . In the neighbourhood (near Rotto on the Sesia) are the Raudii Campi where Hannibal won his first victory on Italian
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soil (218 B.C.), and where in lot B.C . Marius and
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Catulus routed the
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Cimbri . From about 1228 till 1372 Vercelli was the seat of a university . (T .

End of Article: VERCELLI (anc. Vercellae)
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VERCELLI BOOK (CODEX VERCELLENSIS)

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