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MEDIEVAL
Civita di Bagnoregio
«L'antico borgo è condannato. Pochi anni ancora, forse dieci, forse venti, forse pochi mesi, e poi la fine è sicura...Che resista ancora, appollaiato sul tufo, circondato da tutte le parti solo d'aria, come un uccello sulla punta più alta e inaridita di un paesaggio morto...che resista ancora, sbranato dai terremoti, corroso dalle acque,...è più miracolo che cosa vera, più leggenda che realtà. Il
suo nome è antico e semplice: Civita, senza aggettivi senza altre
specificazioni».
Civita di Bagnoregio is also known as the “dying town”. Perched on a tuffaceous hill in the middle of a landslide-prone valley, this nice little town is slowly succumbing to the ravages of time. It was once a thriving town, built by the Etruscan to protect a road leading from Lake Bolsena to the north across the Tiber valley. Rebuilt in the Middle Ages, Bagnoregio became an important centre with churches, hospices and homes of illustrious families. It was also the hometown of St Bonaventura, a famous philosopher and churchman who wrote, among other things, a book about the life of St. Francis of Assisi. In the late Renaissance famous men of letters visited the town like, for example, the learned humanist Annibal Caro. In 1695, a terrible earthquake forced the inhabitants of Civita to leave the town forever. Consequently, Bagnoregio was condemned to a slow, painful agony. Today, the visitors’ footsteps ring out in the small streets, alleys and little piazzas of a town, and its nice nooks and crannies are bathed in an almost religious silence. From Civita, you can take a wonderful view over the lunar landscape created by the Calanchi (big clay formations rising all around Civita).
Fonte
dati e immagini APT Viterbo |