|
|
Province

The province of Ancona occupies the central part of the Marches,it extends
from the Apennine to the Adriatic sea along the valley of the Esino river:
1.940 kmē; 440.239 inhabitants. (227 for kmē), distributed in 49
municipalities. The territory, mostly hilly, is intensely cultivated.
During the last decades fruit trees and vegetable cutivations were added
to the traditional cultivations of grain, olive and grapes (wine verdicchio).
Flourishing in the inner areas is the breeding of bovines. Fishing is
very active in the seaside. In the industrial sector, averages and small
companies of semihandicraft character prevail. Great importance have the
factories of the paper (Fabriano) and musical instruments (Castelfidardo,
Numana). For adequate itself to the new requirements of the international
market, it was strongly modernized and it produces now sophisticated electronic
instruments. Other important productions are those of shoes, cement and
ceramics. Near Falconara Marittima there is a great refinery of oil. Other
industrial centers are Senigallia, Loreto, Iesi (silk manufacturing)
and Osimo.
Municipalities
Ancona
- The administrative centre of the region lies on
the lowest northern slopes of M. Conero, which slope down to the sea,
forming a wide natural bay. The town is of Greek origin;
its name comes from the Greek word Āncon' (elbow), from the shape of the
bay. It passed under Roman influence in the 3rd century BC. and became
increasingly important, particularly under the Emperor Trajan, who made
it one of the biggest harbours in the Mediterranean. After the fall of
the Roman Empire, it was ruled by the Byzantines and Lombards, then by
the Church, although it succeeded in maintaining a degree of autonomy
for centuries. From the 12th to 16 th centuries, Ancona went through a
troubled period, being the scene of struggles between Emperors, Popes
and local overlords. In the 13th century, the town expanded within a circle
of walls surrounding the Astagno hill, its real development began in the
15th century, when it started to spread along the coast. In 1532 the town
lost its autonomy and was finally annexed to the Papal States, whose fortunes
it shared until 1860, when it became part of the Kingdom of Italy. During
World War II it was heavily bombarded and in 1972 an earthquake damaged
the ancient city centre and most of the monuments.
The monuments include: Trajan's Arch (2nd century AD.),
Duomo of St. Ciriaco on mt. Guasco (11th century, the Cathedral
Romanesque, on the site of an early Christian building), Church of
S. Maria della Piazza (12th century, Romanesque), Loggia dei Mercanti
(15th century), San Francesco delle Scale (14th century, with a
beautiful Gothic-Venetian portal, repaired after the earthquake), Palazzo
del Senato (13th-15th century), Palazzo del Governo (14th century).
The economy of the town is based on the services sector and on a busy
industrial sector: shipyards, engineering, metallurgical, chemical
and food manufacturing. Port activities, fishing and tourism are also
of note.
Events: Trade Fair (June), International Fishing Exhibition (June),
Nautical Exhibition of the Adriatic Sea, Biennal Exhibition of Satirical
Cartoons, Wind Instrument Contest (Ancona Prize).
Famous People: Cinzio Benincasa (scholar, 1450-1507), Benvenuto
Stracca (lawyer, 1509-1578), Andrea Lilli (artist, 1555-1610), Luigi Albertini
(journalist and politician 1871-1941).
Cutural Institutions: State Archives, Diocesan Museum (Sarcophagus
of Gorgonio, 4th century), National Museum of the Marches (archeological
remains from the Iron Age and objects dating back to Roman times), Podesti
Art Gallery (including paintings by Tiziano, Andrea del Sarto, L. Lotto,
Guercino), University.
Fabriano
- It is situated on the oriental side of the Apennine Umbro-Marchigiano
at 325 m. a.s.l., on the Giano torrent, left affluent of the Esino river.
Agricultural market, Fabriano is also an important industrial center:
the traditional industry of the paper is still active. Even back in the
14thC, Fabriano's paper mills were producing a million sheets of paper
a year and it was here that watermarked paper was invented. Its paper
is still used the world over for banknotes and quality art paper. So proud
is the town of its traditional industry that it has dedicated an interesting
modern museum to it - the Museo della Carta. Flourishing moreover
industries of food (sausage factories, grinding mills), ceramics, plastic,
household-appliances, clothes, furnitures, cement and lateritious.
While the industrial sprawl of the suburbs promises little, it is worth
penetrating to the heart of the town to see the opera-set main Piazza
del Comune flanked by the Gothic Palazzo del Podestà
(1255). Centre-stage is a smaller version of Perugia's famous fountain
(the Sturinalto fountain) built at the close of the 13thC. Remarkable
the gothic church of Saint Lucia (or Saint Domenico), the
churches of Sant' Augustin (13thC - 14thC) and Saint Benedict.
The town was the birthplace of Gentile da Fabriano, Italy's greatest
master of the late 14thC International Gothic style of painting. You will
have to make do, however, with works by his followers, best of whom was
Allegretto di Nuzio - you can find his work in the Pinacoteca Civica
in tiny Piazza Umberto I behind the main square, and in the Duomo
next door. Also in the Duomo are handsome frescoes by Orazio Gentileschi,
a 17thC follower of Caravaggio who ended his days as court painter to
King Charles I of England.
Jesi
- It is situated at 96 m above the sea level in the low valley of the
Esino river. The economic activity is based principally on agriculture
(cereals, vegetables, grapes), mechanical and food industries (milk and
sugar production). Important are also textile and furniture factories.
Still alive the traditional goldsmith's art. It probably originates from
a colony of Umbrians, but it was the Romans who gave it its name "AESIS".
Destroyed a number of times by the Visigoths and the Langobards in 756
it came under the authority of the church with the Benedictines, it was
the seat of the County and of the free city-state. The ancient historical
village ,which stands on a hill , is made up of small streets and squares
enclosed by an imposing city wall of the 4th century, reinforced during
the Renaissance and still perfectly conserved today, from which stand
out the Montirozzo and Mezzogiorno towers and the gates Porta Valle and
Porta Bersaglieri. The historical centre of the Renaissance and of the
XVIII century developed along Corso Matteotti, which is crowned off by
Arco Clementino. Within the city walls monuments and buildings
of notable interest are found, like the "Palazzo della Signoria"
of Francesco di Giorgio Martini which today houses the Civic Museum,
the library and the Municipal district's archives, the Palazzo Colocci
and the Palazzo Ricci of 1543 with a facade that exhibits ashlar work
in the form of diamond's points. In the Palazzo Pianetti, the beautiful
residence of the nobles, there is the Pinacoteca Comunale (the Municipal
Art Gallery) in which are conserved splendid works of art by the Venetian
painter Lorenzo Lotto. In 1194, here, the Emperor Frederick
II of Swabia was born , who gave Jesi the title "Royal City" and in
1710 the famous musician Giambattista Pergolesi was born after
whom the municipal theatre is named, where important concerts, operas
and dramas take place. The cathedral is also suggestive, dedicated to
St. Settimio the patron saint of the city who has his feast day
on the 22nd of September and so is the medieval church of St. Marco,
of Benedictine origin later donated to the Franciscans. A bit more ahead
there is church of S. Nicolō, one of the oldest monuments in Jesi,
dating back to before the year One Thousand and later on rebuilt in Roman-gothic
style.
Loreto
- It is situated at 127 mt. a.s.l. on a hill with a beautiful panoramic
view of the Adriatic sea, and partly encircled with 16th-century walls.
Agricultural center (vineyards, olive groves, vegetables, forages). It
has silk industries and is a famous place of pilgrimage. It is dominated
by the famous Sanctuary of the "Santa Casa" which is among the
most important sanctuaries in Italy. According to legend, the house of
the Holy Family was miraculously transported by angels in 1294 from Nazareth
in Palestine to the countryside of Loreto. Historians, however, refer
to the Crusaders as one of the likely explanations for its presence. The
Santuario, begun in 1468 by Pope Paul II, is around the Holy House (a
small brick building); Bramante contributed to its construction. It has
fine bronze doors (16th17th cent.) and frescoes by Melozzo da Forli and
Luca Signorelli. Our Lady of Loreto is a patron of aviators. Piazza
della Madonna, the elegant set-piece square with a delicate Baroque
fountain (Carlo Maderno, 1614) that fronts the Sanctuary is flanked on
two sides by the arcades of the 16thC Palazzo Apostolico. The
Museo-Pinacoteca inside preserves a fine group of late works by Lorenzo
Lotto (the Venetian master retired and died in the monastery here in 1556)
and an unusual collection of Renaissance ceramic pharmacist's jars.
Osimo
- At 265 m a.s.l., on a wide sub-apennine hill, between the valleys of
the Aspio and the Musone. Agricultural and breeding center, it has mechanical
and electromechanical industries like those of musical instruments (accordionists)
and record players. Also important are textile factories. The town is
compact, warm brick hystoric center rides the crest of a hill above the
more modern town below. Most of its best buildings date from the 16th
and 17th centuries but signs of its ancient past sometimes show through.
For this place was once the Roman town of Auximum. The town hall
itself is a fine 17th century building that boasts some interesting canvasses
inside. The ancient part conserves Roman walls and the street plan of
the old town still retains its Roman layout. The mosaic pavement of the
Duomo (Saint Leopardo) is a fine relic of Medieval times; the church,
originally built in the 13th century in Romanesque-Gothic style, also
has a magnificently atmospheric crypt and an outstanding bronze baptismal
font from the early 17th century. The old Romanesque church of San
Francesco has been redone inside and out in High Baroque to celebrate
its later reincarnation as the Sanctuary dedicated to San Giuseppe
da Copertino (1603-1663). It is now an important centre of pilgrimage.
San Giuseppe is known as the patron saint of those undergoing exams. Thanks
also to his celebrated capacity for levitation, St Joseph of Copertino
is also much invoked in the U.S.A as a protector of pilots. His remains
are kept in a crystal urn in the modern crypt. In the heart of the old
centre look out for Palazzo Gallo, a splendid palace from the 16th century
with an epic fresco of the Judgement of Solomon (1609) by the Tuscan painter
Pomarancio. A few kilometres south-east of Osimo in the valley of the
Musone river, stands the imposing Sanctuary of Campocavallo, a striking
piece of early 20th century architecture in Lombard Neo-Gothic style.
Senigallia
- The Town of Senigallia is placed along the Adriatic coastline
at 6 m. a.s.l. with the river Misa running through it.
Its story begins in 2000 B.C., when the Liburnians founded it.
Its name is due to the Gauls ( after the Etruscans ), who called their
village "Sena" in 400 B.C.; then the Romans, defeating the Gauls in this
area in 290 B.C., called the town "Sena Gallica". Center
of an ancient fair, considered in the 15thC the greater manifestation
of this type in Europe. Prosperous above all in the 18thC. (after the
concession, in the 17thC, of the free port), and whose memory is still
alive in Italy. After the 2nd World War there was a new development
of economic and productive activities and an increase in the tourist activity.
It is important agricultural-commercial and industrial center (canned
food-stuffs, furnitures, clothes, electronics, metallurgy, building materials,
shipyards, etc.); it's also a fishing port. Nowadays Senigallia
owes its charm to an unpolluted sea-water
(Blue flag of Europe) and soft velvety beach that extends
over 10 km. The charm of the beach goes with that of the monuments and
the works of art situated in a very old historical centre that is very
close to it: something which is quite unusual but for only a very few
seaside resorts of the Adriatic coast. From the beach, it is possible
to reach, by a short walk, the historical centre over which towers the
majestic Rocca Roveresca (Della Rovere's Fortress). The structure
of the fortress, perfectly kept through time, goes back to 1480 and was
built up on the drowning of Baccio Pontelli. It is a classical example
of the military architecture of the Renaissance, with a square structure
having four embattled towers on each corner. Inside are the ruins of previous
Roman fortification built to protect the port. Opposite the Rocca Roveresca,
one can see "Piazza del Duca" (square of the Duke) with the Lion's
Fountain and the Palace of the Duke. On the right side of the
square stands a splendid building the "Palazzetto Baviera". Along
the river Misa, one can admire the magnificent Portici Ercolani
(Ercolani's Arcades) built up in the second part of the XVIIth century
with big blocks of white stone coming from Istria and erected to house
the Fair. The Foro Annonario is a testimoniance of the Marches
neo-Classicism, built in 1837, on a draw of the architect Pietro Ghinelli
from Senigallia, planner of theatres, decided to build this handwork,
important for the aesthetics and on the proportion for the food market
of the city and its infrastructure: under the arcade a sequence of shops
most of them are meat shops, at the centre of it there is the big fish-market.
Recently restructureted is a beautiful place, almost as a theatre's space.
Others importan monuments are: the Church of the Cross (built up
at the beginning of the XVIIth century with a rectangular inside and an
inlaid lacunar ceiling), the Cathedral, Lambertina gates
(in honour of Benedict XIV on the project by the architet Rossi and Cardinal
Ercolani), Mastai Palace where Pope Pio IX was born and Church
of the Grazie (erected by order of the Duke Giovanni Della Rovere).
Inside it, behind the high altar is kept the Madonna in Trono e Santi
(Madonna on the Trone and Saints) a famous painting by Perugino.
|
|