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Pisa
Already
existing during the Etruscan and Roman times, Pisa reached its apex
in the Middle Ages when it was one of the 4 Marine Republics of
Italy, together with Genoa, Amalfi and Venice.
At that time the city was a very important commercial center and
controlled a significant Mediterranean fleet. It conquered part of
Sardinia and succesfully defeated several rival town in Sicily and
in the south of Italy; its fleet also took part in the crusades.
Pisa used the richness it had accumulated in those years to build
the monuments that constitutes the Campo dei Miracoli.
The town had an indipendent republican government and was ruled by a
city council. Pisa always sided with the pro-imperial Ghibellines,
actively supporting emperors such as Frederick Barbarossa, Frederick
II and Henry VII. Those emperors acknowledged Pisa indipendence and
were grateful for its loyalty such that the town was chosen to host
the spoils of Henry King of Germans, the son of Frederick II.
The decline began in 1284 when it was defeated by Genoa in the naval
Battle of Meloria. The defeat ended the marine power of Pisa and the
town never fully recovered. It tried to rebuild its power in the
course of the 14th century but was eventually conquered by Florence
in 1406. Pisa is also known for its excellent university, which was
established in 1343 and has become one of Italy's top schools.
Pisa is crammed full of wonderful, historical monuments and
buildings dating back many hundreds of years. The 14th-century
Romanesque Leaning Tower is of course Pisa’s main attraction (it
has 294 stairs) and really seems to overturn any moment. The tower
reopened in November 2001. A fortification project has made some
progress in stopping the increase in inclination.
The
Leaning Tower belongs to an ensemble of four impressive buildings
all located on "Campo dei Miracoli" (square of miracles):
the cathedral Santa Maria Assunta, the campanile (leaning tower that
was actually a bell tower), the baptistry and the Camposanto
cemetery. Other interesting sights include Knights' Square, Borgo
Stretto, Lungarno and the small Gothic chapel of "Santa Maria
della Spina".
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