Aosta

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "redirect hatnote". Script error: No such module "Settlement short description".Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters".Expression error: Unexpected < operator.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". AostaTemplate:Efn (official Template:Langx;Template:Efn Template:LangxTemplate:Efn)Template:Efn is the principal city of the Aosta Valley, a bilingual region in the Alps, Script error: No such module "convert". north-northwest of Turin, Italy. It is situated near the Italian entrance of the Mont Blanc Tunnel and the Great St Bernard Tunnel, at the confluence of the Buthier and the Dora Baltea, and at the junction of the Great and Little St Bernard Pass routes.

History

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View of the plaine aostoise and the Monte Emilius
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Arches of the Roman Theatre
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Porta Prætoria

Aosta was settled in proto-historic times and later became a centre of the Salassi, many of whom were killed or sold into slavery by the Romans in 25 BC.[1] The campaign was led by Terentius Varro, who then founded the Roman colony of Augusta Praetoria Salassorum, housing 3,000 retired veterans. After 11 BC Aosta became the capital of the Alpes Graies province of the Empire. Its position at the confluence of two rivers, at the end of the Great and the Little St Bernard Pass, gave it considerable military importance, and its layout was that of a Roman military camp.

After the fall of the Western Empire, the city was conquered, in turn, by the Burgundians, the Ostrogoths, and the Byzantines. The Lombards, who had annexed it to their Italian kingdom, were expelled by the Frankish Empire under Pepin the Short. Under his son, Charlemagne, Aosta acquired importance as a post on the Via Francigena, leading from Aachen to Italy. After 888 AD it was part of the renewed Kingdom of Italy under Arduin of Ivrea and Berengar of Friuli.

In the 10th century Aosta became part of the Kingdom of Burgundy. After the fall of the latter in 1032, it became part of the lands of Count Humbert I of Savoy.[2]

The privilege of holding the assembly of the states-general was granted to the inhabitants in 1189. An executive council was nominated from this body in 1536, and continued to exist until 1802. After the Congress of Vienna restored the rule of Savoy it was reconstituted and formally recognized by Charles Albert of Sardinia, at the birth of his grandson Prince Amedeo, who was created duke of Aosta.[2]

File:Gonfanon Aoste Salon ducal.JPG
The gonfalon of Aosta/Aoste in the salon ducal of the Hôtel-de-Ville

Climate

Aosta is in the rain shadow of the Mont Blanc massif and features a humid subtropical climate (Köppen: Cfa), bordering on a cool semi-arid climate (Köppen: BSk), also bordering on an oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb) and under the Köppen climate classification due to its low average annual rainfall. It is considered temperate oceanic (Trewartha: Do) in the Trewartha climate classification.

The city experiences cool to very cold winters, hot summers and relatively dry conditions throughout the year.

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Demographics

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Main sights

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Tour du Lépreux

The ancient town walls of Augusta Prætoria Salassorum are still preserved almost in their entirety, enclosing a rectangle Script error: No such module "convert"..[3] They are Script error: No such module "convert". high, built of concrete faced with small blocks of stone. At the bottom, the walls are nearly Script error: No such module "convert". thick, and at the top Script error: No such module "convert"..

Towers stand at angles to the enceinte and others are positioned at intervals, with two at each of the four gates, making twenty towers in total. They are roughly Script error: No such module "convert". square, and project Script error: No such module "convert". from the wall. Of the 20 original towers, the following are well preserved:[4]

  • Tour du Lépreux (French for Leper's Tower), was given this name after a leper called Pierre-Bernard Guasco who was jailed there in the late 17th century. Le lépreux de la cité d'Aoste, a novel by Xavier de Maistre, is also named after this leper.
  • Tourneuve (13th century).
  • Tour du Pailleron.
  • Tower (Castle) of Bramafan, built in the 11th century over a Roman bastion. It was the residence of the Savoy viscounts. In Franco-Provençal, Bramé la fan means "To scream for hunger".
  • Tour du Baillage.
  • Tour Fromage.

The south and east gates exist intact. The latter, a double gate with three arches flanked by two towers known as the Porta Praetoria (1st century AD) was the eastern gate to the city, and has preserved its original form apart from the marble covering.[5] It is formed by two series of arches enclosing a small square.

The rectangular arrangement of the streets is modeled on a Roman plan dividing the town into 64 blocks (insulae). The main road, about Script error: No such module "convert". wide, divides the city into two equal halves, running from east to west. This arrangement makes it clear that guarding the road was the main raison d'être of the city.

The Roman theatre, of which the southern façade remains today, is Script error: No such module "convert". tall.[6][7] The structure, dating from the late reign of Augustus, occupied an area of Script error: No such module "convert".; it could contain up to 4,000 spectators. In the nearby was the amphitheatre, built under Claudius. A marketplace surrounded by storehouses on three sides with a temple in the centre with two on the open (south) side, as well as a thermae, have also been discovered.

File:L'altra faccia dell'Arco di Augusto.jpg
Arch of Augustus

Outside the town walls is the Arch of Augustus, a triumphal arch in honour of Augustus, built in 35 BC to celebrate the victory of consul Varro Murena over the Salassi.[8] About Script error: No such module "convert". to the west is a single-arched Roman bridge, called the Pont d'Aël. It has a closed passage, lighted by windows for foot passengers in winter, and above it an open footpath.

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Aosta Cathedral

There are considerable remains of the ancient road from Eporedia (modern Ivrea) to Augusta Praetoria into the Aosta Valley. The modern railway follows this route, notable for the Pont Saint-Martin, which has a single arch with a span of Script error: No such module "convert". and a roadway Script error: No such module "convert". wide; the cutting of Donnas; and the Roman bridges of Cillian (Saint-Vincent), Aosta (Pont de Pierre).

Other sights include:

  • The Cathedral, built in the 4th century and replaced in the 11th century by a new edifice dedicated to the Madonna. It is annexed to the Roman Forum.

Transport

Aosta lies on the crossroad of two major trans-alpine trunk roads: national road 26 (Italian: SS26, French: RN26[9]) connecting the city of Chivasso to Little St Bernard Pass on the Italy-France border, and national road 27 (Italian: SS27, French: RN27[10]) connecting the city of Aosta to the Great St Bernard Pass on the Italy-Switzerland border. Aosta is also served by the A5 motorway between Turin and Courmayeur.[11]

Aosta railway station, opened in 1886, forms part of the Chivasso–Ivrea–Aosta railway. Direct trains only connect Aosta up to the city of Ivrea. The branch line to nearby Pré-Saint-Didier, in the Valdigne, on the way towards Courmayeur was closed in 2015. Train service is operated by Trenitalia.[12]

The main bus hub is located near the Aosta train station. Buses connect the city of Aosta to the nearby valleys and to destinations outside the region, including Turin, Milan, Chamonix (France) and Martigny (Switzerland).[13]

Aosta airport is located 5 km to the east of the city. However, there are currently no scheduled services at the airport. The nearest airports to the city are Turin Airport which is located 65 km south and Geneva Airport, is located 109 km north west of Aosta.

Notable people

See also

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Twin towns - sister cities

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Aosta is twinned with:[16][17]

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Notes

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References

Inline citations

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  1. John Lemprière, Lorenzo DaPonte, & John David Ogilby (1839), Bibliotheca Classica: Or, A Dictionary of All the Principal Names and Terms, (Tenth American Edition), New York: W.E. Dean. Salassi, p. 281
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  5. Toy, Sidney. Castles: Their Construction and History. New York: Dover Publications, 1985. p. 30.
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  9. Bulletin officiel de la région autonome Vallée d'Aoste - n.12/2012
  10. Bulletin officiel de la région autonome Vallée d'Aoste - n.12/2012
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General references

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Further reading

  • Lin Colliard, La vieille Aoste, éd. Musumeci, Aoste, 1972.
  • Aimé Chenal, Promenade archéologique de la ville d'Aoste, ITLA, Aoste, 1965.
  • Mauro Caniggia Nicolotti & Luca Poggianti, Aoste inconnue : traces cachées, oubliées ou invisibles de la vieille ville, typog. La Vallée, Aoste, 2010.
  • Carlo Promis, Le antichità di Aosta, (Turin, 1862);
  • Édouard Bérard, Atti della Società di Archeologia di Torino, iii. 119 seq.; Notizie degli Scavi, passim.

External links

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