Fiesole (Italian pronunciation:[ˈfjɛːzole]) is a town and comune of the Metropolitan City of Florence in the Italian region of Tuscany, on a scenic height above Florence, 5km (3 miles) northeast of that city. It has structures dating to Etruscan and Roman times.
Town and comune of Florence, in Tuscany, Italy
Comune in Tuscany,Italy
Fiesole
Comune
Città di Fiesole
View from the hills of Fiesole overlooking Florence
Since the fourteenth century, the city has always been considered a getaway for members of the upper class of Florence and, up to this day, Fiesole remains noted for its very expensive residential properties, just as well as its centuries-old villas and their formal gardens.[3] The city is generally considered to be the wealthiest and most affluent suburb of Florence. In 2016, the city had the highest median family income in the whole of Tuscany.[4]
Fiesole is a centre of higher education. The campus of the European University Institute is situated in the suburb and uses several historical buildings including the Badia Faesolina and the Villa Schifanoia. Additionally, the American universities, Harvard,[5] Georgetown,[6] and Saint Mary's of Minnesota all maintain campuses at Fiesole.
History
Excavation of the late-fourth-century BC Etruscan temple in Fiesole that later was used by the Romans
Fiesole (EtruscanViesul, Viśl, Vipsul) was probably founded sometime during the ninth century BC, as it was an important member of the Etruscan confederacy. The remains of its prehistoric walls and ancient structures have been preserved and an archaeological museum in the town presents artifacts from and information about these cultural periods.
The earliest known recorded mention of the town dates to 283 BC, when the Etruscan town, then known as Faesulae, was conquered by the Romans. In Roman antiquity, it was the seat of a famous school of augurs and, every year, twelve young men were sent there from Rome to study the art of divination. Sulla colonized it with veterans, who afterward, under the leadership of Gaius Mallius, supported the cause of Catilina.[7][8]
Partial restoration of one of the Roman structures in Fiesole
The Roman theatre, below the cathedral to the northeast, has 19 tiers of stone seats and is 37 yards (34m) in diameter. It has been restored partially enough to provide a good idea of its structure. Above it is an embanking wall of irregular masonry, and below it some remains of Roman baths, including five parallel vaults of concrete. More than 1,000 silver denarii, all coined before 63 BC, were found at Faesulae in 1829. A small museum contains the objects found in the excavations of the theatre.[9]
Fiesole was the scene of Stilicho's great victory over the Germanic hordes of the Vandals and Suebi under Radagaisus in 406.[10] During the Gothic War (536–553), the town was besieged several times. In 539, Justin, the Byzantine general, captured it and razed its fortifications.
A fourteenth-century depiction from the Nuova Cronica showing the sacking of Fiesole in 1010, Chig.L.VIII.296 49v
It was an independent town for several centuries in the early Middle Ages, no less powerful than Florence in the valley below, and many wars arose between them. In 1010 and 1025, Fiesole was sacked by the Florentines. Later, it was conquered by Florence in 1125, when its leading families were obliged to take up their residence in Florence, which still holds true today. Dante reflects this rivalry in his Divine Comedy by referring to "the beasts of Fiesole" (Inferno XV.73).[11]
By the fourteenth century, rich Florentines had countryside villas in Fiesole, and one of them is the setting of the frame narrative of the Decameron. Boccaccio's poem Il Ninfale fiesolano is a mythological account of the origins of the community.[12]
It is also documented that the artist and scientist Leonardo da Vinci experimented for the first time with early flying models on the hills of Fiesoles.[13]
Main sites
Remnants of Etruscan walls
Roman baths
Roman theatre
Palazzo Comunale (Town Hall) of the fourteenth century
The Cathedral of Fiesole (Il Duomo) that contains the shrine of St. Romulus, martyr, according to legend the first Bishop of Fiesole, and that of his martyred companions; the shrine of St. Donatus of Fiesole; and its altarpiece by Pietro Perugino
The Badia or ancient cathedral of St. Romulus, built in 1028 by Bishop Jacopo Bavaro with materials taken from several older edifices at the foot of the hill on which Fiesole stands and were supposed to cover the site of the martyrdom of St. Romulus. It contains notable sculptures by Mino da Fiesole; the old cathedral became a Benedictine abbey that passed into the hands of the Canons Regular of the Lateran. It once possessed a valuable library, long since dispersed. The abbey was closed in 1778
Episcopal Palace
The room in the Episcopal Palace where Carmelite bishop St. Andrew Corsini lived and died
The little Church of Santa Maria Primerana in the cathedral square, where the same saint was warned by Our Lady of his approaching death. Built in 996 and further expanded in medieval times, it has maintained the Gothic presbytery from that period. It received a new façade in the late sixteenth century, with graffito decoration by Ludovico Buti. The interior, on a single hall, has a thirteenth-century panel portraying Madonna with Child. In the transept are two marble bas-reliefs by Francesco da Sangallo and a terracotta from Andrea della Robbia's workshop.
The Church of S. Alessandro, with the shrine of St. Alexander, bishop and martyr
The Monastery of San Francesco on the crest of the hill, with the cells of St. Bernardine of Siena and seven Franciscan Beati
Church of San Girolamo, the home of Venerable Carlo dei Conti Guidi, founder of the Hieronymites of Fiesole (1360)
San Domenico, the novice-home of Fra Angelico and of St. Antoninus of Florence
Fontanelle, a villa near S. Domenico, where St. Aloysius came to live in the hot summer months, while a page at the court of Grand Duke Francesco de' Medici
Villa San Michele (after drawings by Michelangelo)Piazza Mino
Villa I Tatti, a campus of Harvard University
Villa Medici
Villa Le Balze, a campus of Georgetown University
Villa Palmieri
Villa Schifanoia
Villa Sparta, former residence in exile of the Greek royal family
Fonte Lucente, where a crucifix is greatly revered as miraculous
Castello di Vincigliata
Episcopal Seminary of Fiesole
In the neighborhood are:
Monte Senario, the cradle of the Servite Order, where its seven holy founders lived in austerity
S. Martino di Mensola, with the body of St. Andrew, an Irish saint, still incorrupt
Monte Ceceri and the monument to Leonardo da Vinci's attempted flight
Mino da Fiesole, Florentine sculptor (c.1429—1484) and painter
Helen of Greece and Denmark, queen mother of Romania (was awarded the honorary title of Righteous Among the Nations in 1993 for her humanitarian efforts to save the Jews of Romania)
Hermann Hesse, German-Swiss writer, featured the city in his well-known novel Peter Camenzind
Miloš Crnjanski, Serbian writer and poet who wrote his 1973 poem Stražilovo in Fiesole [15]
In literature
The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio is set in the slopes of Fiesole. The city was featured equally in the novels Peter Camenzind (1904) by Hermann Hesse, A Room with a View (1908) by E. M. Forster, and in the book of travel essays Italian Hours (1909) by Henry James.[16]
In contemporary art
Wall mural in Grossi Florentino, executed by students of Napier Waller under supervision
"Villa Le Balze". Villa Le Balze. Georgetown University. Retrieved 9 September 2022.
Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, William Smith, Editor.
Gaius Mallius was a colonist of Fiesole who, according to Sallust (Bellum Catilinae 24.2), was the first to raise an army and take the field against Rome. His nomen is often confused with the more common Manlius.
One or more of the preceding sentencesincorporates text from a publication now in the public domain:Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Faesulae". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol.10 (11thed.). Cambridge University Press. p.124.
Radagaisus was executed 23 August 406 (Herwig Wolfram, Thomas J. Dunlap, tr., History of the Goths, 1988:169); Paulinus of Nola attributed the victory of Stilicho over Radagaisus's Ostrogoths near Fiesole, to the protection of Felix, Peter, Paul and other saints.
Dante in Love, A. N. Wilson, p. 71 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux: 2011)
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