Venetian walls of Crema
Venetian walls of Crema | |
---|---|
Crema, Lombardy in Italy | |
Coordinates | 45°21′48.19″N 9°41′1.37″E / 45.3633861°N 9.6837139°E |
Site information | |
Owner | Public property[1] |
Site history | |
Built | 1488-1509 |
Architect | Giovanantonio De Marchi and Venturino Moroni |
Materials | Brick |
Battles/wars | Siege of 1514 |
The Venetian walls of Crema are an architectural construction dating back to the second half of the 15th century, built for defensive purposes.
History
[edit]Medieval walls
[edit]The origins of the city of Crema are shrouded in mystery.[2] Fulcheria Island appears for the first time in a document of 1040 when the bishop of Cremona Ubaldo asked Emperor Henry III the Black to entrust him with that territory, until then a fief of Boniface III.[3]
In addition, it is known of a diploma through which in 1055 Henry III granted the districtum de Insula Fulcherii in perpetual investiture to the church of Cremona.[4]
The Island once again became a feud of the marquises of Tuscany in 1057, specifically to Beatrice of Lorraine – second wife of Boniface, who died in 1052 – and her daughter Matilda.[5] The latter finally granted the Island to the Church and the Municipality of Cremona in 1098.[5]
As for the toponym Crema, it appears as locus in 1082 and as castrum in 1084.[6] However, a certainty about the existence of Crema comes only in 1146 when the imperial legate Ermanno, bishop of Constance, sent a letter to the consuls, counts and people of Crema urging them to obey the bishop of Cremona.[7] Moreover, in 1162 Emperor Frederick Barbarossa confirmed the investiture of the castrum Cremae con burgo[8] to the people of Cremona, later retaining for himself the villages in the territory, a crucial piece of news since it was an indication of a settlement with a subordinate territory.[8]
Multiple hypotheses have been posed about the shape of Crema in the period before the siege. Historian Pietro Terni suggested that the city had been fortified since the Lombard era and for centuries had three outer suburbs.[9]
According to Dado Edallo, the suburbs extra moenia would not predate the 11th century, although the scholar does not rule out previous early medieval urban formations of religious origin,[10] a hypothesis that Paolo Favole refutes since churches arranged in the shape of a cross in Italy are of later date.[9]
Finally, Carlo Piastrella hypothesizes only a partial fortification to the east, where in past centuries the toponym "Contrada del Ghirlo" was used, from "gyrus," which in medieval Latin indicated the city walls.[11] The other sides would have been defended by ditches and embankments that would have allowed the people of Crema to cross them with ease during the siege of 1159/1160 and supply the inhabitants and refugees through passages within the Moso swamp.[11] As for the name Castrum Cremae cum burgo mentioned in the diploma of 1162 Piastrella identifies the village as a separate military post, probably identifiable with Borgo San Pietro, which has maintained its own characteristic urban connotation over the centuries;[12] in further support of this are also the chronicles of the siege which agree that the destructive fire set to the city by the imperial allied forces did not affect the supposed Borgo San Pietro, within which many fleeing besieged found refuge.[12]
One certain element was the wide and deep moat, which, as the chronicler Ottone Morena testified, prevented the approach of imperial war machines,[13] and it was only with the contribution of a large quantity of earth and under the shelter of "cats" and "tortoises" (siege engines) that the besiegers were gradually able to approach the fortifications.[13]
From reconstruction to the arrival of the Venetians
[edit]With a diploma dated February 11, 1185, in Reggio, in the presence of the consuls of Crema Domerto Benzoni, Rogerio de Osio and Benzo Bonsignori, the rebuilding of the city was granted.[14] According to historian Pietro Terni, after the erection of ditches and trenches to counter Cremonese skirmishes,[15] a new city wall with 21 towers was erected between 1190 and 1199.[15] In addition to the four gates Serio, Ombriano, Ripalta and Pianengo with their towers the enclosure counted a fifth minor gateway, the gate (or postern) of Ponfure dependent on Porta Pianengo.[16] The toponym seems to have originated at the time of the siege, when the people of Crema during a sortie forced a group of besiegers to fall back along the walls; the tenacious resistance of one of them, named Furio, earned him perpetual memory;[17] in fact, nowadays the Ponte Furio street that connects Via XX Settembre with Via Giuseppe Verdi still exists.
After the reconstruction, the castrum was divided into 27 vicinie (or neighborhoods) that took the names of the families of feudal and comital tradition that held the power of the commune.[18][19] Again according to Terni Crema was expanded on every side except to the north.[11] However, according to Carlo Piastrella, only moats and embankments were built.[12]
Certain records from those centuries include the erection of the castles of Porta Serio (1335)[20] and Porta Ombriano (1361), the latter commissioned by Bernabò Visconti and demolished by the Venetians in 1451.[21]
During the brief seigniory of the Benzoni family, Giorgio, who came to power in 1405, had the contado fortified with a series of watchtowers (some of which still exist, transformed or incorporated into other buildings).[22] In the city, the cathedral bell tower served as the main observation point, where two or three guards paid by the municipality were stationed.[23] This fortified network is well documented on the Desegnio de Crema et del Cremascho, the oldest extant map of the territory, which can also be consulted in reproduction on ceramic tiles at the Civic Museum of Crema, a work created by Gianetto Biondini in 1966.[23]
Venetian walls
[edit]Construction
[edit]In February 1449 a Venetian troop led by Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta laid siege to Crema, which capitulated the following September, starting the long rule under the Serenissima destined to last until 1797 (except for the brief French period of 1509–1512).[23]
It fell to the Venetian podestà Berardo Barbarigo to act as ambassador to the people of Crema to convince them of the need for a new city wall: having invited the mayors to a banquet he convinced them, appealing to their pride and vanity, to take on one-third of the funding of 36,000 ducats,[24] although he later increased the cost estimate to 120,000 ducats.[25]
Within a solemn ceremony on May 24, 1488, work began with the rebuilding of the Ombriano Gate, and then continued until 1498, alternating the construction of the southern and northern sectors.[25] The work continued until 1509 with the completion of the excavation of the moat and the completion of the inner embankment.[25] No military engineers were called in to direct the work, but it was entrusted first to Giovanantonio De Marchi from Crema and then to Venturino Moroni from Bergamo.[24]
At the conclusion of the reconstruction, the walls contemplated the four gates:[26] of Ombriano, Pianengo (sometimes also called Porta Nova),[27] Serio and Ripalta; in addition, the walls were divided by eight towers thus named:[27] Torrion del Berardo, Torrion di S.to Giorgio, Torrion del Foscolo, Torrion del Paradiso, Torrion di Santa Maria, Torrion di S.to Bertolameo, Torrion del Pavaro, Torrion di S.to Marco.
16th century
[edit]In 1508, confronted with fears of invasion following the stipulation of the Anti-Venetian League of Cambrai, the moats were strengthened and enlarged and the guards increased. All male citizens of Crema over the age of sixteen were called to work on reinforcing the counter-ditches.[28] The outcome of the Battle of Agnadello (1509) resulted in the French conquest.
Three years later with the contribution of the condottiere Renzo da Ceri Crema returned to Venetian hands.[29] Bribing the French commander Guido Pace Bernardi in return for a fee, the people of Crema willingly opened their doors to the condottiero to free themselves from an invader who enforced taxes, oppression and robbery.[29] However, political front reversals led to a new siege in 1514 by a coalition between the Duchy of Milan, the Spanish Empire and the Old Swiss Confederacy; to defend the city, Renzo da Ceri had all the isolated buildings around the walls knocked down, had the ditches lowered and settled in the sanctuary of Santa Maria della Croce turned into a fort.[29] On the night of August 25, 1514, there was the final assault of Renzo da Ceri's troops in the camp of the Sforzeschi and the Swiss at Ombriano, routing them and finally freeing the Crema region from the invading forces.[29]
Already a few years later, however, doubts began to be expressed about the defensive efficiency of the city;[30] it was especially the introduction of the new offensive techniques based on the use of gunpowder that was the most important critical issue encountered by the relators in those years since that of Governor Sforza Pallavicino in 1548.[30]
17th and 18th centuries
[edit]The situation was revealed in all its drama at the time of the political crisis that began in 1606 with the breakdown of diplomatic relations between the Venetian Republic and the Church State and the real possibility of the entry of Spain into the battlefield in support of the pope.[31] The Venetian province of Crema was practically an exclave surrounded by the State of Milan and was being militarized through massive enlistment of manpower, reinforcement of border surveillance and provision of extensive artillery.[32] In 1606 the general superintendent in the mainland Lorenzo Priuli arrived in Crema on inspection, who observed with distress the inadequacy of the city walls.[32]
A map from a few years later shows some of the interventions: these are fortifications outside the castle, at the ravelins of the gates and the towers of the enclosure. It is not dated, but it is signed by the distinguished military engineer Francesco Tansini (1580–1638, of Crema origin) and dated in all probability around the year 1620. It is inferred from the caption that it was Tansini himself who was responsible for rebuilding the interventions undertaken earlier by Marcello Alessandrini.[33]
Several times during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries projects for adaptation and improvement were proposed: these were sometimes radical, sometimes innovative interventions, but the substantial public funding that would be required was the greatest deterrent to their concreteness.[34] One project by Tansini, among many others, is of particular interest: it is a signed but undated map (probably made around 1630) that envisaged the construction of a pentagonal citadel northwest of the city, toward the Moso marsh. The same also provided for a fortified area to the south, between the walls and the Cresmiero, intended as a refuge for the people of the contado in case of war.[35]
Filippo Verneda's Relatione della città di Crema, dated April 15, 1683, meticulously describes Crema's fortifications and does not fail to expose their shortcomings: works that were too small, design flaws (e.g., the lack of space to create an embankment on the lunette of Porta Ombriano). the embankment of unequal height and too close to the dwellings, and many others.[36]
In a 1771 annotation, podestà Angelo Giustinian wrote how at "the Foscolo station" there was a breach that favored overpassing and thus the nocturnal entry of thugs and the practice of smuggling.[37]
19th century
[edit]In 1803 the Cisalpine Republic decreed Crema an "Open City,"[38] initiating the new urban reorganization; with a resolution of March 12, 1804, it was determined that the gates should be demolished.[39] While Porta Ripalta and Porta Pianengo were bricked up, for Porta Serio and Porta Ombriano the architect Faustino Rodi was entrusted with their renovation; the Cremonese architect, who was already overseeing the work on the new bridge over the Cresmiero in Crema,[38] opted for a total neoclassical makeover.[38]
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Porta Serio in 1896, with the toll booths, taken from "Le cento città d'Italia," monthly illustrated supplement of the Secolo, Sonzogno Editore, 1896
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Porta Ombriano in 1896, with the tollhouses, taken from "Le cento città d'Italia," monthly illustrated supplement to the Secolo, Sonzogno Editore, 1896
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The walls and the city from the Campo di Marte, taken from "Le cento città d'Italia," monthly illustrated supplement to the Secolo, Sonzogno Editore, 1896
In 1809 the Royal State Property Office sold the Porta Serio Castle, which was gradually demolished together with the outer rampart on the area of which a few decades later – in 1858 – public gardens were built there.[39]
The suppression of many religious orders dates back to 1810 and, among them, was that of the Dominican nuns also known as Santa Maria Mater Domini,[40][41] who were based in a seventeenth-century complex located northwest of the city; in 1817 the new Austrian government converted the former convent into barracks by installing there the "Imperiali Regii Stalloni" intended for the improvement of horse breeds.[41] To gain space, a section of the wall was demolished and a more advanced, high wall was built.
Based on a design by engineer Luigi Massari in 1833, a roadway was planned at the foot of the southern embankment, from the present-day Piazza Garibaldi to Via Kennedy;[42] this road, built mainly for the purpose of speeding up access to the Ospedale Maggiore for those coming from outside the city, was initially known as Viale alle Mura, or Passeggio dei Bastioni.[42] It was later called Via dell'Ospitale and then, pursuant to a mayoral resolution in 1931, Via dell'Assedio.[42]
In the year 1881,[43] on the other hand, the idea of adding a third gateway in the walls in addition to the existing Porta Serio and Porta Ombriano was put forward. A few years earlier, in 1863,[44] operation of the Treviglio-Cremona railway line was started, but the temporary building and related switches were already at that time considered too close to the "Provinciale bergamasca,"[44] hence the idea of building the future and final station on the extension of Via Tadini. However, the costs of building a new road and a new toll gate were the reasons that scuttled the project.[45]
20th and 21st centuries
[edit]Until the last years of the 19th century, urban expansion outside the historic center, resulting in increased trade, required greater ease of access to the city,[46] hence the abolition, in the early 20th century, of the nighttime closure of the gates and entry duties.[47]
Dating back to 1919, however, was the decision to tear down the now unused tollhouses, thus isolating the two gates that had been employed as entrance architectural monuments.[46]
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Serio Gate
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Ombriano Gate
Thus, all administrative functions ceased and given the need to interact more easily with the outside area, new gateways were opened from 1903.
- 1903: Tadini Street;[48]
- 1907: reopening of Porta Ripalta (at that time, between Via Vittorio Emanuele II and Via Piacenza);[48][49][50][51][52]
- 1907: Borgo San Pietro street;[48]
- 1907: reopening of Porta Pianengo, in Santa Chiara street;[48]
- 1911: Monte di Pietà street, at that time a continuation of Ponte Furio street;[48][53]
- 1911: Quartierone street;[48]
- 1924: Medaglie d'Oro street, at the time Piazza delle Teresine;[48][54][55]
- 1928: Federico Pesadori street;[48][56][57]
- 1934: Valera street;[48]
- 1982: Massari street.[58][59][60]
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Via Tadini
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Via Kennedy, where Porta Ripalta once stood.
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Via Borgo San Pietro
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Via Santa Chiara; once there stood Porta Pianengo (or Porta Nova)
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Via Monte di Pietà
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Via Quartierone
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Via Pesadori
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Via Valera
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Via Massari
A stretch of wall is linked to a tragic episode that occurred during World War II; Crema was also bombed by Anglo-American Allied forces and the primary target was the railway bridge over the Serio River.[61] However, on December 30, 1944, shortly after lunchtime a bomb hit the Torrion Foscolo inside which Teresa Ragazzi Bissa (41) and worker Bruno Pizzeghello (38), an employee of an electrical company that was located right in front of the tower, had sought refuge there;[62] the two perished under the rubble. After the conflict ended, the remains of the keep were not removed as a future memorial to the event.
A council resolution in 1948 suppressed the southern road abutting the rampart of the walls – the Via dell'Assedio – and the area was ceded to the local residents;[42] it also legalized the subdivision of the areas once occupied by the ramparts,[47] a choice that many would later call "improper"[47] and "nonsensical."[42]
It was in the 1950s that the project to expand the "Hospital Institutes," which were then located in the built-up complex on Kennedy Street, was undertaken. In 1955, a grant of ten million liras was provided by the High Commission for Hygiene and Sanitation contingent on the expansion of the Dyskinetic Department,[63] and, in any case, the hospital needed new space to cope with the increase in admissions and inpatients.[63] The resulting expansion project included the construction of a new monoblock occupying the space of the moat immediately beyond the city walls[64] and related “tampering” of the “bastion of the Venetian walls”.[65] The veto of the Superintendence placed the hospital's Board of Directors in a position to consider other solutions, including the erection of a new infrastructure elsewhere,[66] a decision finally made in October 1960.[67]
Also in 1960, at the conclusion of a series of celebratory events dedicated to the eighth centenary of Frederick Barbarossa's siege, a commemorative plaque was placed on the Venetian walls, near Porta Serio, in memory of the historic event;[68] it reads:
TO THE HEROES OF CREMA
WHO ON THE CITY WALLS
FOR THE DEFENCE OF MUNICIPAL LIBERTIES
AGAINST FREDERICK BARBAROSSA
FEARLESSLY FOUGHT AND FELL
TO THE MARTYRED HOSTAGES
WHO MADE CREMA DISTINGUISHED
THE MINDFUL CITIZENS
ON THE VIII CENTENARY OF THE SIEGE
MCMLX
In the 1980s had originated the idea, never fulfilled, of creating a pedestrian path to connect the urban green areas of Porta Serio and the Campo di Marte gardens by partially restoring the old patrol path and the remaining vacant areas at the foot of the walls.[69]
During the early 2000s the former Villa&Bonaldi factory, built on the northeastern exterior of the walls in 1924,[70] was demolished, a cobblestone parking lot was built under the walls, and a large section of the walls under Via Castello was returned to public view.
The castle of Porta Serio
[edit]The castle in front of Porta Serio was built according to late medieval principles in 1335,[20] was later enlarged and became the seat of the castellan and garrison;[20] in Filippo Verneda's Relatione of 1683, it is described as a structure with walls of perfect quality, with angular towers both square and round, with an outer pit "of 9 steps" also on the side facing the city and a counterscarp "12 feet high." Inside was the place-of-arms, rooms for the accommodation of soldiers and storerooms for weapons; on an upper floor there was accommodation for the castellan.[36] The Relatione goes on to describe the exterior, where it mentions, in support of the castle's defense, the rampart and keep.[36] Verneda believes that the castle, "although an ancient work," was "valuable in many ways... because it could always keep the city in good order."[36]
The castle was sold for the sum of 34,000 liras by the Royal State Property Office of Lodi to a company – formed by Counts Barni, Passerini and Bonelli[71] – which resold it to master builder Gaetano Viscardi, who gradually began to demolish it and, starting in 1822, built new houses on the cleared area.[71]
There is precise iconographic evidence of the castle that has documentary value: on the walls of the hall of Villa Severgnini in Izano, the painter Angelo Mora made a series of eight tempera landscapes, commissioned by Gaetano Severgnini; one of these depicts the castle pictured from the north, toward today's Via Luigi Griffini, together with the houses called "chiodere" on the right and the bell tower of San Benedetto in the background.[71]
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Angelo Mora, The Castle of Crema, tempera, m 1.92 x 4, Villa Severgnini, Izano
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Piazza Garibaldi in 2017, photographed from the same angle that reproduces the castle of Crema in Angelo Mora's tempera
The castle of Porta Ombriano
[edit]It stood north of the Porta, on the area of Palazzo Terni,[72] erected in 1370; in 1379 Carlo, the son of Bernabò Visconti, settled there in a tower which, according to Sforza Benvenuti, "was the scene of many love affairs" and was therefore called the Tower of Paradise, a name later given to the nearby keep.[72]
In 1403 Ghibelline factions besieged by Guelph factions and backed by Cabrino Fondulo took refuge there;[73] on that occasion Gentilino Soardo, leader of the Ghibellines from Bergamo who had been called to help the people of Crema, ended up seriously wounded.
The castle was demolished by the Venetians in 1451 and part of the land was sold to the convent of the nuns of Saint Monica.[74]
Features
[edit]The walls encircle the historic center almost entirely, except in the northwest area. The ovoid shape is interspersed by the circular or polygonal gates and towers.[75]
The walls were surrounded by an outer moat provided with a counterscarp and of which a section still exists at the gardens of Campo di Marte.[75]
The actual walls have a sloping scarp with, at the top, a semicircular curb, formed by molded bricks; the facing is of exposed brick, while the inner core is filled with cement mortar, scrap materials or pounded bricks, a system that allowed faster construction and less time required to complete it; in some sections a seventeenth-century elevation still exists.[75]
On the side towards the town center there was an embankment; examples are visible when passing along Giovanni Gervasoni Street and inside the San Luigi sports center. For access to the ramparts, internal stairs had been built[76] with the presence of covered walkways: there is still a section of about 130 meters between the Torrion della Madonna and Porta Ombriano, with a barrel vault and embrasures placed at a distance of 8 meters at human height dating most likely to the early period, suitable for the use of crossbows and arquebuses.[77]
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Section of the walls (breaching of Valera Street)
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Detail of the elevation of a rampart
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A residual section of a moat at the gardens of Campo di Marte
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The embankment of Via Gervasoni
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Detail of the brick veneer
Image gallery
[edit]-
Interior view from Via Pesadori
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Exterior view from Via Diaz
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The Torrion della Madonna and a part of the moat
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Interior view from Via delle Grazie
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Interior view from Via Massari
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Glimpse inside the ‘Gianna Manenti Agello’ park, seen from the public Via Stazione
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Glimpse from Via Stazione
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View from the car park accessible from Via Stazione
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Pedestrian walkway between Piazza Garibaldi and the public gardens of Porta Serio
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The Castle Keep
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The Torrion di Porta Serio and the gate of the same name
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The Torrion di Porta Serio
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Interior view of Via Valera
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Mura venete di Crema – complesso". Retrieved August 11, 2017.
- ^ Edallo (1995, p. 52).
- ^ Perolini (1982, p. 17).
- ^ Perolini (1982, p. 18).
- ^ a b Perolini (1982, p. 19).
- ^ Edallo (1995, p. 17).
- ^ Sforza Benvenuti (1859, p. 64).
- ^ a b Perolini (1982, p. 21).
- ^ a b Favole (1996, p. 138).
- ^ Edallo (1995, p. 49).
- ^ a b c Favole (1996, p. 141).
- ^ a b c Favole (1996, p. 140).
- ^ a b Carlo Piastrella (May 29, 2009). "L'assedio di Crema". In Primapagina.
- ^ Perolini (1982, p. 22).
- ^ a b Sforza Benvenuti (1859, p. 131).
- ^ Sforza Benvenuti (1859, p. 132).
- ^ Perolini (1976, p. 89) .
- ^ Fino (1566, p. 30).
- ^ Albinio (2006, pp. 45–46).
- ^ a b c Cassi (2009, p. 283).
- ^ Favole (1996, p. 147).
- ^ Perolini (1982, p. 42).
- ^ a b c Perolini (1982, p. 43).
- ^ a b Bertozzi et al. (2015, p. 28).
- ^ a b c Venchiarutti (2015, p. 17).
- ^ Bertozzi et al. (2015, p. 27).
- ^ a b Tosato (2014, p. 46) .
- ^ Savoia (2010, p. 25).
- ^ a b c d Savoia (2010, p. 26).
- ^ a b Venchiarutti (2015, p. 18).
- ^ Benzoni (2010, p. 75).
- ^ a b Benzoni (2010, p. 76).
- ^ Crema, pen and ink drawing with watercolor, c. 1620, in the Treviso Public Library
- ^ Venchiarutti (2015, p. 18).
- ^ Crema, pen and ink drawing with watercolor, c. 1630, in the Treviso Public Library
- ^ a b c d Filippo Verneda, Relatione della città di Crema, manoscritto conservato presso la Biblioteca comunale di Treviso
- ^ Venchiarutti (2015, p. 21).
- ^ a b c Morandi (1991, p. 70).
- ^ a b Cassi (2009, p. 281).
- ^ "Convento di Santa Maria Mater Domini, domenicane osservanti (1517–1810)". Retrieved August 9, 2017.
- ^ a b Sforza Benvenuti (1859, p. 310 – vol. 2).
- ^ a b c d e Perolini (1976, p. 121).
- ^ AA.VV. (1996, p. 71).
- ^ a b AA.VV. (1996, p. 73).
- ^ AA.VV. (1996, p. 76).
- ^ a b Morandi (1991, p. 80).
- ^ a b c Venchiarutti (2015, p. 21).
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Perolini (1976, p. 15).
- ^ The old Strada Maestra di Porta Ripalta was named after Victor Emmanuel II in 1871; it changed its name to Via Ettore Muti during the Italian Social Republic, and finally to Via Giacomo Matteotti in 1945; in 1970 the City Council decided to separate the small square in front of Palazzo Fadini and the Church of San Giacomo from Via Matteotti, renaming it Piazzetta Caduti sul Lavoro; furthermore: the next section up to where the gate was located and its continuation was renamed Via John Fitzgerald Kennedy
- ^ Perolini (1976, p. 45).
- ^ Perolini (1976, p. 71).
- ^ Perolini (1976, p. 81).
- ^ Perolini (1976, p. 83).
- ^ The name at the time is reminiscent of the nearby convent of Carmelite nuns; it later took the name, in 1926, of via Umberto Fadini and, finally, the present name in memory of Gen. Umberto Faini, Capt. Luigi Viviani and Capt. Luciano Bertolotti
- ^ Perolini (1976, p. 82).
- ^ Known in ancient times as Canton di San Giacomo, it was dedicated to Giuseppe Garibaldi in 1881, to Dante Alighieri in 1934 and finally to the vernacular poet Federico Pesadori in 1951
- ^ Perolini (1976, p. 85).
- ^ Bertozzi et al. (2015, p. 32).
- ^ Known in ancient times as Strada del Teraglio, it was named after Luigi Massari by mayoral resolution in 1931
- ^ Perolini (1976, p. 80).
- ^ Vincenzo Cappelli (November 30, 1996). "'44/'45: bombe su Crema". Il Nuovo Torrazzo.
- ^ AA.VV. (1995, p. 221).
- ^ a b Senza firma (September 29, 1955). "Dieci milioni del Governo all'ospedale di Crema". La Provincia.
- ^ Senza firma (March 31, 1960). "In via di notifica al Comune il veto della Sovrintendenza?". La Provincia.
- ^ Senza firma (July 6, 1960). "Il progetto di ampliamento non è stato abbandonato". La Provincia.
- ^ Senza firma (October 5, 1960). "Un nuovo ospedale sorgerà a Crema?". La Provincia.
- ^ Senza firma (October 21, 1960). "La costruzione di un nuovo Ospedale annunciata dal presidente dell'Amministrazione". La Provincia.
- ^ Senza firma (November 1, 1960). "Il Convegno sull'Agricolutra cremasca al Centro Culturale S. Agostino". La Provincia.
- ^ Antonio Grassi (April 24, 1992). "Passeggiando sotto le mura". La Provincia.
- ^ Dario Dolci (February 6, 2002). "Uffici al posto della fabbrica". La Provincia.
- ^ a b c Zucchelli (2000, p. 217).
- ^ a b Sforza Benvenuti (1859, p. 193).
- ^ Sforza Benvenuti (1859, p. 200).
- ^ Sforza Benvenuti (1859, p. 265).
- ^ a b c Bertozzi et al. (2015, p. 29).
- ^ Bertozzi et al. (2015, p. 68).
- ^ Tino Moruzzi (August 9, 1999). "Mura, c'è una strada coperta". La Provincia.
Bibliography
[edit]- Fino, Alemanio (1566). La historia di crema raccolta da gli annali di Pietro Terni. Venezia: Appresso Domenico Farri.
- Sforza Benvenuti, Francesco (1859). Storia di Crema, vol. 1. Milano: Giuseppe Bernardoni.
- Perolini, Mario (1976). Origini dei nomi delle strade di Crema. Cremona: Tipografia Padana.
- Perolini, Mario (1982). Crema e il suo territorio. Cremona: Tipografia Padana.
- Morandi, Mariella (1991). Porta Serio e Porta Ombriano in Insula Fulcheria. Crema: Leva Artigrafiche.
- Edallo, Dado (1995). La formazione del tessuto urbano in L'immagine di Crema. Crema: Leva Artigrafiche.
- AA.VV. (1995). 50 anni fa Crema e i cremaschi dal settembre '43 all'aprile '45. Crema: Buona Stampa.
- AA.VV. (1996). La ferrovia e le attività economiche a Crema nel tempo. Crema: Edizioni Tipolito Uggé.
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