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P.zza della Libertá, 16 |
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| telephone +39 733 548711 |
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| office timetable Monday 8.30-13.00 Others days: 9.00-13.00 |
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| Write to Municipality |
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Welcome to Pollenza Municipality Site
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THE ENVIRONMENT AND THE HUMAN SETTLMENTS
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| The elliptical layout of Pollenza lies on a ridge bounded
Nwards by the river Potenza and Swards by the river
Chienti and by the state road 77.
It is 344 m. above sea level and has a population of about
6.025 inhabitants.
The Sibillini range is to the west: its iridescent colours
make it a beautiful sight in all the seasons: the shining
white of the snow as well as the bright green in spring give
the view its charm. In the east the hills slope down towards
the sea in a pleasant landscape now completely shaped by
the work of man.
The towns of Treia, Macerata, Tolentino and San Severino
frame the rivers, green countryside and the human
settlements.
The Cassero and the Trebbio are on the outskirts, north and
south, and they extend the town up to the end of the
terrace where Pollenza stands.
The surfaces slope down showing a well organized
territory full of farms and villages which form the historical
evidence of the medieval castles which stood there in
ancient times.
The geological conformation of the place is of clay and
marble in some points, sand and friable soil elsewhere
because of the presence of sandstone. This particular
conformation has influenced old and modern building
and has contributed to its preservation.
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THE ORIGIN
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| The oldest marks left by man in this area go back to the
Piceno age and have been discovered on Monte Franco,
north of the present town. This is a historical place for the
inhabitants of Pollenza. Here is evidence of the passage of
old communities: a large necropolis, with tombs from VIII
century B. C. In the course of the centuries there has been
a recurring enrichment of the site, which has become a sort
of "fil rouge" following the cycles of human settlements
on this hill in different forms according to the different
ages, without any interruption.
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ROMAN AGE
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| In the IV century Strabo and Pliny mentioned Pneuentia
as one of the main towns in the Piceno area; it is the
republican age, when important centres such as Trea and
Ricina do not stand out yet as they will in the following
Augustan age; Urbs Salvia, which later on will compete
for the territory of Pneuentia and finally will eclipse it,
thanks to its population explosion and its political power,
is at the moment totally ignored by G. Caesar who
happened to pass the nearby.
Pollentia or Pneuentia is situated along the Itinerarium
Antonini, between Auximum, Septempeda and Firmum.
Afterwards, during the imperial age, the town of
Urbisaglia rises above it and Pollentia becomes a mere
place of transit for the pilgrims on their way to the shrine
of Dea Bona, which stands below along the Itinerarium
Antonini, in the area which will become the seat of the
Abbazia di Rambona.
Unlike Urbisaglia, which will spread from the the hill
downwards, and become an important town, Pollenza does
not extend its territory surrounded as it is, in the north by
Monte Francolo, and in the south, by the spreading towns
of Tolentino and Urbisaglia.
At the end of the first century AD, the town still exists and
is autonomous, even if under the influence of Urbisaglia.
The name of Pollenza is gradually forgotten or it is used to
mean the large estate of the Roman landowner, of Frank
origin, Flavio Orso.
This is the case when the surname of a large landowner
replaces the name of the spot, outliving it. There is many
toponymic evidence linked with this name: the most
important, Fondo Orsenano, concerns the place where his
villa was situated, north-east of the centre of the town, near
the church of San Valentino, commanding the valley
below. There is a road "Strada Urscilla" which starts from
this villa and leads to Recina and from there to the sea
where, presumably, Orso owns other lands: for this reason
he builds a road which is linked with the present "Strada
Regina". Finally a certain Branca Orsina indicates the hill
between the river Chienti, the river Fiastra, and the
Entogge, along the road from Pollenza to the Abbadia di
Fiastra. Pollenza will claim its sovereign rights over this
place until the Middle Ages, by virtue of the descendants
of Flavio Orso who are the owners of these lands.
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MIDDLE AGES
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| Around the year 1201 Pollenza is an independent commu-ne.
A document makes reference to an alliance with Treia
and Tolentino which was signed that year. It has changed
its name into Monte Milone (probably from around AD
879) after the name of the Frank who rebuilds it after the
barbarian invasions and receives it as a fief from the Pope
and Charles III, for his services. The Pope often calls for
help from Charles the Fat to stop the advance of the
Saracens and to defend himself against the attacks of
Guido da Spoleto: it is likely that the Frank (or Longobard)
Milone was among the emperor's suite and afterwards
stopped in the area of Ancona. This thesis can be supported
by the fact that Milone is married to Berta, Charlemagne's
sister, whose name marks the small village north to the
abbey of Rambona, along the road to Septempeda.
In 1248 the political status of Pollenza is completely
reversed: Monte Milone is part of a confederation, together
with Cingoli, Tolentino, Matelica, Camerino, San Ginesio
and Montecchio and exerts its control over the neighbouring
towns, including Urbisaglia which is subject to Tolentino
and Monte Milone. The important centre in the imperial
age, because of civil wars, is now a small village which has
become subject to Tolentino between the end of XIII and
the beginning of XIV century; Pollenza, which was not
able to spread out during the imperial age, from the top of
its hill, keeps its identity and becomes a commune.
The townplanning is typically medieval, with a radiocentrical
design which follows the shapes of the levels.
In the north, the areas of Maria and San Salvatore develop,
in the south those of S. Andrea and S. Bartolomeo,
following the direction of the present Via Roma; it goes
beyond the town walls and reaches the Cassero or Borgo
Piazza Vecchia which is often identified as the main
defensive part of the castle.
San Bartolomeo is close to the present Porta del Colle,
S. Andrea on the site of the present Piazza Ricci and Santa
Maria where the church hospice under the rule of the
Abbazia di Rambona stood: here in AD 996 the Abbot
S. Amico died: he was the most remarkable figure inside
the monastic community of Rambona.
In 1258 the monks give the church of Santa Maria to the
Franciscan Order who build the monastery, which in 1496,
is dedicated also to S. Antonio for the "help" the saint gave
during the plague.
By now, the territory of Monte Milone is roughly the same
of the modern town. Around the fortified centre, called
Castrum Montis Milonis, stand four other castles: the
Cassero, Castel Gualdo, Gagliano and Castel Franco. It
seems that the later was the residence of the noble Frank
Milone, S. Amico's father.
The castle of Monte Milone strives to survive during the
hard times of the middle ages, while below, the abbey of
Rambona grows in importance becoming a busy commercial
centre, with a very famous trade fair which attracts
merchants even from the far east. The byzantine influence
in this place is evident from the decoration of the crypt,
from the recurrent theme of the greek cross, from the
presence of San Flaviano, an oriental saint, and from the
images of the Virgin in the attitude of a byzantine empress in
the famous ivory diptych found in the abbey and dated
around the IX century.
These wooden slabs give important information about
Rambona and, indirectly about Pollenza: they have been
the subject of much research and confirm the Roman
origin of the town, the presence of the oriental element
through the mention of San Flaviano, the date of foundation
of the abbey and so on.
It is worth mentioning in passing, that the diptych has been
the subject of numerous descriptive and interpretative
publications.
The Castle of Milone, initially roughly protected by fences
and towers, has its core in the highest point, where the the
present square is now; here stands a square based tower
near the house of the feudal lord who lived in primitive
conditions. To secure the population against the regular
attacks, the wall is extended up to the present Porta del
Colle and Porta Santa Croce.
According to custom, Castel Gualdo, Castel Gagliano,
Castel Franco and the Cassero are gradually "incorporated"
to the main castrum, maybe against their will, as happens
in Macerata, or maybe of their own accord, on account of
the mutual advantage in resisting attacks from the outside.
It is of no use to try to find traces of this original castle, due
to the constant stratification of the present centre of the
town. We know, however that the tower near the squire's
house, remains until the eighteen century when old age
and the damage caused by an earthquake, destroys it
completely.
The foundation of the neighbouring castles is presumably
contemporary to that of Monte Milone: among these, Castel
Franco is the most important and the first to disappear.
It stood on the hill of the same name, and was inhabited
by Longobard or Frank "milites" (soldiers) the feudal
aristocracy of the time; perhaps it was connected to the hill
below, by a drawbridge and by fences which were soon
demolished by the Commune of Monte Milone, either for
fear of dangerous competition with the main town, or
"as the first step to climb the Castle of Monte Milone
from the north". We do not know the exact date of its
disappearance, but it is certain that in the fifteenth century
it exists no longer, otherwise it would have been mentioned
in the battles between Zerpellone and Piccinino, which
take place on its slopes and involve the two towers on the
Potenza river. The Cassero stands vertical on the Monte
della Croce. Founded around the X, XI century, it is soon
assimilated by Monte Milone.
Castel Gualdo, whose Frank or Teutonic origin is in the
German word "wald " meaning wood or forest, is connected
to the Trebbio, where today stands the monastery of the
Frati Minori.
The small church of Santa Lucia in Silvis was close to
Villa Lauri, which later on gives its name to the whole
district; like Milone, Gualdo is perhaps a Longobard leader
who receives it as a fief for his military services. He
controls an area up to the Strada Romana, in"the triangle
Monte Milone-Tolentino-Urbisaglia, district in the middle
of the rich valley of the river Chienti".
Pietro Manzi reports that the importance of this area is so
remarkable in every age, that the General Council of
Monte Milone decides to build here an inn called "Osteria"
"to accommodate the soldiers on guard and to let two
rooms twice a year to official authorities".
We do not know how and when the castle ceased to exist,
but the historians think that it was incorporated into the
Castrum Montis Milonis, when this became important,
and "invited" the country people to submit to the central
authority.
The placing of the Castello di Gagliano is uncertain.
According to tradition and the toponomy, it is identified
with the area between the main road Macerata-Pollenza(
Murat-Bivio Rotelli) and the State Road 77, in
the area today called Vaglie; more precisely along the ditch
of the same name which was once called Gagliano and
went along the whole fief.
Gagliano was the feudatory's name as well. He was
certainly persuaded to join the castle, in fact his name can
be found in the city registry office until the fifteenth century.
The joining of all the small estates under a central authority
raise the Castrum Montis Milonis to the role of castle
and it is famous for being one of the most warlike and
rebellious, for this it is punished and damaged over and
over again. It opposes the Dukes of Varano, the emperor,
and the Church, and thus, is humiliated, sacked and
subjected to violence by the king Enzo, in 1239; in 1290
Pope Niccolò IV deprives it of the power to exercise
the law.
Macerata, Treia, Tolentino and San Severino obtain the
right to elect their own magistrates, whereas Monte Milone
is deliberately excluded from these rights and, thus
penalized.
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14th & 15th CENTURIES
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| In the XIV century the pope entrusted cardinal Albornoz
with reordering and governing the Papal State and he
found a very unstable political situation: at the end of the
XIII until the beginning of the XIV centuries in fact,
communes and landlords fight, sometimes supported by
unscrupulous mercenaries. The urge to restore order causes
pressing for the promulgation of the Costitutiones
Aegidianae which contain a micro-code concerning public
administration, penal laws, police and ecclesiastical
procedures and catalogues all the castles, the towns, the
fortresses, the incomes, the nobles and their estates. The
lands of the Marches are divided into five categories:
Civitates Maiores, Civitates Magnae, Terrae Mediocres,
Terrae Parvae, Terrae Minores.
Monte Milone is included among the mediocres (medium
sized) and in 1366 it is forced, like all the others, to fortify
the town wall, where necessary, even through the demoli-tion
of houses, villages and villas, in order to build shelter
for people, animals and harvest, in case of attack.
The Cassero remains outside the wall because it is
considered hard to defend. In the following period it was
subjected to various landlords:the Buonaccorsi, the
Lazzarini, (XIV cent), the Varano and the Malatesta until it
loses its autonomy completely, with the arrival of
Francesco Sforza in the Marches. He was on the point of
conquering all the region caused all the towns and villages
willing to defend themselves, to fortify the town walls.
Around the middle of the century, workers from Lombardy
are called in: they set up shops, teach local craftsmen
motivating active reconstruction.
In 1443 Zerpellone, captain of Francesco Sforza, quartered
just in Monte Milone, (for the favourable position between
two valleys), comes to know that the town supports the
Papal State: he immediately decides to punish it, and to lay
waste the country.
In 1447 the dominion of Francesco Sforza comes to an end
leaving scars in the territory and on the people.
Monte Milone comes back to the papal authority which
slowly reorganize the territory, also rebuilding the walls.
The big bases are built with twelve towers and two
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16thCENTURY
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| The sixteenth century is an age of relative prosperity,
during which the town and economic activities have a new
impulse. The ceramics industry flourishes in Pollenza and
for four centuries it will be considered as one of the most
important in the Marches.
The oldest references date back to 1509:
a certain Gerolamo of An-cona, potter, requests the licence
to open a shop and a loan from the Town Council.
Other potters settle there, thanks to the incentives of the local
authority who want to encourage the growth of this craft.
Some of the most beautiful buildings in Pollenza are built
in this period: palazzo Scolastici-Narducci and that of the
cardinal Cento. The first is in Via Roma,between the Porta
del Colle and Piazza Ricci and it is due to the munificence
of Mr.Giovanni Greco who gives his house and property to
the nuns on condition that they do not receive foreign nuns
and dedicate the church to Saint Joseph.
The nuns, who used to live in a small house near the
church of Saint Blaise, from August 30th 1556, can enjoy
a new monastery.
The church of Saint Joseph is enriched by a beautiful stone
portal with stylized flowers and triglyphs, surmounted by a
plain frame.
Inside there is the mystical "Sposalizio of Santa Caterina"
(the marriage of S. Catherine) and three sumptuous gilded
altarpieces dating from the end of the seventeenth century.
Afew steps ahead stands the stately palazzo of the cardinal Cento.
Next to the square we can find another magnificent building
from the sixteenth century, the palazzo Scolastici-Narducci,
which catches the eye, with its fine stone portal with
diamond shaped ashlars.
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17th & 18th CENTURIES
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| In the seventeenth century the Town Council allows the
building upon the city walls, next to them, and between
them; some towers become private houses, but the town
keeps unchanged its overall medieval structure: the streets
are narrow and winding, bordered by rows of small
two or three storey houses.
In the eighteenth century the building renewal starts
involving the whole city centre and principally the main
square: on the area of the Palazzo dei Priori, the town hall
(1775) and the town tower (1785) are built by the architect
Alessandro Rossi from Osimo.
The ceramics craft improves progressively and reaches
its peak in 1787, when F. Verdinelli becomes the most
famous potter among the nobles due to the beautiful
design of his pottery and the refinement of the glaze.
He works in via Vaseria, near the Porta del Colle and his
job is so esteemed that he is granted the "privativa ponti-ficia",
a sort of exclusive right to produce fine white or
coloured pottery in a range of twenty-five miles and for
a period of ten years.
The century is coming to an end,with the troubled events
of the Napoleonic wars after a time of relative peace
guaranteed by the dominion of the Camera Apostolica
(the papal administration). Between 1797 and 1799
Pollenza is occupied by Napoleon and becomes the head-quarters
and capital of the district. Between 1799 and
1807 it comes back to papal authority and is later included
in the Italian Kingdom (1807 1813). From 1814 to 1815
it is part of the Kingdom of Naples.
These events end on May 2nd and 3rd 1815 with the epic
Battle of Cantagallo, the withdrawal of G. Murat and the
final return to the papacy. They are crucial moments for
the history of Pollenza which will be dealt with in the
following pages.
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19thCENTURY
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| Revolutionary ferment is by then in the air, the desire for
renewal is shown by the image of the town: the fortified
walls are lightened by the demolition of the towers, the
ancient Porta del Colle and Porta della Croce are restored
to better condition, and the Porta Nuova is built to connect
the square to the ring around the city walls.The square is
modified according to rational criteria of Enlightment, and
gains its well known rectangular shape. They build the
church of the Immacolata (1821) lining it up with the front
of the town hall, and demolish the church of San Giovanni
(1827) of the Convento degli Agostiniani, where the
hospital had moved, after the State confiscation of the
ecclesiastical properties, in 1809.
In 1837 the project for the City Theatre is commissioned to
Ireneo Alandri. The architect, from San Severino is known
for other important theatres such as the theatre of Ascoli,
Spoleto and the Sferisterio of Macerata. He does not finish
the work in Pollenza because he refuses to agree to the
proposal of the mayor to increase the number of boxes, and
is replaced by the architect Virgilio Vespignani.
Also the Collegiata di San Biagio is restored.
In 1834, from a design of De Mattia from Treia, they start the
building of the neo-classical temple which still today closes the
perspective of via Roma.
In 1862 Monte Milone is called Pollenza again.
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20thCENTURY
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| In the twentieth century the restoration of the monuments of
the town continues: in 1907 the church of S. Andrea in Piazza
Ricci is demolished and the Piazza della Libertà takes its
definitive shape with the the building of the portico of Palazzo
Scolastici, symmetrical to that of the theatre. Finally, in 1931
the front of the church of the SS. Francesco e Antonio is built,
from a design by the architect Cesare Bazzani.
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