
Assisi -
History of the city
Originally an Umbrian settlement, under Rome Assisi became a municipium with the name of Asisium.
Up until the 13th century the city perimeters remained the same as they had been in Roman times. Bishop Rufino evangelised Assisi in 238 AD. Wrested from the Goths of Totila in 545, Assisi passed under the dominion of the Longobard and Frankish Duchy of Spoleto. In the 11th century it proclaimed itself a free ghibelline comune, constantly clashing with the nearby guelph Perugia. In 1189, taking advantage of the absence of the imperial vicar Conrad of Lutzen, the inhabitants of Assisi stormed the city's fortress. In retaliation for Perugia's interference with the city's bid for freedom, Assisi marched against its ancient rival and was defeated at Ponte San Giovanni.
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Giotto: San Francesco riceve le stimmate |
In 1208 Francis, who had in the meantime been given the chapel of Santa Maria degli Angeli by the Benedictines, also known as the Porziuncola, founded his own order, the Lesser Friars.
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San Francesco e Santa Chiara |
In 1221 Francis founded Third Order (lay) at Cannara. Francis received the stigmata in 1224 at La Verna and died in 1226 at La Porziuncola. Francis was proclaimed saint just two years after his death. The following day Pope Gregory IX laid the foundation stone for the church and convent Francis' companion Fra' Elia wished to erect. Claire was also canonised two years after her death in 1253. A year later work began to build the church in her honour.
Notwithstanding these two eminent religious figures, the history of Assisi followed another course. In 1316 Assisi extended its city walls to include the complex of the Basilica of St Francis, the Benedictine convent of San Pietro and Borgo Aretino. The city went into a decline after the plague of 1348. To secure the dominion of the Church over Assisi, in 1367 Cardinal Albornoz ordered the Rocca Maggiore to be built on what remained of the imperial fortress above the city. From the 14th through to the 16th century the two main families in Assisi, the Nepis above and the Fiumi below, feuded viciously depite the fact that the city was under a succession of rulers for long periods (Biordo Michellotti, Broglio di Trinci, Galeazzo Visconti, Braccio Fortebraccio, Francesco Sforza, Jacopo Piccinino). The city only finally endered the dominion of the Church under the Piccolomini pope, Pius II (1458-64).
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