Velletri

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Comune di Velletri
Coat of arms of Comune di Velletri
Municipal coat of arms
Country Italy Italy
Region Lazio
Province Rome
Mayor Bruno Cesaroni (since June 2004)
Elevation 332 m
Area 113 km²
Population
 - Total (as of 2004-12-31) 50,324
 - Density 436/km²
Time zone CET, UTC+1
Coordinates 41°42′N 12°41′E
Gentilic Veliterni
Dialing code 06
Postal code 00049
Patron San Clemente
 - Day November 23
Website: www.comune.velletri.rm.it

Velletri is a comune in the province of Rome, on the Alban Hills, in Lazio (Latium) - Italy. It is bounded by other communes of Rocca di Papa, Lariano, Cisterna di Latina, Artena, Aprilia, Nemi, Genzano di Roma, Lanuvio.

Velletri is renowned as one of the main centres for wine production in the Latium.

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[edit] History

The origins of Velletri (ancient Velitrae) are uncertain. A settlement existed on the site from pre-historic times, though scholars debate if its inhabitants were Etruscan, Latin or Volscian. During the First Latin War, the city was conquered by the Romans under their king Ancus Marcius and called Velitrae, from the Volscian term Velcester. The Roman captured in again in 494 BCE and in 338 BCE. From this date Velletrae became a Roman town ("municipium"). During the Roman period, patricians built several villas in it. The city had also several temples and an amphitheatre.

The family (gens) Octavia, to which the first Roman Emperor Augustus belonged, came from Velitrae, and the future emperor spent his youth there.

Velletri began to decay after its sack by Alaric the Goth in 410 CE. In the 5th century it was the seat of a bishopric and in the following one it became an imperial city after the Byzantine reconquest of Italy. In the Middle Ages it started a difficult recover, culminating in the 12th century with its declaration as a free commune. In the 14th and in the first half of the 15th centuries Velletri fought against the commune of Rome and the barons of Lazio, and later became part of the Papal States.

The first pawnshop of the world was opened in Velletri in the 15th century.

In 1774 Velletri and its surroundings were the theatre of a battle between the Spanish and the Austrian Army, during the war between the Habsburg and the Bourbon. After the French Revolution, Velletri rebelled and it was proclaimed a Republic. Later changed side and 900 of its citizens resisted in Castelgandolfo the siege by Joachim Murat. The Republic lasted till 1814, and was briefly revamped in 1849.

Between September 2, 1943, and June 2, 1944, Velletri was heavily bombed by the Allied Powers. Many of the monuments were destroyed and many people died.

Detail of the Cathedral of St. Clement.
Enlarge
Detail of the Cathedral of St. Clement.

[edit] Main sights

  • The Palazzo Comunale (Town Hall), with a porch entrance, was began in 1572 by Giacomo della Porta on a design by Vignola, end finished in 1741 by Filippo Barigioni. It houses the City's Archaeological Museum. It was destroyed during World War II and rebuilt in 1956.
  • The 16th century Oratory of Santa Maria del Sangue ("St. Mary of the Blood").
  • The church of Sant'Antonio Abate (14th century).
  • The lofty campanile of S. Maria in Trivio, erected in 1353 in Lombard-Gothic style, in gratitude for the liberation of the city from a plague which devastated it in 1348.
  • The Cathedral of St. Clement, erected in the 4th century over the ruins of an ancient temple. It has three naves and was rebuilt in the current form in 1659-1662. The Renaissance gate is by Traiano da Palestrina (1512). The interior has several frescoes, while the Capitular Museum houses important relics, vessels and paintings including works by Gentile da Fabriano and Antoniazzo Romano.
  • The Tempietto Bramantesco ("Bramantesque temple"), constructed by Alessandro da Parma in 1523.

[edit] Twin cities

[edit] External links