Alessandria

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Comune di Alessandria
Coat of arms of Comune di Alessandria
Municipal coat of arms
Country Flag of Italy Italy
Region Piedmont
Province Alessandria (AL)
Elevation 95 m (312 ft)
Area 204 km² (79 sq mi)
Population (as of 30 november 2007)
 - Total 92,808
 - Density 455/km² (1,178/sq mi)
Time zone CET, UTC+1
Coordinates 44°55′N, 08°37′E
Gentilic Alessandrini
Dialing code 0131
Postal code 15100
Frazioni Spinetta Marengo, Castelceriolo, Lobbi, San Giuliano Nuovo, San Giuliano Vecchio, Mandrogne, Cascinagrossa, Litta Parodi, Valle San Bartolomeo, San Michele
Patron San Baudolino
 - Day November 10
Website: www.comune.alessandria.it

Alessandria (Lissandria in Piedmontese) is a city in Piedmont, Italy, and the capital of the Province of Alessandria. The city is sited on the river Tanaro, 55 miles southeast of Turin.

Alessandria is also a major railway hub.

Contents

[edit] History

Alessandria was founded in 1168 upon a preexisting urban nucleus, to serve as a stronghold for the Lombard League, defending the traditional liberties of the communes of northern Italy against the Imperial forces of Frederick Barbarossa. Alessandria stood in the territories of the marchese of Monferrato, a staunch ally of the Emperor, with a name assumed in 1168 to honor the Emperor's opponent, Pope Alexander III. In 1174–75 the fortress was sorely tested by Imperial siege and stood fast. A legend (related in Umberto Eco's book Baudolino, and which recalls one concerning Bishop Herculanus’ successful defense of Perugia several centuries earlier) says it was saved by a quick-witted peasant, Gagliaudo: he fed his cow with the last grain remaining within the city, then took it outside the city walls until he reached the Imperial camp. Here he was captured, and his cow cut open to be cooked: when the Imperials found the cow's stomach filled with grain, Gagliaudo was asked the reason to waste such a rich meal. He answered that he was forced to feed his cow with grain because there was such a lot of it, and no room to place it within the city. The Emperor, fearing that the siege would last too long, left Alessandria free. (Malaria was probably the real cause of his departure.) A statue of Gagliaudo can be found on the left corner of the city cathedral. Alessandria was granted a charter as a free commune in 1198, but entered into jealous conflicts with the older communes of the region, in particular with Asti.

In 1348 Alessandria fell into the hands of the Visconti and passed with their possessions to the Sforza, following the career of Milan, until 1707, when it was ceded to the House of Savoy and henceforth formed part of Piedmont.

With Napoleon's success at the Battle of Marengo (1800), it fell to France and became the capital of the Napoleonic Département of Marengo. During this period a substantial fort was built to the north of the city containing impressive and substantial barracks which are still used as a military HQ and stores (2006). The remains of a second fort to the south of the city (Christo quarter) have been sliced in two by a railway.

From 1814 Alessandria was Savoyard territory once more, part of the Kingdom of Sardinia.

During the years of the Risorgimento, Alessandria was an active center of the liberals.

In a suburb, Spinetta Marengo, the Battle of Marengo is reenacted annually, on June 14.

Alessandria was the first capital of an Italian province to be governed by a Socialist: the clockmaker Paolo Sacco was elected sindaco. July 25, 1899.

Alessandria was a tactical military target during World War II and was subjected to intense Allied bombing, the most serious being the raids of April 30, 1944, with 238 dead and hundreds wounded, and April 5, 1945, with 160 deaths, among them 60 children from the children's asylum in Via Gagliaudo. On end of that month the city was liberated of the German occupation (1943-1945) by the partisan resistance and troops of Brazilian Expeditionary Force

On November 6, 1994 the Tanaro flooded a good part of the city, causing major damage, especially in the Orti quarter.

[edit] Events

[edit] People born in Alessandria

See also: Category:People from Alessandria
  • Saint Baudolino (c.700–c.740), hermit was born at Forum Fulvii, which now falls within the city.
  • Francesco Filiberti (15th century),sculptor.
  • Georgius Merula (c. 1430-1494), humanist and classical scholar,
  • Giovanni Mazzoni (15th–16th century),painter.
  • Giorgio Soleri (16th century),painter.
  • Giuseppe Vermiglio (16th–17th centuries),painter.
  • Giovanni Migliara (1785–1837), painter.
  • Andrea Vochieri (1796–1833), patriot.
  • Urbano Rattazzi (1808–1873), statesman of the Risorgimento.
  • Francesco Faà di Bruno (1825–1888), mathematician and priest.
  • Virginia Marini (1844–1018), actress.
  • Angelo Morbelli (1854–1919), painter.
  • Blessed Teresa Grillo Michel (1855–1944), founder of the Congregation of the Little Sisters of Divine Providence.
  • Sibilla Aleràmo (1876–1960), writer.
  • Pietro Morando (1889–1980), painter.
  • Giovanni Ferrari (1907–1982), footballer.
  • Umberto Eco (born 1932), writer.
  • Gianni Rivera (born 1943), footballer.
  • Andrea Chierico, writer.
  • Ragheb Kareem, DJ.

[edit] Museums

  • The Marengo Battle Museum
  • Antiquarium Forum Fulvii
  • Sale d'arte
  • I percorsi del Museo Civico
  • Museo del Fiume
  • Museo di Scienze Naturali e Planetario
  • Museo Etnografico C'era una volta
  • Museo della Battaglia di Marengo
  • Museo del Cappello Borsalino

Sistema dei musei civici

[edit] External links

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