Aosta

Comune di Aosta
Ville d'Aoste
Country Flag of Italy Italy
Region Aosta Valley
Province Aosta (AO)
Mayor Guido Grimod
Elevation 583 m (1,913 ft)
Area 21 km² (8.1 sq mi)
Population (as of December 31, 2004)
 - Total 34,270
 - Density 1,632/km² (4,227/sq mi)
Time zone CET, UTC+1
Coordinates
Gentilic Aostani (Aostains)
Dialing code 0165
Postal code 11100
Frazioni Arpuilles, Cache, Champailler, Entrebin, Excenex, Laravoire, Porossan, Seyssinod, Signayes, Vignole, Cossan
Patron St. Gratus
 - Day September 7
Website: www.comune.aosta.it
Aosta Cathedral.
Porta Praetoria.

Aosta (French: Aoste) is the principal city of the bilingual Aosta Valley in the Italian Alps, 110km north-northwest of Turin. It is situated near the Italian entrance of the Mont Blanc Tunnel, at the confluence of the Buthier and the Dora Baltea, and at the junction of the Great and Little St. Bernard routes. Aosta is not the capital of the province, as these functions are shared by the region and the communes.

Aosta.
Arches of the Roman Theatre.

Contents

History

Aosta was settled in proto-historic times and later became a Celtic-Ligurian city of the Salassi. Terentius Varro captured it in 25 BC and founded the Roman colony of Augusta Praetoria. After 11 BC Aosta became the capital of the Alpes Graies ("Grey Alps") province of the Empire.

After the fall of the Western Empire, the city was conquered by the Burgundians, the Ostrogoths, the Byzantines. The Lombards, who had annexed it to their Italian kingdom, were expelled by the Franks of Pepin the Younger. Under Charlemagne Aosta acquired importance as a post on the Via Francigena, leading from Aachen to Italy. After 888 it was part of the renewed Kingdom of Italy under Arduin of Ivrea and Berengar of Friuli.

In the 10th century Aosta became part of the Kingdom of Burgundy. After the fall of the latter in 1032, it entered the lands of Umberto I Biancamano of the House of Savoy . After the creation of the county of Savoy, with its capital in Chambéry, Aosta followed its history, as well as the later Kingdom of Sardinia and unified Italy.

Under the House of Savoy, Aosta was granted a special status that it maintained when the new Italian Republic was proclaimed in 1948.

Main sights

The main monuments of the city include:

See also

References

External links