PESARO, regio Le Marche
Pesaro is de
hoofdstad van de provincies Pesaro en Urbino,
aan de monding van de Foglia in de Adriatische Zee. Het is een havenstad en
badplaats.
Pesaro kwam in 283 v.C. in Romeins bezit, werd in 184 v.C. een Romeinse kolonie,
Pisaurum, en kwam door de schenking van Pippijn aan de Kerkelijke Staat. In
1521 schonk paus Julius II Pesaro aan zijn neef Francesco della Rovere, hertog
van Urbino. De stad werd, ook in cultuur-artistiek opzicht, afhankelijk van Urbino en raakte na de terugkeer, 1631, in de Kerkelijke Staat geleidelijk in
verval. Vooral in de 16de eeuw bloeide in Pesaro de majolicakunst. Ligt aan de monding van de Foglia, is het
Romeinse Pisaurum. De nog steeds bestaande majolica productie bereikte in de
16de eeuw haar hoogtepunt. In 1792 werd de componist Rossini hier geboren.
Bezienswaardigheden
De Dom met het 5de eeuwse mozaïek waar de Terugkeer van
Helena uit Troje naar Griekenland te zien is; San Francesco met het
gebeeldhouwde portaal; Palzzo Ducale met de 16de eeuwse beschilderde badkamer
van Lucretia Borgia; Palazzo Vincenzo met de Musei Civici met de Pala di
Pesaro van Bellini; Museo Oliveriano met archeologische vondsten; en de 15de
eeuwse Cocca Costanza.
Stedelijk museum is ondergebracht in het Palazzo Toschi-Mosca en bezit een
uitgebreide collectie keramiek en pinacotheek, met werk van Giovanni Bellini.
Pesaro is de geboorteplaats van Gioacchino Rossini (1792-1868), de beroemde
componist van opera's als De barbier van Sevilla en Willem Tell. Geen wonder dat
zijn geboortehuis een museum is in de hoofdstraat, de Viale Rossini, dat er in
deze plaats een Ottica Rossini is, een Teatro Rossini (waar elk jaar het
Rossini-operafestival plaatsvindt), een Libreria del Barbiere, dat de pizza
Rossini goed loopt, kortom: Rossini is overal. In de vitrine van zijn museum
staan keramiekbeeldjes van de gezette componist Pesaro is de zetel van de
Stichting Gioacchino Rossini, die Rossini-studies bevordert en een bulletin
publiceert.
Te zien zijn er verder: het voormalig hertogelijk paleis, 15de eeuw en de
vesting Rocca Costanza uit de 15de eeuw. Te noemen kerken zijn: Sant'Agostino,
15de eeuw en de San Giovanni Battista. Buiten de stad vindt u er de Villa
Sforza, 15de eeuw en de Villa Rovere of Villa Imperiale, 16de eeuw.
Vanaf Urbino
kunt u goed naar Pesaro aan de Adriatische kust. Een
ruim opgezette badplaats waar de pastelkleuren en de palmen de aanblik van de
recht-toe-recht-aan-hotels aan de lungomare enigszins verzachten. Pesaro is in het voorseizoen
nog stil, maar in de vakantiemaanden zijn de lange stranden met de typische
blauwe strandhuisjes een bron van ongeremd familie plezier.
Internet:
www.le-marche.com Uitstekende site.
- E-mail adressen
iat.pesaro@regione.marche.it
ass.turismo@provincia.ps.it
servizio.turismo@regione.marche.it -
marcheturismo.aptr@regione.marche.it
info.aptr@regione.marche.it
REGIO MARCHE, De Marken
Few countries in the world are suffused with
such a strong sense of historical continuity as Italy. From the myths that
surround the birth of the Etruscan civilization to the foundation of United
Italy in the 19thC, past and present are inextricably linked in a seamless web
that stretches back over three millennia.
This short account provides a thread to guide you through the labyrinth of
this complex story. You'll find more detailed local history in the individual
town pages.
Before the
Romans
Our
knowledge of the early peoples of the Marche is hazy and often draws from the
unreliable writings of later Roman historians. The most important of the tribes
who first inhabited the region in any numbers were the Piceni, who lived on the
eastern seaboard of the Marche. Up in the mountains their place was taken by the
Umbri tribes who also dwelt in the neighbouring region now know as Umbria. Both
tribes have left us few relics of their passage. Only with the Etruscans do we
find early inhabitants who left their mark on Italian history but their
influence in the Marche was marginal. Ancient Rome
With the expulsion in 509 BC of
Tarquinius Superbus, the last of the Etruscan monarchs, the new Republic of Rome
gradually began to make its presence felt. Already weakened by attacks from the
Greek colonists in southern Italy and by Celtic inroads from the north, the
Etruscans soon came under the sway of Rome. The beginning of the end was marked
by the Roman conquest of the Etruscan city of Veio in 396 BC.
With the construction of the great highways such as the Via Flaminia, Roman
dominion across Italy was consolidated. Under the first Roman Emperor, Augustus,
the Marche was divided - the northern stretches formed part of the Roman Umbria,
while the south was known as Picenum.
Arrival of the
Barbarians
In AD 476, Rome, already weakened by the
split between the Western and Eastern Empires and the first forays by Goths and
Vandals from the north, finally fell to the barbarian warrior Odoacer. His reign
as the first King of Italy was short-lived, however, with the arrival in 489 of
Theodoric, King of the Ostrogoths, who established a 33-year rule of relative
tranquility in Italy.
On his death, the Eastern Emperor Justinian in Constantinople tried to revive
imperial power in Italy through his celebrated generals Belisarius and Narses.
Although they finally managed to topple the Gothic King Totila in 552 the
deciding battle took place at the Furlo Gorge in the Marche, central Italy was
in no fit state to resist yet another invasion from the north, this time from
the Lombards in 568.
For 200 years these warriors from the Danube valley held loose control over much
of central Italy, ruling from Lucca and Spoleto. Only in the northern Marche and
part of Umbria did the Byzantine powers manage to keep a toehold under the
protection of the Exarchate of Ravenna.
The Holy Roman
Empire
Although converted to Christianity by
Pope Gregory the Great, the Lombards were regarded as unwelcome guests by later
popes. It was Pope Stephen II who first hit on the idea of calling in foreign
help to oust the Lombards and in 754 Pepin the Short entered Italy at the head
of his Frankish army. The expulsion of the Lombards proved difficult and it was
only under Pepin's son, the great Charlemagne, that the work was completed.
As a reward to his Frankish champion, Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne as the
first Holy Roman Emperor. Although at the time it was little more than an
honorary title, the Holy Roman Empire thus founded was to last on and off for a
thousand years and to become the focus of continual strife between the rival
claims of successive popes and emperors. Although Charlemagne's empire
flourished, it depended too heavily on his guiding hand; on his death in 814,
things rapidly fell apart.
Italy was again plunged into anarchy with imperial officials setting themselves
up as local despots. Increased security only returned with the revival of the
power of the Holy Roman Empire under the Saxon King, Otto I. Trade and industry
began to flourish and, while Emperor and Pope argued over who should rule, many
of the cities of central Italy, the Marche included, had their first taste of
independence. Although they paid lip service to one side or the other, in truth
they found themselves able to decide their own future. Bereft of effective
central government, these early city states bred fierce local patriotism and
ceaseless rivalry with their neighbours.
Guelphs &
Ghibellines
The rivalry between the Papacy and the
Holy Roman Empire came to a head under the rule of the brilliant medieval German
Hohenstaufen Emperor, Frederick II, the man who earned the title Stupor Mundi
for his dazzling talents. If you visit Jesi, you'll be able to see the place
where he was born in a tent. Although he almost succeeded in creating a united
Italy under his banner, his death in 1250 marked the eclipse of German imperial
power in the peninsular.
The Marche, like the rest of central Italy, was deeply bound up
in this conflict, with loyalties tied either to the Guelph or Ghibelline parties.
The supporters of the papacy took their name from Frederick's rival for the
empire, the Welf Otto, while the imperialists became known as Ghibellines from
the Italianized Hohenstaufen battle-cry "Hie Weibling". Behind the simple
struggle between the two powers lay a deeper political battle between the new
middle class of merchants and artisans, who allied themselves with the Guelphs,
and the old feudal aristocracy who saw that the tide of democracy could best be
held in check by the Emperor's Ghibelline faction. Into this fundamental
struggle all the warring factions of central Italy poured their energies. The
Guelph cause can be said to have triumphed with the arrival of the French under
Charles of Anjou in the middle of the 13thC at the invitation of Pope Urban IV;
from now on France rather than Germany was to be the dominant foreign power in
Italy. The Guelph and Ghibelline labels, however, lingered on for centuries.
Long after they had lost their original significance, they remained as a cover
for just about any difference of opinion, even as an excuse to settle old
scores.
Despots and
Republics
The absence of the papacy in Avignon
from 1305-77, the subsequent Great Schism which saw up to three candidates
claiming the Throne of St Peter, and the arrival of the Black Death in 1348, all
provided fertile soil for the flowering of local despotism across the Marche.
The careers of these petty tyrants were briefly interrupted by the arrival of
the ruthless Cardinal Albornoz, sent by the Avignon popes to reimpose their rule
over the Papal States, and finally went into decline with the restoration of the
papacy in Rome in 1421 under the determined Pope Martin V. Peace before the
Storm
The apogee of the Renaissance in the
middle of the 15thC was marked by a period of relative stability across central
Italy. This was in no small part thanks to the Italian League, a defensive
treaty between the major powers in Italy that held in check both the lesser
Italian states and foreign invaders. It is against this background that many
centres of art and learning flourished; perhaps, none better illustrates the
splendour of these lesser courts than that founded by Duke Federico of
Montefeltro at Urbino.
Foreign
Domination and the Papal States
But the days of this prototype of a
united Italy were numbered. The individual interests of the leading states soon
took priority over the common good, and the arrival of Charles VIII from France
in 1494, at the invitation of Milan in their quarrel with Naples, marked the
dissolution of the League and the opening gambit in the Wars of Italy. Although
the French invasion convulsed central Italy, two years later Charles was back in
France with his Italian conquests lost.
But the French intervention had turned the thoughts of another great European
power towards Italian conquests - Spain. As the 16thC dawned and the Italian
Renaissance took root across Europe, central Italy along with the rest of the
peninsular became a battleground on which the rival claims to Italian hegemony
between Francis I of France and Charles V of Spain were tested. And with the
Treaty of Cateau-Cambresis in 1559, over a hundred and fifty years of Spanish
domination of Italy began.
With the Spanish holding the rest of Italy in check, the Papacy was free to
consolidate its rule over its own possessions which included the Marches - while
the centre of Italian culture moved to Counter- Reformation Rome, the Papal
States were left to languish under the dead hand of ecclesiastical bureaucrats.
Napoleon & The
Risorgimento
The shock waves of the French Revolution
of 1789 were felt in Italy and helped to fan the first flames of libertarianism
that were to culminate in 1860 with the birth of United Italy. But first it had
to submit to the Napoleonic invasion of 1796. Across Italy, Bonaparte first set
up client republics - with the Papal States transformed into the Roman Republic
- then the more draconian Kingdom of Italy. The collapse of the regime with the
fall of Napoleon was as rapid as its arrival. But, despite its brevity,
Napoleonic rule awoke central Italy and the rest of the country from its long
slumbers and fostered the rebirth of nationalism. Under the Piedmont King Victor
Emmanuel, his wily prime minister, Cavour and the heroic if maverick general,
Garibaldi, United Italy became a reality. In 1859 the Italian tricolour flew
from the Fortezza of Florence and the last Grand Duke, Leopold II, abdicated. A
year later large parts of Italy opted to join the new Kingdom of Piedmont. The
Papacy, however, proved more intransigent to the onslaught of the Risorgimento
and it was only by force that the Marches managed to break free from the Papal
States in the same year. It was a full ten years later that Rome finally fell,
in 1870. From here on the history of the Marche is but part of the story of
modern Italy.
©Peter Greene/le-marche.com
** Uw accommodatie in Pesaro kunt U goed
boeken via
Hotels/Pesaro. Er zijn 14 hotels online boekbaar.
Hotels nabij: Bezienswaardigheid
Aquarium Le Navi - e.a.
Hotels op / nabij luchthaven: Federico
Fellini (RMI) 27.4 km -
Falconara (AOI) 47.8 km
Hotels in populaire steden in de omgeving van Pesaro: Trebbiantico
3.7 km -
Montelabbate 10.9 km - e.a.
** Uw accommodatie in geheel Italië kunt U goed boeken via
Hotels/Appart.Italië.
▲ |