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Chiesa di San Miche a Lucca in Toscana
Città di Lucca - Toscana - Italia
Immagini Royalty Free di Lucca
È una delle poche città a conservare ancora intatta le sue mura del XV-XVII secolo, lunghe 4.450 km circa. Il suo centro storico è ben conservato ed annovera numerose chiese medioevali di notevole ricchezza architettonica, accanto a torri, campanili e palazzi rinascimentali di pregevole linearità stilistica. La piazza dell'anfiteatro nata sulle rovine dell'antico anfiteatro romano ad opera dell'architetto Nottolini è unica nel suo genere architettonico.

Come altre città della Toscana, conserva molte opere d'arte, come un museo a cielo aperto, un ambiente costruito che si è realizzato ed arrichito nel corso dei secoli, dove le nuove strutture si sono armonizzate con le antiche. Troviamo ottimi esempi di questa valorizzazione cittadina con la piazza dell'anfiteatro, già citata, con la piazza Napoleone dell'epoca del principato di Elisa Baciocchi, e con il parco pubblico realizzato sopra ed intorno alle mura urbane.

Photos Royalty Free Lucca
Lucca is a city in Tuscany, northern central Italy, situated on the river Serchio in a fertile plain near (but not on) the Tyrrhenian Sea. It is the capital city of the Province of Lucca.

Ancient and medieval city
Lucca was founded by the Etruscans (there are traces of a pre-existing Ligurian settlement) and became a Roman colony in 180 BC. The rectangular grid of its historical center preserves the Roman street plan, and the Piazza San Michele occupies the site of the ancient forum.

Plundered by Odoacer, Lucca appears as an important city and fortress at the time of Narses, who besieged it for three months in 553, and under the Lombards it was the seat of a duke who minted his own coins. It became prosperous through the silk trade that began in the 11th century, and came to rival the silks of Byzantium. During the 10-11th centuries Lucca was the capital of the feudal margravate of Tuscany, more or less independent but owing nominal allegiance to the Holy Roman Emperor.

After the death of the famous Matilda of Tuscany, the city began to constitute itself an independent commune, with a charter of 1160. For almost 500 years, Lucca remained an independent republic. There were many minor feudatories in the region between southern Liguria and northern Tuscany dominated by the Malaspina; Tuscany in this time was a part of feudal Europe. Dante’s Divine Comedy include many references to the great feudal families who had huge jurisdictions with administrative and judicial rights. Dante himself spent some of his exile in Lucca.

In the common central Italian pattern, internal discord afforded an opportunity in 1314 to Uguccione della Faggiuola to make himself master of Lucca, but the Lucchesi expelled him two years afterwards, and handed over their city to the condottiere Castruccio Castracani, under whose masterly tyranny it became for a moment a leading state of central Italy, rival to Florence, until his death in 1328. On 22 and 23 September 1325, in the battle of Altopascio, he defeated again Florence's Guelphs, taking many prisoners and also for this he was nominated by Louis IV the Bavarian, duke of Lucca. Castracani's tomb is in the church of San Francesco. His biography is Machiavelli's third famous book on political rule.

In 1408 Lucca hosted the convocation intended to end the schism in the papacy. Occupied by the troops of Louis of Bavaria, the city was sold to a rich Genoese Gherardino Spinola, then seized by John, king of Bohemia. Pawned to the Rossi of Parma, by them it was ceded to Martino della Scala of Verona, sold to the Florentines, surrendered to the Pisans, nominally liberated by the emperor Charles IV. and governed by his vicar, Lucca managed, at first as a democracy, and after 1628 as an oligarchy, to maintain its independence alongside of Venice and Genoa, and painted the word Libertas on its banner till the French Revolution" (Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911)

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