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The ideal starting-point to visit the city is the
Castle hill on which many are the legends. The most intriguing is the one
according to which the soil comprising the hill was carried there by the
soldiers of Attila the Hun, who transported it in their helmets to allow their
ferocius commander to feast his eyes upon the sight of Aquileia burning in the
distance.
The residence of chamberlains, patriarchs and Venetian governors over
the centuries, the castle visitable today was built on the site of the one
destroyed in 1511 earthquake and has just been restored as it was seriously
damaged by another recent earthquake (1976). Remarkable is the Hall of
Parliament of the sovereign State of Friuli where Giambattista Tiepolo, G. B.
Grassi and Pomponio Amalteo worked. The Gallery of Art is now situated on the
first floor.
The House of the Confraternity of Santa Maria di Castello is
the only building that survived the 1511 earthquake. The construction dates back
to the 15th century. The House of the Peasantry, on the northern edge of the
hill, was rebuilt in 1931, following the plan of a 15th century edifice that was
once situated on the corner of Via Rauscedo and Via Vittorio Veneto.
The church
dedicated to St. Mary of the Castle is probably the oldest in Udine, judging
from extant fragments dating back to the Lombard era. It lost its parochial
status in 1263 when it was annexed to the parish of Sant'Odorico (now the
Cathedral), a more capacious church.
It was renovated many times in the course
of the centuries (the facade was entirely rebuilt after the catastrophic
earthquake of 1511). Its three naves preserve the suggestive atmosphere of
silence and contemplation so peculiar to the oldest churches.
The Venetian
Gothic "portico" with steps and ramps leading down the hill was commissioned in
1487 by the Venetian Governor Tommaso Lippomano.
Turning his back to the castle and
going beyond the Bollani Arch, projected by Andrea Palladio (1556), the visitor
is met by the splendid vista of Piazza Libertà, the heart of Udine,
frequently referred to as "the most beautiful Venetian square on mainland". The
most important sights of the city are to be found here, the remains of a
Venetian past that began in 1420 and lasted until the end of the 18th century.
The most outstanding element of the square is undoubtedly the famous "Loggia
del Lionello" with its alternating courses of pink and white stone. It was begun
in 1448 on a project by Nicolo Lionello, a local goldsmith, and was rebuilt
after a project designed by architect Andrea Scala when it was seriously damaged
by a terrible fire in 1876. Opposite the Loggia del Lionello is the Loggia di
San Giovanni, a Renaissance construction undertaken by Bernardino da Morcote.
Other noteworthy monuments in the square are the Fountain built in 1542 and
designed by an architect from Bergamo, Giovanni Carrara; the Columns bearing the
Venetian Lion and the Statue of Justice (1614); the Statues of Hercules and
Cacus (affectionately known as "Florean" and "Venturin") and the Statue of Peace
(1819) which was donated to Udine by Emperor Franz I to commemorate the peace
Treaty of Campoformido.
Through Via Mercatovecchio, the most characteristic
street of the town, the visitor arrives at Piazza Matteotti - San Giacomo; this
was the first real square the city of Udine had, a "real-life square" . In it on
the first Sunday of every month takes place an antique-trade little market. In
the centre stands a fountain designed in 1543 by Giovanni da Udine, a pupil of
Raffaello.
The church, dedicated to St. James, closes the west side of the
square and is one of the oldest in the city. It was erected in 1378, but its
Lombardesque facade was projected by Bernardino da Morcote at the beginning of
the 16th century, while the chapel on the right side was added towards the
middle of the 17th century.
Walking past the front of the Town Hall, entirely
made of Istrian stone, erected between 1910 and 1931, an example of Art Nouveau
projected by Raimondo D'Aronco the famous architect from Udine, one reaches the
Cathedral, an imposing edifice built on a Latin cross-shaped plan with three
naves and chapels along the sides. The oldest part goes back to 1335. At the
beginning of the 18th century a radical project of transformation involving both
the exterior and the interior was undertaken at the desire and wholly at the
expence of the Manin family. The Baroque interior has monumental dimensions and
contains many works of art by G. B. Tiepolo, P. Amalteo, L. Dorigny. On the
ground floor of the bell tower there is a chapel which is completely adorned
with frescoes by Vitale da Bologna (1349).
Close to the Cathedral, the small
Purity Oratory (1757) has one of the greatest master pieces by G. B. Tiepolo:
the fresco on the ceiling shows "Our Lady of the Assumption" . But it is in the
Archbishop s Palace that Tiepolo achieved one of the highest peaks of his
stylistics. We also suggest a visit to the Gallery of Modern Art, the Friulian
Museum of Natural History and the Ossarium Temple which holds the mortal remains
of 25,000 soldiers killed in World
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