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"Fiesole"
Numerous founds of Etruscan civilization have come to
light in the vast zone to the north of the Arno between
the Sieve and Ombrone rivers. The so-called "Fiesole
stelae" date back as far as the late 6th century
B.C. However finds from the Villanovan culture of the
early iron age and the age of copper and of bronze have
also been unearthed. The Etruscan settlement of Fiesole
was probably the center of a zone where settlements
were scattered over the hillsides which overlook the
Florentine basin. Remains from this period include various
stretches of the powerful city wall and the ruins of
a Temple with two wings and two columns in the pronaos.
Since some of the walls are still intact it can be considered
as one of the most important examples of this kind in
all of Etruria. A considerable number of interesting
finds from the Etruscan period - urns, bucchero, clay
and bronze statues - together with other objects from
Roman times are to be found in the Museum near the archaeological
zone. Invaded by the Gauls in 225 B.C. and captured
by Marcus Porcius Cato in 90 B.C., it was occupied by
Silla in 80 B.C. and turned into a military colony.
This was when Fiesole became a Roman city (Faesulae)
with a forum, temples, theater, baths. The Theater,
which is still well preserved, is sometimes used for
spectacles of classic theater and has a capacity of
about 3.000 people. It dates to the beginning of the
imperial age and was improved in the period of Claudius
and of Septimius Severus. The Baths too belong to the
early empire and were remodelled by Hadrian.
In republican times (1st cent. B.C.) the Temple, originally
Etruscan was rebuilt. an explanation for the prosperity
of Etruscan and Roman Fiesole is to be found in its
fortunate geographical site near a ford over the arno
- close to where Florentia was to rise. The territory
of the Roman Municipium of Fiesole must have extended
prevalently to the north of the Arno while the territory
of the "colonia" of Florence must have lain
above all to the south of the river. Occupied by the
Ostrogoths and the Byzantines, Fiesole from the 6th
century on was the site of a Lombard settlement as documented
by the remains of a necropolis. In 1125, after military
compaigns, Florence wiped out the city forcing it into
submission and destroyng part of the centuries-old city
walls.
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