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Italia
Benedict XIV
Lucius III
Cattedrale di Bologna
Cattedrale Metropolitana di San Pietro
Enzio of Sardinia
Legge del Paradiso
Lombard League
Bologna Cathedral
Frederick I Barbarossa
Liutprand
Emilia Romagna
Barbarossa
Bologna
Italy
triumohal cross


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Bologna - Cattedrale Metropolitana di San Pietro

Bologna -  Cattedrale Metropolitana di San Pietro
Bologna is the capital of the Emilia-Romagna region. Founded by the Etruscans, the city has been an urban center for centuries, first under the Etruscans, then under the Celts, then under the Romans, and again in the Middle Ages.

In 728 Bologna was conquered by the Longobard king Liutprand and thus became part of the Longobard Empire.

In the 11th century the place grew again as a free commune. In 1088 the university was founded, today the oldest university in Europe. As the city continued to expand, it received a new ring of ramparts in the 12th century, and another was completed in the 14th century.

In 1164 Bologna joined the Lombard League against Frederick I Barbarossa, and in 1256 the city promulgated the "Legge del Paradiso", which abolished serfdom and slavery and freed the remaining slaves with public money. The city center was a forest of towers. It is estimated that around 100 family towers of the leading families, church towers and towers of public buildings defined the cityscape.

In 1272, King Enzio of Sardinia, an illegitimate son of the Hohenstaufen Emperor Frederick II, died in Bologna after more than 22 years of imprisonment.

The Cathedral of San Pietro in Bologna is the cathedral of the Archdiocese of Bologna.

A church existed as early as 1028. This church was destroyed in the great fire of 1141 and was rebuilt and rededicated by Pope Lucius III in 1184. The building was completely renovated in 1575. However, the interventions were so radical that the vaults collapsed in 1599. The portico was rebuilt at the end of the 17th century and between 1743 and 1747, on the orders of Benedict XIV, it was given a new facade according to the plans of the architect Alfonso Torreggiani.

Romanesque crucifix, 12th century

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