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Keywords

Italia
Gran Madre di Dio
Duchy of Savoy
Humbert Biancamano
Adelaide of Susa
Ostrogoths
Augusta Taurinorum
Lombards
Franks
Savoy
Charlemagne
Piemont
Piemonte
Piedmont
Turin
Torino
Italien
Italy
Victor Emmanuel I


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Torino - Gran Madre di Dio

Torino - Gran Madre di Dio
Turin is the capital of Piedmont and was the first Italian capital from 1861 to 1865. The population of the city is about 850.000 while the population of the metropolitan area is estimated at 2.2 million.


In the first century BC the Romans founded "Augusta Taurinorum". Turin reached about 5,000 inhabitants at the time, all living inside the high city walls. After the fall of the Roman Empire, the town was conquered by the Ostrogoths and later by the Lombards whose territory in 773 fell into the hands of the Franks under Charlemagne. After the marriage of Adelaide of Susa with Humbert Biancamano's son Otto, the family of the Counts of Savoy gained control. The title of count was held by the Bishop as count of Turin. At the end of the 13th century, when it was annexed to the Duchy of Savoy, the city already had 20,000 inhabitants. Many of the gardens and palaces were built in the 15th century when the city was redesigned. The University of Turin was also founded during this period.

Gran Madre di Dio is a Neoclassical-style church conceived in 1814, after the defeat of Napoleon, to celebrate the return to the throne of King Victor Emmanuel I of Sardinia from the Savoia family, after a 16 years long exile. Construction began in 1818, only to pause for nearly a decade, and restart in 1827, under the rule of Charles Felix of Sardinia. The church was inaugurated in 1831 under Charles Albert of Sardinia.

The architecture recalls the Pantheon in Rome.

kiiti, Marco F. Delminho, Andy Rodker have particularly liked this photo


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