Montepescali

Coordinates: 42°53′01″N 11°05′10″E / 42.88361°N 11.08611°E / 42.88361; 11.08611
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Montepescali
Dialing code
0564

Montepescali (Italian: [ˌmontepeˈskaːli]) is a small town in southern Tuscany, Italy, a frazione of the comune of Grosseto. The site, from which the scenic panorama of the coastal strip and the Tuscan Archipelago up to Corsica can be seen, is also known as "Terrace or balcony of the Maremma".

History

The town was built in the early

Aldobrandeschi and then passed under the Republic of Siena
, gaining an autonomous status in the first half of the 15th century.

After Montepescali was annexed to the

Ptolemies
, to the Guadagni and finally to the Federighi.

It has always been an agricultural center. Extensive olive groves and vineyards are present on the hill.

Main sights

Military architecture

  • Walls of Montepescali. From the Middle Ages (with some later changes later) they formed an elliptical shape enclosing the entire village. The defensive functions are confirmed by the presence of some towers, leaning at regular intervals along the outer perimeter, and a bulwark at the southern ends added during the 16th century.
  • Tower of Belvedere, of medieval origins. It presents a semicircular section, leaning against the wall on the west side just north of Porta Vecchia; the Church of the Santissima Annunziata stood outside the circle in its vicinity.
  • Tower of Guascone, one of the oldest towers. It stands leaning against the north-eastern part of the wall, not far from Porta Nuova. It presents a rectangular section, and it is dedicated to the commander of the troops who defended Montepescali from the siege of 1555.
  • Porta Vecchia and Porta Nuova, the two doors of the walls.
  • Three-pointed bulwark, a feature added to the Roman fortress in the 16th century. Its various renovations of the last century have transformed it into a rooftop terrace.

Palazzi

Churches

Museums

  • Museum of local history Ildebrando Imberciadori, the ethnographic museum of the town. The exhibit areas are home to a collection of farm machinery and tools of farm life, but there is also archaeological evidence and documents that illustrate that a very long time passed between the
    Medici
    era.

Gallery

  • The Walls
    The Walls
  • The tower of Cassero
    The tower of Cassero
  • The Cassero
    The Cassero
  • Church of San Niccolò
    Church of San Niccolò
  • Church of Santi Stefano e Lorenzo
    Church of Santi Stefano e Lorenzo
  • Museum of History
    Museum of History
  • The baluardo a tre punte
    The baluardo a tre punte
  • The cemetery
    The cemetery

Sources

  • Aldo Mazzolai. Guida della Maremma. Percorsi tra arte e natura. Florence, Le Lettere, 1997.
  • Giuseppe Guerrini. Torri e Castelli della provincia di Grosseto (Amministrazione Provinciale di Grosseto). Siena, Nuova Immagine Editrice, 1999.
  • Carlo Citter. Guida agli edifici sacri della Maremma. Siena, Nuova Immagine Editrice, 2002.

See also

External links

Media related to Montepescali at Wikimedia Commons