Firenze
Florentia",
the florid, was the name given by the Romans Florentia", the florid,
was the name given by the Romans to this small settlement located at
the foot of the ancient Etruscan Fiesole and founded in the first century
BC.
The Etruscans, an ancient and mysterious
race, of whom we know very little, but who left numerous testimonies
around about Florence, had
settled on the hills surrounding the plain of the river Arno as far
back as the VII-VI centuries BC.
At
first erected as a Roman "castrum",
Florentia soon assumed the appearance of a real town with a Forum (now
Piazza della
Repubblica), thermal baths (via delle Terme), and amphitheater
(via Tòrta).
Then the period of the decline of the Empire arrived , with the political
fragmentation from which the feudal system sprang up. The
town, constituted as a Commune at the beginning of the twelfth century,
began to expand
until it spread over half of Arno valley and surrounding hillsides.
Despite
the internal struggles, first between rival families and then between
the
Guelfs (loyal to the Pope) and the Ghibellines (loyal to
the Emperor), from the thirteenth century onwards it began to flourish
as a city of art, culture and international trading, reaching its zenith
in the fifteenth century under the Signoria of Cosimo and Lorenzo de’ Medici.
After Lorenzo’s death in 1492, Florence witnessed a long period
of wars that led to the end of the Florentine Republic and saw the birth
of the Grand
Duchy of Tuscany, ruled first by a younger branch of the Medici family
and following, by the Hapsburg-Lorena family. Despite
alternating events the Grand Duchy survived up until the political unification
of
Italy, of which Florence was capital from 1865 to 1871.
This
marked the beginning of a profound restructuring of the city that led
to the knocking
down
of the walls and the erasing of several ancient quarters in the center
that endowed Florence with its present-day appearance. |