{"id":15452,"date":"2024-03-19T15:30:36","date_gmt":"2024-03-19T13:30:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.tourinvespa.com\/cosa-visitare\/monteriggioni\/"},"modified":"2024-03-19T15:30:36","modified_gmt":"2024-03-19T13:30:36","slug":"monteriggioni","status":"publish","type":"cosa-visitare","link":"https:\/\/www.tourinvespa.com\/en\/cosa-visitare\/monteriggioni\/","title":{"rendered":"Monteriggioni"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Monteriggioni is 15.12 km from Siena (travel time, by car or bus estimated at 17 minutes) and 55.68 km<br \/>\nfrom Florence (travel time, by car or bus estimated at 54 minutes) and can be reached via<br \/>\nFor Florence-Siena freeway junction.<br \/>\nAbbadia Isola is 4.4 km from Monteriggioni and can be reached via the Colligiana Provincial Road\/<br \/>\nSP5 (travel time, by car or bus estimated 8 minutes).<br \/>\nMONTERIGGIONI: located just north of Siena, it was founded in the second decade of the 13th century by the<br \/>\nRepublic of Siena, with the main purpose of creating a defensive outpost against rival Florence. For<br \/>\ncenturies therefore, the settlement fully performed the function for which it was created, rejecting from time to time<br \/>\nsieges and attacks. Its military function declined from the mid-sixteenth century, when the entire<br \/>\nSienese state was annexed to the Florentine state.<br \/>\nIts city wall embraces the top of a hill with a perimeter of about 570 meters and is equipped with<br \/>\nFourteen rectangular towers protruding from the outer curtain. The grandeur of the towers had to be<br \/>\nknown even in the Middle Ages, so much so that it suggested to Dante a famous simile with the Giants placed<br \/>\nIn the Inferno (Inf., XXXI, vv. 40-44). Within the village, in which traces of the ancient<br \/>\nstructures, the most interesting building is the Parish Church of St. Mary of the Assumption, dating from the early<br \/>\nmid-13th century and remodeled inside in modern times.<br \/>\nInside the castle of Monteriggioni, it is possible to visit the circuit that includes the walkways on the<br \/>\ncity walls and the &#8220;Monteriggioni in Arme&#8221; educational trail.<br \/>\nThe walkways on the walls, built in the early 2000s, consist of two separate walkways of<br \/>\ndifferent lengths, placed near the doors. The paths ideally re-propose a path of<br \/>\nMedieval patrol.<br \/>\nFrom the two walkways, it is possible to observe the castle from a privileged position, but also enjoy a<br \/>\nbreathtaking views, ranging from the Chianti hills to the woods of the Montagnola to the<br \/>\ntowers of San Gimignano.<br \/>\nThe &#8220;Monteriggioni in Arme&#8221; educational trail, with access from Piazza Dante Alighieri 23, is divided into four<br \/>\nrooms; traces the period when Monteriggioni functioned as a military outpost of the Republic of<br \/>\nSiena. Each room, dedicated to a different century between the 1200s and 1500s, bears reproductions of weapons and armor<br \/>\npresumably in vogue in the area and bilingual panels illustrating local history and siege techniques<br \/>\nand defense of a medieval castle. The exhibits were made respecting ancient techniques,<br \/>\ndrawing on original elements if any and on coeval depictions of soldiers and battle scenes.<br \/>\nParticularly appreciated is the possibility of handling and wearing some parts of armor, which gives the<br \/>\naudience a direct interaction with the exhibition, making them an active part of the educational journey.<br \/>\nABBADIA ISLAND: a small village located on the slopes of Mt. May, it was a stopping point on the Via<br \/>\nFrancigena as early as the 10th century, as witnessed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Sigeric, who stopped there during his<br \/>\njourney to Rome. Sigeric noted in his diary the name &#8220;Borgonuovo,&#8221; for it was not until 1001, following<br \/>\nof the foundation of the abbey by Ava dei Lambardi, the place name became Abbadia Isola. The place where<br \/>\nstands the monastery, which, as the name reminds us, was once surrounded by water, is chosen<br \/>\nmainly because of its strategic position controlling the Via Francigena.<br \/>\nThroughout the following centuries, one of the main functions of the abbey would continue to be the<br \/>\nhospital, or shelter and hospitality for wayfarers in transit to Rome. Starting from the foundation the<br \/>\nmonastery experienced a remarkable economic and political rise, which would continue until the middle of the thirteenth century.<br \/>\nThereafter it would begin a slow decline that in 1446 would lead to the aggregation of the monastery to that of<br \/>\nS. Eugene near Siena.<br \/>\nThe monumental complex was chosen to house The MaM (Monteriggioni Archaeological Museum).<br \/>\nThe museum is &#8220;outside-in,&#8221; meaning it is intended to tell the story of the abbey with special paneling and<br \/>\nopen-air enhancement elements, while the two exhibition areas (La tinaia and Sigeric rooms) narrate through<br \/>\nreconstructions, models, multimedia aids, artifacts and paneling the events of the Monteriggionian territory<br \/>\non a journey back in time, from the Middle Ages to protohistory. The premises of the Tinaia constitute the access<br \/>\nto the visit, directly introducing both the layout of the Cloister and Church and the rooms located on the floor<br \/>\nupper; in the three rooms, in succession, it is possible to trace the history of the abbey, as well as see the<br \/>\nReconstruction of an exponent of the Franzesi family (last lords of Staggia influential on Abbadia a Isola)<br \/>\nBuried with her jewels in the cloister.<br \/>\nIn the Sigeric Hall, the display continues from the Roman Age to Prehistory, with a prominent place attributed to<br \/>\nto the tomb of the Calisna \u015aepu, from the Casone necropolis, found in 1893. This section includes.<br \/>\nalso the reconstruction of the so-called &#8220;Chiostraccio Man&#8221;; this is a skeleton found in 1962 and<br \/>\nconsidered for years to be the oldest known Tuscan man, having been dated to over 15,000 years old. Today,<br \/>\nthanks to new analysis (carbon 14 and DNA), it was possible to establish that he did not live in the Paleolithic age, but<br \/>\nEtruscan.<br \/>\nIn contrast, to the period of land formation related to the proto-urban center of Volterra, the small<br \/>\nLate Iron Age settlement at Campassini locality. In addition to the materials recovered during the<br \/>\nexcavations, its explanation is enhanced by two reconstructive models illustrating life in the village, through<br \/>\nThe reconstruction of the hut and pottery kiln active here.<br \/>\nFinally, touch screen totems provide access to in-depth videos and reconstructions<br \/>\nThree-dimensional of nonexhibitable artifacts.<br \/>\nAt the end of the trail, an educational room is set up in which to conduct museum-related activities. The whole<br \/>\nroute (visit to the monument complex, museum and educational activities) will be conducted through a special<br \/>\nspecialized operator.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"template":"","class_list":["post-15452","cosa-visitare","type-cosa-visitare","status-publish","hentry"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tourinvespa.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/cosa-visitare\/15452","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tourinvespa.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/cosa-visitare"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tourinvespa.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/cosa-visitare"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.tourinvespa.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=15452"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}