Clusone is an Italian town and comune in the province of Bergamo, Lombardy, Italy. Located in the Val Seriana, it received the honorary title of city on 15 May 1957 with a presidential decree which ratified a Napoleon's promise of the year 1801.
Geography and climate
Clusone is part of the Serio Valley, even though from an orographicpoint of view the plateau of Clusone, from glacial origin, belongs in part to the basin of Oglio. The climate of Clusone is temperate: in the winter, temperatures can fall to and in summer may reach a maximum of.
History
The city is of ancient origins, probably dating back to the first settlement of Orobii, which was founded around 1300 BC. Later, in the Roman period, the village became a center of greater importance in the entire district, including the construction of fortifications. The city's name originates from this period and may come from the Latin word , indicating an enclosed space surrounded by mountains The following centuries saw the end of Roman domination and the subsequent arrival of the Lombards, who were in turn followed by the Franks. The first written document which mentions Clusone dates from 774, in a deed that recorded the grant of the nucleus of the rocca by Charlemagne to the monks of Saint Martin of Tours. The fortress grew considerably in medieval times, so as to assume the appearance of a real castle, with walls and towers for defensive purposes. A branch of the noble Aliprandi family of Milan, that assumed the surname Fanzago in place of that original, moved to Clusone at the end of the 14th century. The period under the Republic of Venice represented the period of maximum artistic, cultural and commercial development for Clusone. Clusone shared its fate with Venice until the treaty of Campoformio when it joined the Cisalpine Republic. Under the Austrian rule as part of the Lombardy-Venetia, Clusone became the chief city of a district of the province of Bergamo. On November 12, 1801, it was awarded the title of city. This title was reconfirmed on May 15, 1957, by the Italian Republic.
Main sights
Piazza della Rocca. Until the 19th century, the city was surrounded by walls, and there is documented evidence that in more distant times it was even with equipped with a fortress which still remains precisely marked out in the Piazza della Rocca.
Oratorio dei Disciplini. In front of the facade of the basilica is the Oratory of Disciplini, which has a fresco on the facade from the 15th century with the Triumph of Deathon top and a macabre dance of great interest in the lower register. Outside of the "Oratorio dei Disciplini" is a fresco of the Triumph of Death painted by Giacomo Borlone de Buschis in 1485. It portrays a triumphant Death, personified as a living skeleton with a cloak and a crown. At her feet are the bodies of a pope and an emperor, surrounded by snakes, frogs and scorpions. She stands on a sepulchre around which figures of a cardinal, a bishop, a king and a philosopher are offering her gifts. She is flanked by two skeletons who fire against other characters at the side, one with a bow and another, on the right, with an early arquebus.
Town hall, with a façade covered with late-Gothic frescoes and with the clock tower, a work by Pietro Fanzago.
Church and the Court of Sant'Anna.
Church of Heaven, containing a painting by Marco Richiedei, which is located near Piazza Uccelli
Church of San Defendente
Fogaccia Palace, built in the 17th century, with large halls that exhibit valuable paintings and frescoes by the painter Francesco Paglia