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This is how holiday rental owners described Torri in Sabina
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The first mention of the towers date back to medieval times in 747, when it appears in regesto donation to the abbey of Farfa a casalis Turris, this donation is confirmed in the following centuries until 1084. Dates back to 1298 the attestation of the existence of a castle, ...
show more which happens to be owned by the Holy See in 1364.
Later, from 1368, Towers is one of the estates of the Orsini, who kept the property until the death of the wife of Flavio Orsini, Anna de la Tremouille, in 1728. From that date back towers owned by the Holy See.
In 1817 the country joined as an independent municipality, the governorate of Calvi. After the unification of Italy, the town was first assigned to the province of Perugia, in 1923 the province of Rome in 1927 and finally became part of the new province of Rieti.
Places of interest
. Archaeological site of a Roman municipium of Forum Novum (second century BC), they are talking about Pliny, Virgil and Frontinus, the Roman town of Sabina. It had its heyday in the Augustan age, and at least 465 since it housed the ecclesia cathedralis Sabinorum until 1733;
. Church of Santa Maria della Praise Vescovio, dating from the early decades of the ninth century, the cathedral of the diocese until its transfer Sabina Magliano Sabina in 1733, it preserves important frescoes of the twelfth century with the Old and New Testament Stories the side walls and a Last Judgment in the wall of the counter;
. Two medieval fortified settlements, called Rocchette Rocchettine, whose first news dates back to the fourteenth century, both belonging to the family of the Savelli. Today Rocchette is transformed into the town, while Rocchettine has no inhabitants since the early '50s. Inside the church of San Lorenzo, recently restored, open to the public until August 10 (day of San Lorenzo, the patron saint of Rocchettine) and can be visited on request.
. Church of St. John the Baptist, the sources cited in the fourteenth century, it retains an artifact of the sixth century re-used as a baptismal font, a painting by Vincent Camuccini (nineteenth century) depicting Our Lady of Refuge, and important paintings of the Umbrian school;
. Other churches, like those of St. Nicholas of Bari, the Madonna del Colle and Sant'Egidio.
show less
The first mention of the towers date back to medieval times in 747, when it appears in regesto donation to the abbey of Farfa a casalis Turris, this donation is confirmed in the following centuries until 1084. Dates back to 1298 the attestation of the existence of a castle, ...
show more which happens to be owned by the Holy See in 1364.
Later, from 1368, Towers is one of the estates of the Orsini, who kept the property until the death of the wife of Flavio Orsini, Anna de la Tremouille, in 1728. From that date back towers owned by the Holy See.
In 1817 the country joined as an independent municipality, the governorate of Calvi. After the unification of Italy, the town was first assigned to the province of Perugia, in 1923 the province of Rome in 1927 and finally became part of the new province of Rieti.
Places of interest
. Archaeological site of a Roman municipium of Forum Novum (second century BC), they are talking about Pliny, Virgil and Frontinus, the Roman town of Sabina. It had its heyday in the Augustan age, and at least 465 since it housed the ecclesia cathedralis Sabinorum until 1733;
. Church of Santa Maria della Praise Vescovio, dating from the early decades of the ninth century, the cathedral of the diocese until its transfer Sabina Magliano Sabina in 1733, it preserves important frescoes of the twelfth century with the Old and New Testament Stories the side walls and a Last Judgment in the wall of the counter;
. Two medieval fortified settlements, called Rocchette Rocchettine, whose first news dates back to the fourteenth century, both belonging to the family of the Savelli. Today Rocchette is transformed into the town, while Rocchettine has no inhabitants since the early '50s. Inside the church of San Lorenzo, recently restored, open to the public until August 10 (day of San Lorenzo, the patron saint of Rocchettine) and can be visited on request.
. Church of St. John the Baptist, the sources cited in the fourteenth century, it retains an artifact of the sixth century re-used as a baptismal font, a painting by Vincent Camuccini (nineteenth century) depicting Our Lady of Refuge, and important paintings of the Umbrian school;
. Other churches, like those of St. Nicholas of Bari, the Madonna del Colle and Sant'Egidio.
show less
source: Tenuta San Savino di Capone Francesca Romana
Neighbouring holiday resorts Torri in Sabina
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