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Keywords

Italy
Bergamo
Lombardy
Palazzo della Ragione
Greek Cross
Città alta
Duomo di Bergamo
Cattedrale di Sant'Alessandro


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Bergamo - Duomo di Bergamo

Bergamo - Duomo di Bergamo
Bergamo was the settlement of a Celtic tribe but got conquered by the Romans in 196 BC. Looted by Attila´s troops in the 5th century, it became the capital of a Lombardian duchy a century later. After the conquest of the Lombard Kingdom by Charlemagne, the Franks ruled here.

End of the 11th century Bergamo had become an independent commune, with a lot of feuding between the local the Guelph and Ghibelline factions.

In 1428 Bergamo was ceded in 1428 by the Duchy of Milan to the Republic of Venice and was transformed into a fortified city, protecting the trade routes leading into the Rhine Valley.

The French Revolutionary Army ended more than three centuries of Venetian rule in 1797. Bergamo was part of the "Cisalpine Republic".
At Congress of Vienna, Bergamo was assigned to the (Austrian) Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia. Giuseppe Garibaldi conquered Bergamo in 1859. The city was incorporated into the newly founded Kingdom of Italy.

Bergamo has two centres: Città alta ("upper city"), a hilltop medieval town, and the Città bassa ("lower city").

Next to the old town hall "Palazzo della Ragione", where the Duomo di Bergamo (aka "Cattedrale di Sant' Alessandro") is now, stood the Cathedral of St. Vincenzo already in the 5th century. After rebuilding the church in the Romanesque area, a new cathedral was erected by Filarete ("Antonio di Pietro Averlino") in 1459. The building of today was built on plans by Carlo Fontana, dating from 1688. The dome was completed in 1883, the neo classical facade in 1889.

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