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Casale Monferrato

Casale Monferrato (Italian pronunciation: [kaˈzaːle moɱferˈraːto]) is a town in the Piedmont region of northwestern Italy, in the province of Alessandria. It is situated about 60 km (37 mi) east of Turin on the right bank of the Po, where the river runs at the foot of the Montferrat hills. Beyond the river lies the vast plain of the Po valley.

Casale Monferrato
Comune di Casale Monferrato
Via Lanza
Location of Casale Monferrato
Casale Monferrato
Location of Casale Monferrato in Italy
Casale Monferrato
Casale Monferrato (Piedmont)
Coordinates: 45°08′N 08°27′E / 45.133°N 8.450°E / 45.133; 8.450
CountryItaly
RegionPiedmont
ProvinceAlessandria (AL)
FrazioniPopolo, Pozzo Sant'Evasio, Roncaglia, San Germano, Santa Maria Del Tempio, Terranova, Cantone Bassotti, Cantone Cerreto, Cantone Il Rondò, Cantone La Cascinetta, Cantone La Ceriella, Cantone Losa, Cantone Rossi, Cantone Vallare, Castellino, I Dossi, Rolasco, Vialarda, Villa Sordi[1]
Government
 • MayorFederico Riboldi
Area
 • Total86.21 km2 (33.29 sq mi)
Elevation116 m (381 ft)
Population
 (1 January 2021)[3]
 • Total33,213
 • Density390/km2 (1,000/sq mi)
DemonymCasalesi or Casalaschi
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
15033
Dialing code0142
Patron saintSt. Evasius
Saint day12 November
WebsiteOfficial website

An ancient Roman municipium, the town has been the most important trade and manufacturing centre of the area for centuries. After the fall of the Roman Empire, Casale became a free municipality and, in the 15th and early 16th centuries, served as the capital of the House of Palaiologos. Then in 1536, the town passed to the Gonzagas who fortified it with a large citadel. In the 17th century, Casale was heavily involved in the War of the Mantuan Succession and besieged by French and Spanish troops. During the wars of Italian unification the town was a defensive bulwark against the Austrian Empire.

In the 1900s Casale, in the middle of the Turin-Milan-Genoa industrial triangle, developed as an important industrial centre, especially known for the production of asbestos cement. A local Eternit factory has been at the centre of a massive environmental scandal, with subsequent high-profile litigation that often made international headlines.[4]

History edit

Antiquity and Middle Ages edit

 
The fortified town from an engraving of 1745. On the left the river Po, and to the right the star-shaped cittadella

The origins of the town are fairly obscure. It is known that the Gaulish settlement of Vardacate (from var = "water"; ate = "populated place") existed on the Po in this area, and that it became a Roman municipium. By the beginning of the 8th century, there was a small town under Lombard rule, probably called Sedula or Sedulia. It was here (according to late and unreliable accounts) that one Saint Evasius, along with 146 followers, was decapitated on the orders of the Arian Duke Attabulo. Liutprand, King of the Lombards is said to have supported the construction of a church in honour of Evasius. Certainly, the martyr's cult flourished, and by 988 AD, the town had become known as Casale di Sant’Evasio.

At the time of Charlemagne, the town came under the temporal and religious power of the bishops of Vercelli, from which it was freed by Frederick Barbarossa, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Italy. It was sacked by the anti-imperial troops of Vercelli, Alessandria and Milan in 1215, but rebuilt and fortified in 1220. It fell under the power of the Marquess of Montferrat in 1292, (although it was conquered by the Visconti of Milan in 1370, it remained under their control until 1404[5]) and later became the capital of the marquessate.[6]

The condottiere Facino Cane was born in Casale Monferrato and he participated, financed by the Duke of Milan Gian Galeazzo Visconti, in the Battle of Casalecchio in 1402, but Theodore II, Marquess of Montferrat, the son of Isabella of Majorca, did not participate. Gian Galeazzo spent 300,000 golden florins attempting to turn from their courses the river Mincio from the city of Mantua, but Gian Galeazzo died.

In 1536 it passed to the Gonzagas of Mantua, who fortified it strongly. Thereafter it was of considerable importance as a fortress[6] and was besieged during the Mantuan War of Succession.

Late modern and contemporary edit

In 1745, following the defeat of the Piedmontese army at the Battle of Bassignano during the War of the Austrian Succession, Casale was occupied by the victorious French and Spanish troops. Much damage was caused to the city's buildings. The subsequent renovation and rebuilding in the Baroque style made a substantial contribution to the urban texture.[3][7]

 
Memorial to asbestos victims on the former Eternit factory site. There is written: "The handkerchiefs soaked in our tears will put on wings and fly far to develop deep roots of justice".

During the Wars of Italian Independence, it successfully resisted the Austrians in 1849 and was strengthened in 1852.[6] The vast limestone deposits in the hills nearby caused, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, several concrete factories to open up in the town. Casale became known as the "cement capital of Italy".

Newspaper edit

Lo Spettatore del Monferrato (‘The Monferrato Spectator’) was a regionally focused periodical published weekly from 1852 to 1855 in Casale Monferrato, north-west Italy, and printed by Tipografia Corrado.[8]

Eternit asbestos disaster edit

From 1907 to 1986, Casale was the site of a large Eternit factory, that produced the homonymous asbestos cement, whose operations resulted in a massive environmental disaster, linked to the death of some 1,800 people from mesothelioma and other asbestos-related diseases in the area: in spite of former Eternit owner Stephan Schmidheiny and his associate, Jean-Louis de Cartie, being convicted and ordered to pay tens of millions of euros in compensation by the Turin Appeal Court in 2012, the Italian Supreme Court in 2014 declared that the statute of limitations had expired in the case.[9]

Main sights edit

Piazza Mazzini and its environs edit

 
Piazza Mazzini
 
The Torre Civica

The historic centre of the town is itself centred on Piazza Mazzini, the site of the Roman forum.[10] Named for Giuseppe Mazzini, a key republican figure of the Risorgimento, it is dominated by an 1843 equestrian statue by Abbondio Sangiorgio of King Charles Albert of Piedmont-Sardinia, dressed in Roman costume, specifically as a senator, with his knees uncovered. The statue was commissioned by the municipal authorities as a mark of gratitude to the king for having selected Casale as the seat of Piedmont's second Court of Appeal and to celebrate the construction of Casale's first permanent bridge across the Po. Locally the square is called Piazza Cavallo (wiktionary:cavallo being the Italian word for "horse").

 
The Cathedral's narthex

Duomo edit

A little to the east of the square is the Lombard Romanesque cathedral of Sant'Evasio, founded in 742, rebuilt in the early 12th century and consecrated on 7 January 1107 by Pope Paschal II. It occupies a site where once was a Roman temple dedicated to Jupiter. It underwent restoration in 1706 and again in the 19th century. The cathedral has an asymmetric façade, including a complex narthex with two galleries (matronaei) connected by a tribune and closed by round arches. The interior houses the relics of Saint Evasius and, near the presbytery, fragments of 11th-century pavement mosaics with Biblical scenes (now remounted on the walls of the corridor from the apse to the sacristy).

San Domenico edit

In 1471, after William VIII, Marquess of Montferrat had chosen Casale as the permanent location of the marquisate court, construction began of the church of San Domenico, to the north of Piazza Mazzini. Work on the building ceased for some time, as a result of political instability; in the early 16th century a fine, if slightly incongruous, Renaissance portal was imposed on the late Gothic façade.

Via Lanza edit

Via Lanza, which runs northwards from the north-west corner of Piazza Mazzini, is known for the Krumiri Rossi bakery, which indeed produces Krumiri: biscuits which have been a speciality of Casale since their legendary invention in 1870 by one Domenico Rossi after an evening spent with friends in Piazza Mazzini's Caffè della Concordia (now a bank). Also in Via Lanza is the 17th-century church of San Giuseppe, probably designed by Sebastiano Guala; a painting attributed to the Ursuline nun Lucrina Fetti (c.1614–1651,[11] brother of Domenico) shows Christ venerated by Sant’Evasio and includes a very accurate depiction of contemporary Casale with its civic tower. The church and convent of San Francesco, which housed the remains of many of the Marquises of Monferrato, was turned to other uses during the 18th century and demolished in the nineteenth. The high open tower which is a landmark of Via Lanza belongs to Palazzo Morelli di Popolo; it has been attributed to Bernardo Vittone, and also to Magnocavalli—both are believed to have had a hand in the refurbishment of the building.

 
Piazza Mazzini; in the background Via Saffi leads past the civic tower towards Piazza Castello

Via Saffi edit

Running west from Piazza Mazzini to Piazza Castello is Via Saffi, which contains one of the town's most recognizable landmarks: the Torre Civica. This brick tower, square in plan and 60 metres high, dates from the 11th century but suffered severe fire damage in April 1504 when a festival to celebrate the peace between Holy Roman Emperor Maximillian I and King Louis XII of France got out of hand. The reconstruction, completed six years later by Matteo Sammicheli, produced a taller structure which included the current bell chamber. The balconies attached to the upper part of the tower were added during the period of Gonzaga rule. Subsequent restorations were carried out in 1779 (after a lightning strike which destroyed the 15th-century clock) and again in 1920.

Adjoining the tower is the church of Santo Stefano which stands on the east side of a small square named after it. The church's origins date to the beginning of the second millennium, but it was largely rebuilt in the mid-17th century under a project attributed to Sebastiano Guala; work on the current façade began in 1787 but was not completed until the late 19th century. Inside are paintings by Giovanni Francesco Caroto (1480–1555), Il Moncalvo (1568–1625), Giorgio Alberini (1575/6 – 1625/6), and Francesco Cairo (1607–1665). Adorning both the walls and the vault are 15 tondi depicting prophets, apostles and the Virgin painted by Pietro Francesco Guala in 1757, the last year of his life.

The south side of Piazza Santo Stefano, facing back towards Via Saffi, is formed by the neo-classical Palazzo Ricci di Cereseto. The imposing façade, marked by four massive brick columns, was built in 1806 to an earlier design by the local architect Francesco Ottavio Magnocavalli.

Also in the square, there is a marble statue of the archaeologist and architect Luigi Canina by Benedetto Cacciatore.

Piazza Castello edit

Piazza Castello is a large irregularly shaped open space used as a car park and as a market square; it is dominated by the castle of the Paleologi which occupies most of its western side. The square arose in 1858 through the demolition of the castle's eastern ravelin and was extended in the late nineteenth/early 20th century when the remaining ravelins were removed.

The castle edit

The castle itself is an imposing 15th-century military construction, with a hexagonal plan, four round towers and an encircling moat.

 
Santa Caterina. Note the elliptical drum

Santa Caterina edit

At the southeast corner of the piazza is the elegant Baroque church of Santa Maria delle Grazie, better known by its earlier designation of Santa Caterina. A masterwork of Giovanni Battista Scapitta, completed after his death by Giacomo Zanetti, it is marked by an elliptical cupola, and a façade curvilinear both in plan and elevation.

Teatro Municipale edit

 
The Theatre

The theatre, which stands at the north-eastern corner of the piazza at the end of Via Saffi, opened in 1791 with a performance of the La moglie capricciosa, an opera buffa by Vincenzo Fabrizi. Its construction, to a design by Abbot Agostino Vitoli of Spoleto, had taken six years. However, it fell into disuse during the period of Napoleonic rule and remained closed for several decades. After extensive internal embellishment, the theatre reopened in 1840 with a performance of Vincenzo Bellini's Beatrice di Tenda. In 1861 the theatre was sold by the Società dei Nobili to the local authority (the comune) which made it more accessible to the general public. Nevertheless, it fell again into decline; during World War II it was used as a store. Major restoration work took place in the 1980s and the theatre finally reopened in 1990 with a performance by Vittorio Gassman. Since then it has offered a mixture of theatre, music and dance, while the foyer is used for exhibitions, usually photographic.

The horseshoe-shaped auditorium with stalls, four tiers of boxes and a gallery (or loggione, i.e. the gods) is richly decorated with frescoes, stucco, gilding and velvet. The curtains of the royal box hang from a structure supported on stucco caryatids by Abbondio Sangiorgio who also designed the equestrian statue in Piazza Mazzini.[12]

The stage curtain, showing Apollo in His Sun Chariot, was designed by the scenographer Bernardino Galliari (1707–1794). A sketch for the curtain is preserved at the Galleria Sabauda in Turin.[13]

Via Garibaldi and Sant’Ilario edit

From the side of the theatre, Via Garibaldi leads northwards to the 16th-century church of Sant'Ilario, founded in 380 in honour of Hilary of Poitiers. It was completely rebuilt in 1566 and was largely restructured towards the end of the 19th century. The church's polychrome façade is of interest and it contains two important works by Niccolò Musso: the Madonna del Carmine (‘Our Lady of Mount Carmel’) and San Francesco ai piedi del Crocefisso (‘Saint Francis at the foot of the Crucifix’) originally from the church of San Francesco.

 
Neoclassical façade of Santa Croce by Francesco Ottavio Magnocavalli

Via Roma, ghetto and synagogue edit

Behind the shops on the west side of Via Roma, which runs southwards from Piazza Mazzini, lay the ghetto which persisted until the emancipation of the Jews in Piedmont following Charles Albert's concession of a constitution, the Statuto Albertino, under the revolutionary pressures of 1848. The Synagogue of Casale Monferrato is inside a building at Vicolo Olper 44 that offers no hint from its nondescript exterior that it is a synagogue, built in 1595, and recognized as one of the most beautiful in Europe. The women's galleries now host an important Jewish museum. Of particular interest are the Tablets of the Law in gilded wood, dating from the 18th century, numerous rimonim (Torah finials) and atarot (crowns for the Torah scrolls) carved and with silver filigree.

The Giardini pubblici and public sculpture edit

 
Ai caduti: the war memorial

The public gardens which front the railway station extend westwards, dissected by various streets, almost to the southern end of Via Roma. They contain a range of monuments to figures of local and national renown including Giovanni Lanza (sculpted by Odoardo Tabacchi, 1887), Giuseppe Antonio Ottavi (Leonardo Bistolfi, 1890), Filippo Mellana (Giacomo Ginotti, 1887), and Giuseppe Garibaldi (Primo Giudici, 1884).

The most important, however, is Bistolfi's war memorial of 1928 (pictured left). A marble exedra with four caryatids in the form of winged victories is raised on a dias fronted with steps. The bronze sculpture Il Fante Crociato, a foot soldier in crusader-period costume, takes centre stage; a second bronze a lightly robed Primavera Italica (Italic Spring) steps down from the platform and out of the ensemble.

Other public sculptures of note in Casale include the monument to King Charles Albert in Piazza Mazzini mentioned above, Bistolfi's 1887 monument to Urbano Rattazzi in Piazza Rattazzi, Benedetto Cacciatori's Luigi Canina in Piazza Santo Stefano. The Monumento alla difesa di Casale (Francesco Porzio, 1897; pictured right), situated to the north of the castle, commemorates the vigorous action which took place during the First Italian War of Independence in 1849 to defend the city against Austrian troops who had just taken part in the defeat of the Piedmontese army. In the Priocco district, to the south of the historic centre, in Viale Ottavio Marchino, there is a monument by Virgilio Audagna to the cement industrialist Ottavio Marchino, son of the founder of Cementi Marchino, which is now part of Buzzi Unicem.

Palazzi edit

 
Palazzo Treville
 
Palazzo San Giorgio, the town hall

The historic centre is marked by many palazzi which are often Baroque in appearance (though the substance is often earlier), reflecting the urban renewal which took place in the early decades of the 18th century. Among the best-known are:

  • The 15th-century palazzo of the Marchesa Anna d'Alençon in Via Alessandria.
  • The 15th-century Palazzo Treviso, in Via Trevigi, was restructured on behalf of Anne d'Alençon before being given to the Dominican convent. During the Napoleonic period, it was used as a lyceum and has subsequently remained in scholastic use.
  • Palazzo Del Carretto, also known as the Casa Tornielli, in Via Canina, again dating from the 15th century, now housing a language school.
  • The medieval Casa Biandrate, at the junction of Via Guazzo and Via Morini, has preserved its late Gothic character.
  • Palazzo Sannazzaro, a gothic building in Via Mameli, remodelled in the baroque style by Giacomo Zanetti (1698–1735).
  • Palazzo Gozani di Treville, regarded as the most beautiful in the town and as one of the two most important works of Giovanni Battista Scapitta, the other being the church of Santa Catarina, mentioned above. The rococò atrium and courtyard are particularly praised, as is the long and gently curved façade which follows the path of Via Mameli.
  • Palazzo Gozani di San Giorgio, now the town hall, was partially rebuilt in the years 1775–8 to a design by Filippo Nicolis de Robilant. The façade is of three orders with its windows surrounded by decorations in stucco. Via Mameli.
  • Palazzo Magnocavalli has a façade commissioned from Giacomo Zanetti by the architect Francesco Ottavio Magnocavalli. Inside, the monumental twisted staircase, supported by two columns, fits gracefully into a very restricted space. Via Mameli.
  • Palazzo Fornara, built in 1840 in the neo-classical style by the Vercellese Pietro Bosso, forms the east side of Piazza Mazzini. The site was previously occupied by the church of Santa Maria di Piazza which was deconsecrated during the Napoleonic period. Since 1925 it has been a bank.
  • Palazzo Langosco, in Via Corte d’Appello, encloses part of the main cloister of the former Augustinian convent complex of Santa Croce. Once the seat of the Senate of Montferrat, it now houses the public library.
  • The neo-classical Palazzo Sacchi-Nemours, beside the Teatro Civico in Via Saffi, was built in 1750–2 by the local architect Francesco Ottavio Magnocavalli.
  • Palazzo Ricci di Cereseto, in Piazzetta di S. Stefano, has an imposing neo-classical façade fronted by four massive brickwork columns, constructed in 1806 by G. Battista Formiglia, probably following a design by Magnocavalli.
  • Palazzo Gaspardone-Ottavi, in Via Cavour, came into the possession of the Ottavi family during the 19th century and is noted for Bistolfi's plaque commemorating Ottavio Ottavi (an oenologist known also, in his home town, for writing the Inno ai krumiri, or ‘hymn to the krumiri biscuits’) and a memorial tablet to Saint Luigi Gonzaga.

Museums and galleries edit

The civic museum is located in the ancient convent of Santa Croce, whose cloister is decorated with frescos by il Moncalvo.

Music edit

Casale was an important centre for Italian music from the 13th through the 17th centuries. During the Albigensian Crusade, Casale was a refuge for troubadours fleeing regions to the west; the music of such troubadours may have been decisive in the formation of secular Italian musical styles in the 14th century (see Music of the Trecento). In the 16th century, the town was incorporated into the holdings of the Gonzaga family, who were patrons of music throughout the Renaissance.[14]

The cathedral there has in its archives polyphonic music by Jean Mouton, Andreas de Silva, and Francesco Cellavenia, as well as important prints by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina and other major composers of the period. In the 17th and 18th centuries, Casale was the site for premieres of operas by Giulio Cesare Monteverdi, Pietro Guglielmi, and Pasquale Anfossi, and was the birthplace of the Swiss-Italian composer Carlo Evasio Soliva. Currently, the city's musical centre is the Teatro Municipale.

Economy edit

Agriculture edit

Casale is situated in a plain where rice cultivation is predominant and in an area of cement-bearing hills and wineries. Casale is also well known for being the district of refrigeration, one of the main of Italy.

Manufacturing edit

Since the early 1900s Casale has been known for cement production; Buzzi Unicem, one of the largest cement producers in the world, is headquartered in the town.

After WW2 Casale become also an important manufacturing centre for the production of refrigerators, with the first company called Franger Frigor s.r.l. being established in the town in 1945. New companies started in 1957 Mondial Frigori s.r.l. and many more after. Only to name few Carma S.p.A., Cofi S.p.A., Framec S.p.A., all of them connected in some way with Franger Frigor. In 1965 Vendo Italy S.p.A. which sells bottle coolers and vending machines. Late '60 Cold Car started a new production in refrigerated vehicles using eutectic plates. Other companies started production in the following years: Industra Apparecchiature Refrigerate IAR, PastorFrigor, GeneralFilter, Unifrigor, IARP. "Dena" is another company working on refrigeration filters and capillary tubes. Around 13 manufacturing companies work now in this field. Most of the production in Casale is about Vending machines, Bottle Coolers, Vertical and Horizontal Cabinet, Refrigerated trucks. In this field, many are the technological innovations driven by environmental and energy efficiencies aspects which are used by those companies. Casale is also known for the training facilities in refrigeration and air conditioning organised by Centro Studi Galileo since 1975.[15]

Twin towns — Sister cities edit

Casale Monferrato is twinned with:

Sport edit

The town's football club, A.S. Casale Calcio, was founded in 1909. Within five years it achieved the twin peaks of its success: in 1913 it became the first Italian club to beat an English professional team (Reading F.C.), and in the 1913–14 season it won the Italian Championship. The team dropped out of Serie A in 1934, however, and since the 2006–7 season, it has been playing in Serie D/A.

During the 1970s, an annual under-21 football tournament took place in Casale Monferrato. It was named the "Caligaris" International Tournament, after Umberto Caligaris.[17]

The local basketball team, A.S. Junior Libertas Pallacanestro Casale Monferrato, was founded in 1956 and today competes in Lega Basket Serie A, the first tier of the sport in Italy.

Events edit

  • Annual
    • Saint Joseph's Fair (Mostra mercato di San Giuseppe). A fair of industry, commerce, handicraft, and agriculture held since 1946. Mid-March; Cittadella.
    • Rice and Roses (Riso&Rose). A festival of concerts, pageants, markets and other events held in and around Casale since 2001. May.
    • Folkermesse (from Folk + Kermesse). The world folk music and dance festival, first staged in Casale in 1983, includes the town on its summer itinerary. July–September.
    • Magiche Figure. Exhibition of puppet theatre from Italy and abroad. September.
    • Festival of Wine and the Monferrato. A celebration of local wine and food together with related events. Mid-September.
  • Monthly
    • Antiques market. Founded in 1973, this popular market is held on the second weekend of the month (except August) in the Mercato Pavia.
    • The Artemista craft market and Il Paniere market of organic produce market are held on the third Saturday of each month in Piazza Mazzini.
    • Casale Open City (Casale Città Aperta, a play on the title of the classic neorealist film Roma, città aperta). Many of the town's monuments are open, with free guided tours on Sunday afternoon. The second weekend of the month.
  • Twice weekly
    • Market days. Tuesday and Friday; Piazza Castello.

People edit

Notable people born in Casale, or with close connections to the town, include:

Fictional Casale edit

A siege of the town plays a significant off-stage role in Alessandro Manzoni's novel The Betrothed, and is the centre of Chapter 2 of the novel The Island of the Day Before by Umberto Eco, who was born in neighbouring Alessandria. Casale also appears in a best-selling historical yarn Bellarion the Fortunate by the Anglo-Italian writer Rafael Sabatini. A real 13th-century personality, Ubertino of Casale, is a character in Eco's historical novel The Name of the Rose (1980). The town features in the popular French 1960s TV serial The Flashing Blade.

Gallery edit

References and footnotes edit

General
Some of the content of this article comes from the equivalent Italian-language Wikipedia article (retrieved September 10, 2005).
Grignolio, Idro (1983). Casale Monferrato. Casale Monferrato: Media editrice.
History
Grignolio (see above)
The historic centre
Grignolio (see above)
Casale città aperta (2002 pamphlet produced by the Museo Civico)
Music
Crawford, David: 'Casale Monferrato', Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed December 18, 2005), <http://www.grovemusic.com 2008-05-16 at the Wayback Machine>.
Events
(in Italian)
(in Italian)
Ethnosuoni – Folkermesse (in Italian)
Footnotes
  1. ^ "Casale Monferrato (AL)".
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-03-11. Retrieved 2010-09-01.
  3. ^ a b c . Comune di Casale Monferrato. Archived from the original on 2010-07-06. Retrieved 2010-09-01.
  4. ^ "Eternit lawsuit (re asbestos exposure in Italy)". Business & Human Rights Resource Centre. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  5. ^ Romanoni, Fabio. ""Intrare vel exire non poterant nisi aves". l'Assedio di Casale del 1370- in "Monferrato Arte e Storia", XXVI (2014)".
  6. ^ a b c Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Casale Monferrato" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 440.
  7. ^ Grignolio, p.15
  8. ^ Manno, Antonio (1892). Bibliografia storica degli Stati della Monarchia di Savoia Volume 4. Turin: Fratelli Bocca. p. 120. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  9. ^ "Fury as Italy quashes asbestos conviction in 'trial of century'". France24. 20 November 2014. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  10. ^ Stillwell, Richard, ed. (1976). "VARDAGATE (Casale Monferrato) Piedmont, Italy". The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-03542-3.
  11. ^ For the dates of birth and death see "Lucrina Fetti".
  12. ^ . Comune di Casale Monferrato. Archived from the original on 2008-05-29.
  13. ^ Viale Ferrero, Mercedes (1963). La scenografia del '700 e i fratelli Galliari. Torino: Fratelli Pozzo. p. 205.
  14. ^ Crawford, Grove online
  15. ^ "Centro Studi Galileo". Centro Studi Galileo.
  16. ^ "Amministratori casalesi a Trnava. Si rinforza il gemellaggio". 8 September 2011.
  17. ^ "The Forgotten Italian Job of 1974" 2011-02-09 at the Wayback Machine - Blackpool-mad.co.uk
  18. ^ John Marston The Insatiate Countess, ed. by Giorgio Melchiori (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1984), p. 20.

External links edit

  Media related to Casale Monferrato at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official town website (in Italian)
  • The article on Casale Monferrato in the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia includes a brief history of the Diocese of Casale Monferrato.
  • (in Italian), official site of the city's cathedral.
  • Il Monferrato on line (in Italian), site of the local newspaper.
  • MonferratoArte (in Italian) A historical and bibliographical directory of artists active in the extra-urban Churches of the Diocese of Casale Monferrato.

casale, monferrato, italian, pronunciation, kaˈzaːle, moɱferˈraːto, town, piedmont, region, northwestern, italy, province, alessandria, situated, about, east, turin, right, bank, where, river, runs, foot, montferrat, hills, beyond, river, lies, vast, plain, va. Casale Monferrato Italian pronunciation kaˈzaːle moɱferˈraːto is a town in the Piedmont region of northwestern Italy in the province of Alessandria It is situated about 60 km 37 mi east of Turin on the right bank of the Po where the river runs at the foot of the Montferrat hills Beyond the river lies the vast plain of the Po valley Casale MonferratoComuneComune di Casale MonferratoVia LanzaFlagCoat of armsLocation of Casale MonferratoCasale MonferratoLocation of Casale Monferrato in ItalyShow map of ItalyCasale MonferratoCasale Monferrato Piedmont Show map of PiedmontCoordinates 45 08 N 08 27 E 45 133 N 8 450 E 45 133 8 450CountryItalyRegionPiedmontProvinceAlessandria AL FrazioniPopolo Pozzo Sant Evasio Roncaglia San Germano Santa Maria Del Tempio Terranova Cantone Bassotti Cantone Cerreto Cantone Il Rondo Cantone La Cascinetta Cantone La Ceriella Cantone Losa Cantone Rossi Cantone Vallare Castellino I Dossi Rolasco Vialarda Villa Sordi 1 Government MayorFederico RiboldiArea 2 Total86 21 km2 33 29 sq mi Elevation 3 116 m 381 ft Population 1 January 2021 3 Total33 213 Density390 km2 1 000 sq mi DemonymCasalesi or CasalaschiTime zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code15033Dialing code0142Patron saintSt EvasiusSaint day12 NovemberWebsiteOfficial website An ancient Roman municipium the town has been the most important trade and manufacturing centre of the area for centuries After the fall of the Roman Empire Casale became a free municipality and in the 15th and early 16th centuries served as the capital of the House of Palaiologos Then in 1536 the town passed to the Gonzagas who fortified it with a large citadel In the 17th century Casale was heavily involved in the War of the Mantuan Succession and besieged by French and Spanish troops During the wars of Italian unification the town was a defensive bulwark against the Austrian Empire In the 1900s Casale in the middle of the Turin Milan Genoa industrial triangle developed as an important industrial centre especially known for the production of asbestos cement A local Eternit factory has been at the centre of a massive environmental scandal with subsequent high profile litigation that often made international headlines 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Antiquity and Middle Ages 1 2 Late modern and contemporary 1 2 1 Newspaper 1 2 2 Eternit asbestos disaster 2 Main sights 2 1 Piazza Mazzini and its environs 2 1 1 Duomo 2 1 2 San Domenico 2 1 3 Via Lanza 2 1 4 Via Saffi 2 2 Piazza Castello 2 2 1 The castle 2 2 2 Santa Caterina 2 2 3 Teatro Municipale 2 2 4 Via Garibaldi and Sant Ilario 2 3 Via Roma ghetto and synagogue 2 4 The Giardini pubblici and public sculpture 2 5 Palazzi 2 6 Museums and galleries 3 Music 4 Economy 4 1 Agriculture 4 2 Manufacturing 5 Twin towns Sister cities 6 Sport 7 Events 8 People 9 Fictional Casale 10 Gallery 11 References and footnotes 12 External linksHistory editAntiquity and Middle Ages edit nbsp The fortified town from an engraving of 1745 On the left the river Po and to the right the star shaped cittadella The origins of the town are fairly obscure It is known that the Gaulish settlement of Vardacate from var water ate populated place existed on the Po in this area and that it became a Roman municipium By the beginning of the 8th century there was a small town under Lombard rule probably called Sedula or Sedulia It was here according to late and unreliable accounts that one Saint Evasius along with 146 followers was decapitated on the orders of the Arian Duke Attabulo Liutprand King of the Lombards is said to have supported the construction of a church in honour of Evasius Certainly the martyr s cult flourished and by 988 AD the town had become known as Casale di Sant Evasio At the time of Charlemagne the town came under the temporal and religious power of the bishops of Vercelli from which it was freed by Frederick Barbarossa Holy Roman Emperor and King of Italy It was sacked by the anti imperial troops of Vercelli Alessandria and Milan in 1215 but rebuilt and fortified in 1220 It fell under the power of the Marquess of Montferrat in 1292 although it was conquered by the Visconti of Milan in 1370 it remained under their control until 1404 5 and later became the capital of the marquessate 6 The condottiere Facino Cane was born in Casale Monferrato and he participated financed by the Duke of Milan Gian Galeazzo Visconti in the Battle of Casalecchio in 1402 but Theodore II Marquess of Montferrat the son of Isabella of Majorca did not participate Gian Galeazzo spent 300 000 golden florins attempting to turn from their courses the river Mincio from the city of Mantua but Gian Galeazzo died In 1536 it passed to the Gonzagas of Mantua who fortified it strongly Thereafter it was of considerable importance as a fortress 6 and was besieged during the Mantuan War of Succession Late modern and contemporary edit In 1745 following the defeat of the Piedmontese army at the Battle of Bassignano during the War of the Austrian Succession Casale was occupied by the victorious French and Spanish troops Much damage was caused to the city s buildings The subsequent renovation and rebuilding in the Baroque style made a substantial contribution to the urban texture 3 7 nbsp Memorial to asbestos victims on the former Eternit factory site There is written The handkerchiefs soaked in our tears will put on wings and fly far to develop deep roots of justice During the Wars of Italian Independence it successfully resisted the Austrians in 1849 and was strengthened in 1852 6 The vast limestone deposits in the hills nearby caused in the late 19th and early 20th centuries several concrete factories to open up in the town Casale became known as the cement capital of Italy Newspaper edit Lo Spettatore del Monferrato The Monferrato Spectator was a regionally focused periodical published weekly from 1852 to 1855 in Casale Monferrato north west Italy and printed by Tipografia Corrado 8 Eternit asbestos disaster edit From 1907 to 1986 Casale was the site of a large Eternit factory that produced the homonymous asbestos cement whose operations resulted in a massive environmental disaster linked to the death of some 1 800 people from mesothelioma and other asbestos related diseases in the area in spite of former Eternit owner Stephan Schmidheiny and his associate Jean Louis de Cartie being convicted and ordered to pay tens of millions of euros in compensation by the Turin Appeal Court in 2012 the Italian Supreme Court in 2014 declared that the statute of limitations had expired in the case 9 Main sights editPiazza Mazzini and its environs edit nbsp Piazza Mazzini nbsp The Torre Civica The historic centre of the town is itself centred on Piazza Mazzini the site of the Roman forum 10 Named for Giuseppe Mazzini a key republican figure of the Risorgimento it is dominated by an 1843 equestrian statue by Abbondio Sangiorgio of King Charles Albert of Piedmont Sardinia dressed in Roman costume specifically as a senator with his knees uncovered The statue was commissioned by the municipal authorities as a mark of gratitude to the king for having selected Casale as the seat of Piedmont s second Court of Appeal and to celebrate the construction of Casale s first permanent bridge across the Po Locally the square is called Piazza Cavallo wiktionary cavallo being the Italian word for horse nbsp The Cathedral s narthex Duomo edit Main article Casale Monferrato Cathedral A little to the east of the square is the Lombard Romanesque cathedral of Sant Evasio founded in 742 rebuilt in the early 12th century and consecrated on 7 January 1107 by Pope Paschal II It occupies a site where once was a Roman temple dedicated to Jupiter It underwent restoration in 1706 and again in the 19th century The cathedral has an asymmetric facade including a complex narthex with two galleries matronaei connected by a tribune and closed by round arches The interior houses the relics of Saint Evasius and near the presbytery fragments of 11th century pavement mosaics with Biblical scenes now remounted on the walls of the corridor from the apse to the sacristy San Domenico edit In 1471 after William VIII Marquess of Montferrat had chosen Casale as the permanent location of the marquisate court construction began of the church of San Domenico to the north of Piazza Mazzini Work on the building ceased for some time as a result of political instability in the early 16th century a fine if slightly incongruous Renaissance portal was imposed on the late Gothic facade Via Lanza edit Via Lanza which runs northwards from the north west corner of Piazza Mazzini is known for the Krumiri Rossi bakery which indeed produces Krumiri biscuits which have been a speciality of Casale since their legendary invention in 1870 by one Domenico Rossi after an evening spent with friends in Piazza Mazzini s Caffe della Concordia now a bank Also in Via Lanza is the 17th century church of San Giuseppe probably designed by Sebastiano Guala a painting attributed to the Ursuline nun Lucrina Fetti c 1614 1651 11 brother of Domenico shows Christ venerated by Sant Evasio and includes a very accurate depiction of contemporary Casale with its civic tower The church and convent of San Francesco which housed the remains of many of the Marquises of Monferrato was turned to other uses during the 18th century and demolished in the nineteenth The high open tower which is a landmark of Via Lanza belongs to Palazzo Morelli di Popolo it has been attributed to Bernardo Vittone and also to Magnocavalli both are believed to have had a hand in the refurbishment of the building nbsp Piazza Mazzini in the background Via Saffi leads past the civic tower towards Piazza Castello Via Saffi edit Running west from Piazza Mazzini to Piazza Castello is Via Saffi which contains one of the town s most recognizable landmarks the Torre Civica This brick tower square in plan and 60 metres high dates from the 11th century but suffered severe fire damage in April 1504 when a festival to celebrate the peace between Holy Roman Emperor Maximillian I and King Louis XII of France got out of hand The reconstruction completed six years later by Matteo Sammicheli produced a taller structure which included the current bell chamber The balconies attached to the upper part of the tower were added during the period of Gonzaga rule Subsequent restorations were carried out in 1779 after a lightning strike which destroyed the 15th century clock and again in 1920 Adjoining the tower is the church of Santo Stefano which stands on the east side of a small square named after it The church s origins date to the beginning of the second millennium but it was largely rebuilt in the mid 17th century under a project attributed to Sebastiano Guala work on the current facade began in 1787 but was not completed until the late 19th century Inside are paintings by Giovanni Francesco Caroto 1480 1555 Il Moncalvo 1568 1625 Giorgio Alberini 1575 6 1625 6 and Francesco Cairo 1607 1665 Adorning both the walls and the vault are 15 tondi depicting prophets apostles and the Virgin painted by Pietro Francesco Guala in 1757 the last year of his life The south side of Piazza Santo Stefano facing back towards Via Saffi is formed by the neo classical Palazzo Ricci di Cereseto The imposing facade marked by four massive brick columns was built in 1806 to an earlier design by the local architect Francesco Ottavio Magnocavalli Also in the square there is a marble statue of the archaeologist and architect Luigi Canina by Benedetto Cacciatore Piazza Castello edit Piazza Castello is a large irregularly shaped open space used as a car park and as a market square it is dominated by the castle of the Paleologi which occupies most of its western side The square arose in 1858 through the demolition of the castle s eastern ravelin and was extended in the late nineteenth early 20th century when the remaining ravelins were removed The castle edit The castle itself is an imposing 15th century military construction with a hexagonal plan four round towers and an encircling moat nbsp Santa Caterina Note the elliptical drum Santa Caterina edit At the southeast corner of the piazza is the elegant Baroque church of Santa Maria delle Grazie better known by its earlier designation of Santa Caterina A masterwork of Giovanni Battista Scapitta completed after his death by Giacomo Zanetti it is marked by an elliptical cupola and a facade curvilinear both in plan and elevation Teatro Municipale edit nbsp The Theatre The theatre which stands at the north eastern corner of the piazza at the end of Via Saffi opened in 1791 with a performance of the La moglie capricciosa an opera buffa by Vincenzo Fabrizi Its construction to a design by Abbot Agostino Vitoli of Spoleto had taken six years However it fell into disuse during the period of Napoleonic rule and remained closed for several decades After extensive internal embellishment the theatre reopened in 1840 with a performance of Vincenzo Bellini s Beatrice di Tenda In 1861 the theatre was sold by the Societa dei Nobili to the local authority the comune which made it more accessible to the general public Nevertheless it fell again into decline during World War II it was used as a store Major restoration work took place in the 1980s and the theatre finally reopened in 1990 with a performance by Vittorio Gassman Since then it has offered a mixture of theatre music and dance while the foyer is used for exhibitions usually photographic The horseshoe shaped auditorium with stalls four tiers of boxes and a gallery or loggione i e the gods is richly decorated with frescoes stucco gilding and velvet The curtains of the royal box hang from a structure supported on stucco caryatids by Abbondio Sangiorgio who also designed the equestrian statue in Piazza Mazzini 12 The stage curtain showing Apollo in His Sun Chariot was designed by the scenographer Bernardino Galliari 1707 1794 A sketch for the curtain is preserved at the Galleria Sabauda in Turin 13 Via Garibaldi and Sant Ilario edit From the side of the theatre Via Garibaldi leads northwards to the 16th century church of Sant Ilario founded in 380 in honour of Hilary of Poitiers It was completely rebuilt in 1566 and was largely restructured towards the end of the 19th century The church s polychrome facade is of interest and it contains two important works by Niccolo Musso the Madonna del Carmine Our Lady of Mount Carmel and San Francesco ai piedi del Crocefisso Saint Francis at the foot of the Crucifix originally from the church of San Francesco nbsp Neoclassical facade of Santa Croce by Francesco Ottavio Magnocavalli Via Roma ghetto and synagogue edit Behind the shops on the west side of Via Roma which runs southwards from Piazza Mazzini lay the ghetto which persisted until the emancipation of the Jews in Piedmont following Charles Albert s concession of a constitution the Statuto Albertino under the revolutionary pressures of 1848 The Synagogue of Casale Monferrato is inside a building at Vicolo Olper 44 that offers no hint from its nondescript exterior that it is a synagogue built in 1595 and recognized as one of the most beautiful in Europe The women s galleries now host an important Jewish museum Of particular interest are the Tablets of the Law in gilded wood dating from the 18th century numerous rimonim Torah finials and atarot crowns for the Torah scrolls carved and with silver filigree The Giardini pubblici and public sculpture edit nbsp Ai caduti the war memorial The public gardens which front the railway station extend westwards dissected by various streets almost to the southern end of Via Roma They contain a range of monuments to figures of local and national renown including Giovanni Lanza sculpted by Odoardo Tabacchi 1887 Giuseppe Antonio Ottavi Leonardo Bistolfi 1890 Filippo Mellana Giacomo Ginotti 1887 and Giuseppe Garibaldi Primo Giudici 1884 The most important however is Bistolfi s war memorial of 1928 pictured left A marble exedra with four caryatids in the form of winged victories is raised on a dias fronted with steps The bronze sculpture Il Fante Crociato a foot soldier in crusader period costume takes centre stage a second bronze a lightly robed Primavera Italica Italic Spring steps down from the platform and out of the ensemble Other public sculptures of note in Casale include the monument to King Charles Albert in Piazza Mazzini mentioned above Bistolfi s 1887 monument to Urbano Rattazzi in Piazza Rattazzi Benedetto Cacciatori s Luigi Canina in Piazza Santo Stefano The Monumento alla difesa di Casale Francesco Porzio 1897 pictured right situated to the north of the castle commemorates the vigorous action which took place during the First Italian War of Independence in 1849 to defend the city against Austrian troops who had just taken part in the defeat of the Piedmontese army In the Priocco district to the south of the historic centre in Viale Ottavio Marchino there is a monument by Virgilio Audagna to the cement industrialist Ottavio Marchino son of the founder of Cementi Marchino which is now part of Buzzi Unicem Palazzi edit nbsp Palazzo Treville nbsp Palazzo San Giorgio the town hall The historic centre is marked by many palazzi which are often Baroque in appearance though the substance is often earlier reflecting the urban renewal which took place in the early decades of the 18th century Among the best known are The 15th century palazzo of the Marchesa Anna d Alencon in Via Alessandria The 15th century Palazzo Treviso in Via Trevigi was restructured on behalf of Anne d Alencon before being given to the Dominican convent During the Napoleonic period it was used as a lyceum and has subsequently remained in scholastic use Palazzo Del Carretto also known as the Casa Tornielli in Via Canina again dating from the 15th century now housing a language school The medieval Casa Biandrate at the junction of Via Guazzo and Via Morini has preserved its late Gothic character Palazzo Sannazzaro a gothic building in Via Mameli remodelled in the baroque style by Giacomo Zanetti 1698 1735 Palazzo Gozani di Treville regarded as the most beautiful in the town and as one of the two most important works of Giovanni Battista Scapitta the other being the church of Santa Catarina mentioned above The rococo atrium and courtyard are particularly praised as is the long and gently curved facade which follows the path of Via Mameli Palazzo Gozani di San Giorgio now the town hall was partially rebuilt in the years 1775 8 to a design by Filippo Nicolis de Robilant The facade is of three orders with its windows surrounded by decorations in stucco Via Mameli Palazzo Magnocavalli has a facade commissioned from Giacomo Zanetti by the architect Francesco Ottavio Magnocavalli Inside the monumental twisted staircase supported by two columns fits gracefully into a very restricted space Via Mameli Palazzo Fornara built in 1840 in the neo classical style by the Vercellese Pietro Bosso forms the east side of Piazza Mazzini The site was previously occupied by the church of Santa Maria di Piazza which was deconsecrated during the Napoleonic period Since 1925 it has been a bank Palazzo Langosco in Via Corte d Appello encloses part of the main cloister of the former Augustinian convent complex of Santa Croce Once the seat of the Senate of Montferrat it now houses the public library The neo classical Palazzo Sacchi Nemours beside the Teatro Civico in Via Saffi was built in 1750 2 by the local architect Francesco Ottavio Magnocavalli Palazzo Ricci di Cereseto in Piazzetta di S Stefano has an imposing neo classical facade fronted by four massive brickwork columns constructed in 1806 by G Battista Formiglia probably following a design by Magnocavalli Palazzo Gaspardone Ottavi in Via Cavour came into the possession of the Ottavi family during the 19th century and is noted for Bistolfi s plaque commemorating Ottavio Ottavi an oenologist known also in his home town for writing the Inno ai krumiri or hymn to the krumiri biscuits and a memorial tablet to Saint Luigi Gonzaga Museums and galleries edit The civic museum is located in the ancient convent of Santa Croce whose cloister is decorated with frescos by il Moncalvo Music editCasale was an important centre for Italian music from the 13th through the 17th centuries During the Albigensian Crusade Casale was a refuge for troubadours fleeing regions to the west the music of such troubadours may have been decisive in the formation of secular Italian musical styles in the 14th century see Music of the Trecento In the 16th century the town was incorporated into the holdings of the Gonzaga family who were patrons of music throughout the Renaissance 14 The cathedral there has in its archives polyphonic music by Jean Mouton Andreas de Silva and Francesco Cellavenia as well as important prints by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina and other major composers of the period In the 17th and 18th centuries Casale was the site for premieres of operas by Giulio Cesare Monteverdi Pietro Guglielmi and Pasquale Anfossi and was the birthplace of the Swiss Italian composer Carlo Evasio Soliva Currently the city s musical centre is the Teatro Municipale Economy editAgriculture edit Casale is situated in a plain where rice cultivation is predominant and in an area of cement bearing hills and wineries Casale is also well known for being the district of refrigeration one of the main of Italy Manufacturing edit Since the early 1900s Casale has been known for cement production Buzzi Unicem one of the largest cement producers in the world is headquartered in the town After WW2 Casale become also an important manufacturing centre for the production of refrigerators with the first company called Franger Frigor s r l being established in the town in 1945 New companies started in 1957 Mondial Frigori s r l and many more after Only to name few Carma S p A Cofi S p A Framec S p A all of them connected in some way with Franger Frigor In 1965 Vendo Italy S p A which sells bottle coolers and vending machines Late 60 Cold Car started a new production in refrigerated vehicles using eutectic plates Other companies started production in the following years Industra Apparecchiature Refrigerate IAR PastorFrigor GeneralFilter Unifrigor IARP Dena is another company working on refrigeration filters and capillary tubes Around 13 manufacturing companies work now in this field Most of the production in Casale is about Vending machines Bottle Coolers Vertical and Horizontal Cabinet Refrigerated trucks In this field many are the technological innovations driven by environmental and energy efficiencies aspects which are used by those companies Casale is also known for the training facilities in refrigeration and air conditioning organised by Centro Studi Galileo since 1975 15 Twin towns Sister cities editCasale Monferrato is twinned with nbsp Trnava Slovakia since 1967 16 nbsp Weinstadt Germany since 2007 nbsp Pescara Italy since 2009 nbsp Gjirokaster Albania since 2010Sport editThe town s football club A S Casale Calcio was founded in 1909 Within five years it achieved the twin peaks of its success in 1913 it became the first Italian club to beat an English professional team Reading F C and in the 1913 14 season it won the Italian Championship The team dropped out of Serie A in 1934 however and since the 2006 7 season it has been playing in Serie D A During the 1970s an annual under 21 football tournament took place in Casale Monferrato It was named the Caligaris International Tournament after Umberto Caligaris 17 The local basketball team A S Junior Libertas Pallacanestro Casale Monferrato was founded in 1956 and today competes in Lega Basket Serie A the first tier of the sport in Italy Events editAnnual Saint Joseph s Fair Mostra mercato di San Giuseppe A fair of industry commerce handicraft and agriculture held since 1946 Mid March Cittadella Rice and Roses Riso amp Rose A festival of concerts pageants markets and other events held in and around Casale since 2001 May Folkermesse from Folk Kermesse The world folk music and dance festival first staged in Casale in 1983 includes the town on its summer itinerary July September Magiche Figure Exhibition of puppet theatre from Italy and abroad September Festival of Wine and the Monferrato A celebration of local wine and food together with related events Mid September Monthly Antiques market Founded in 1973 this popular market is held on the second weekend of the month except August in the Mercato Pavia The Artemista craft market and Il Paniere market of organic produce market are held on the third Saturday of each month in Piazza Mazzini Casale Open City Casale Citta Aperta a play on the title of the classic neorealist film Roma citta aperta Many of the town s monuments are open with free guided tours on Sunday afternoon The second weekend of the month Twice weekly Market days Tuesday and Friday Piazza Castello People editNotable people born in Casale or with close connections to the town include Evasius died 3rd 4th or 8th century perhaps martyr and patron saint of the town Ubertino of Casale 1259 1329 Franciscan preacher and theologian Yolande of Montferrat 1274 1317 became Eirene Empress Consort of Andronikos II Palaiologos Byzantine emperor Facino Cane 1360 1412 condottiere William VIII Marquess of Montferrat 1420 1483 who established Casale as its definitive capital Boniface III 1424 1494 Marquess of Montferrat Giovanni Martino Spanzotti born circa 1455 painter William IX Marquess of Montferrat 1486 1518 Anne d Alencon 1492 1562 Marchioness of Montferrat Bianca Maria Gaspardone died 1526 the rich heiress who became wife to Ermes Visconti and to the Count of Cellant and mistress to many more before her public execution in Milan 18 John George Marquess of Montferrat 1488 1533 Boniface IV Marquess of Montferrat 1512 1530 Stefano Guazzo 1530 1593 founder of the Casale literary academy the Illustrati Niccolo Musso c 1590 c 1623 painter of the Baroque period Camilla Faa di Bruno c 1599 1662 the Bella Ardizzina who secretly married Ferdinando Gonzaga Duke of Mantua Ferdinando del Cairo 1666 1748 a painter of the Italian Baroque school was born in Casale Giacomo Zanetti 1698 1735 master builder and architect who completed the baroque reconstruction of Santa Caterina and built several palazzi in the town Pietro Francesco Guala 1698 1757 painter of the Piedmontese Baroque school Francesco Ottavio Magnocavalli 1707 89 architect Carlo Cozio Count of Montiglio and Salabue 1715 1780 chess player Carlo Vidua Count of Conzano 1785 1830 traveller and archaeologist Carlo Evasio Soliva 1791 1853 musician Luigi Canina 1795 1856 archaeologist and architect Joseph Rocchietti the earliest known Italian American novelist was an immigrant from Casale Giovanni Lanza 1810 1882 politician Ascanio Sobrero 1812 1888 chemist Eleuterio Pagliano 1826 1903 painter Luigi Hugues 1836 1913 engineer geographer and musician Francesco Negri 1841 1924 photographer Giovanni Celoria 1842 1920 astronomer Giulio Viotte 1845 78 artist Giovanni Camerana 1845 1905 magistrate poet art critic one of the prime members of the scapigliatura movement Leonardo Bistolfi 1859 1933 sculptor Leandro Bisiach 1864 1946 a violin maker Ugo Cavallero 1880 1943 military commander Cesare Maria De Vecchi 1884 1959 politician Umberto Caligaris 1901 1940 footballer Egidio Ortona 1911 1996 diplomat Augusto Segre 1915 1986 writer and antifascist Giampaolo Pansa born 1935 journalist and writer Sergio Castelletti born 1937 footballer Giovanni Piana born 5 April 1940 philosopher Trent Miller DOB unknown rockstar philosopher was born in Casale although he grew up in London Roberto Bolle born 1975 ballet dancer was born in Casale although he grew up in Trino Vercellese Stefano Macaluso born 1975 businessman and rally driver nbsp Portrait of Anna d Alencon by Macrino d Alba nbsp Niccolo Musso self portrait nbsp Ascanio Sobrero nbsp Roberto BolleFictional Casale editA siege of the town plays a significant off stage role in Alessandro Manzoni s novel The Betrothed and is the centre of Chapter 2 of the novel The Island of the Day Before by Umberto Eco who was born in neighbouring Alessandria Casale also appears in a best selling historical yarn Bellarion the Fortunate by the Anglo Italian writer Rafael Sabatini A real 13th century personality Ubertino of Casale is a character in Eco s historical novel The Name of the Rose 1980 The town features in the popular French 1960s TV serial The Flashing Blade Gallery edit nbsp Piazza Santo Stefano nbsp Church of Santo Stefano nbsp Carlo Alberto nbsp The Castle nbsp The Torre Civica nbsp San Domenico nbsp Synagogue of Casale nbsp The cathedral of Sant EvasioReferences and footnotes editGeneral Some of the content of this article comes from the equivalent Italian language Wikipedia article retrieved September 10 2005 Grignolio Idro 1983 Casale Monferrato Casale Monferrato Media editrice History Grignolio see above The historic centre Grignolio see above Casale citta aperta 2002 pamphlet produced by the Museo Civico Music Crawford David Casale Monferrato Grove Music Online ed L Macy Accessed December 18 2005 lt http www grovemusic com Archived 2008 05 16 at the Wayback Machine gt Events Ente Manifestazioni Casale Monferrato AL Italy in Italian Profilo della citta di Casale Monferrato in Italian Riso amp Rose in Monferrato a flourishing festival Ethnosuoni Folkermesse in Italian Footnotes Casale Monferrato AL Piemonte in cifre Annuario statistico regionale Archived from the original on 2012 03 11 Retrieved 2010 09 01 a b c Profilo della Citta Comune di Casale Monferrato Archived from the original on 2010 07 06 Retrieved 2010 09 01 Eternit lawsuit re asbestos exposure in Italy Business amp Human Rights Resource Centre Retrieved 8 December 2020 Romanoni Fabio Intrare vel exire non poterant nisi aves l Assedio di Casale del 1370 in Monferrato Arte e Storia XXVI 2014 a b c Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Casale Monferrato Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 440 Grignolio p 15 Manno Antonio 1892 Bibliografia storica degli Stati della Monarchia di Savoia Volume 4 Turin Fratelli Bocca p 120 Retrieved 26 October 2022 Fury as Italy quashes asbestos conviction in trial of century France24 20 November 2014 Retrieved 8 December 2020 Stillwell Richard ed 1976 VARDAGATE Casale Monferrato Piedmont Italy The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 03542 3 For the dates of birth and death see Lucrina Fetti Teatro municipale Comune di Casale Monferrato Archived from the original on 2008 05 29 Viale Ferrero Mercedes 1963 La scenografia del 700 e i fratelli Galliari Torino Fratelli Pozzo p 205 Crawford Grove online Centro Studi Galileo Centro Studi Galileo Amministratori casalesi a Trnava Si rinforza il gemellaggio 8 September 2011 The Forgotten Italian Job of 1974 Archived 2011 02 09 at the Wayback Machine Blackpool mad co uk John Marston The Insatiate Countess ed by Giorgio Melchiori Manchester Manchester University Press 1984 p 20 External links edit nbsp Media related to Casale Monferrato at Wikimedia Commons Official town website in Italian The article on Casale Monferrato in the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia includes a brief history of the Diocese of Casale Monferrato Duomo di Casale Monferrato in Italian official site of the city s cathedral Il Monferrato on line in Italian site of the local newspaper MonferratoArte in Italian A historical and bibliographical directory of artists active in the extra urban Churches of the Diocese of Casale Monferrato Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Casale Monferrato amp oldid 1206386736, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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