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San
Leo
A massive rock with precipices on all sides in a landscape that
declines from the Apennines to the sea; a mass of old houses crowded
together between a might fortress and a watchful bell tower; the
intertwining of history and legend, of sacred and profane, of horrid
prisons and sedate parish churches - all this is San Leo. In the whirly
confusion of conflicts between the Goths and Byzantines, Lombards and
Franks, San Leo saw the importance of its impregnable fortress grow, to
the extent that in 963 A.D. it became the capital of the Italic Kingdom
and was besieged for months by Otto I, Emperor of Germany. The view
visitors enjoy from the town is absolutely spectacular and stretches
from Mount Fumaiolo as far as the Adriatic Sea over a landscape dotted
with woods, rocky peaks, ravines, fortresses, villages and rural homes.
The town centre is basically 17th century and well-preserved, with a
unique monumental complex of a religious nature that makes San Leo a
real "art city". The Parish church, Cathedral, Bell Tower and the
Convent of Sant'Igne do in fact cover the entire Romanesque cycle.
How to get to:
From
Riccione by taking, from the Adriatica (to Rimini), the Marecchiese 258
following the
signs. |