L'aquilaSights

Sights in L'aquila

  1. A

    Basilica di Santa Maria di Collemaggio

    The striking Basilica di Santa Maria di Collemaggio is Abruzzo's most famous church. Its square pink-and-white quilt-pattern façade is a beautiful marriage of architectural styles - the intricate rose windows are typically Gothic while the imposing central portal is pure Romanesque. In contrast to the bright exterior, the interior is gloomy and stark.

    Consecrated in 1288, the basilica became an important religious centre in 1294 when Pietro del Morrone was crowned Pope Celestine V here. As founder of the Celestine order, he was canonised in 1303, seven years after his death, and his tomb lies inside the basilica.

    reviewed

  2. La Perdonanza

    L'Aquila's big annual event is La Perdonanza on 28 August. This colourful celebration goes back to 1294 when Pietro del Morrone was crowned Pope Celestine V in the Basilica di Santa Maria di Collemaggio. In an act of largesse, Celestine granted plenary indulgence to everyone present who had confessed and taken Communion. Since then, every 28 August, the pardon has been repeated. The grand pardon is preceded by a 1000-strong costumed procession and a week of highly charged celebrations.

    reviewed

  3. B

    Forte Spagnolo

    With the Gran Sasso d'Italia looming over, L'Aquila's 16th-century castle is a foreboding sight. Known locally as the Forte Spagnolo, it was built after an unsuccessful rebellion against the city's Spanish rulers in 1528. The austere geometry, steep blanched battlements and now-empty moat were designed by the Valencian architect Pirro Luis Scrivà and commissioned by Don Pedro de Toledo, the Spanish viceroy of Naples and de facto ruler of L'Aquila.

    reviewed

  4. Fountain of the 99 Spouts

    The city's most emblematic sight, the Fountain of the 99 Spouts is a misnomer - there are, in fact, only 93 spewing gargoyles. Surrounded by a wall of pink-and-white stone, the 13th-century fountain is one of the few supplies of fresh water that has proved reliable throughout the city's earthquake-prone past. The fountain lies to the west of the centre, near the Porta Riviera, one of the city's four medieval gates.

    reviewed

  5. C

    Basilica di San Bernardino

    To the north, the 15th-century Basilica di San Bernardino features a lavish three-tiered Renaissance façade and an opulent baroque interior. Of note are the detailed reliefs on San Bernadino's mausoleum. San Bernadino, originally from Siena, died in L'Aquila in 1444.

    reviewed

  6. D

    Museo Nazionale d'Abruzzo

    Forte Spagnolo houses the Museo Nazionale d'Abruzzo and its collection of local archaeological finds and religious art. The surprise highlight is the skeleton of a million-year-old mammoth, unearthed near the city in 1954.

    reviewed

  7. Museum

    To see how the city's aristocracy once lived, head for the small museum in the Palazzo Signorini Corsi where you'll find the Corsi family's considerable collection of religious art and period furniture.

    reviewed

  8. E

    Duomo

    Lending its name to L'Aquila's central piazza, the Duomo has suffered repeated earthquake damage since the 13th-century. Today it boasts little more than an unexceptional neoclassical façade.

    reviewed