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AREA:
20 sq km.
POPULATION:
583
HEIGHT
FROM SEA LEVEL (m): 273 WEB
SITE:
www.apricale.org |
Apricale
(from the Latin word "apricus", meaning exposed to the sunlight)
is a town of mediaeval origin in the Nervia Valley, where the
Mediterranean maquis alternates with chestnut and fir trees. Founded in
the eleventh century, it was given an independent statute (the earliest in
Liguria) in 1267 after being under the dominion of the Ventimiglia
aristocracy, and it later fell into the sphere of influence of the Doria
family. A burial ground at Pian del Re (not open to visitors) testifies to
human settlement during the Bronze Age. The thousand-year-old castle is
today a private residence, while all that remains of the town walls are a
few ruins and three gates.
With its narrow alleys and stairways and cluttered houses and shops, the
old town centre is embellished with murals painted every year by the many
artists who take part in Fresco Day.
The parish church of the Purificazione di Maria was rebuilt in the
nineteenth century but dates back to the late Middle Ages; the bell tower
was originally a thirteenth-century tower. Together with the ancient
buildings in Piazza Cavour and the oratory of San Bartolomeo (which
preserves a poliptych dating from 1544) it makes very charming viewing.
Next to the cemetery is the thirteenth-century church of Sant'Antonio,
which has a Baroque façade and sixteenth-century frescoes. The small
church of Santa Maria in Alba has some precious frescoes by Cambiaso,
while other frescoes dating from the fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries
adorn the church of Madonna degli Angeli, at the entrance to the town. The
famous ceramics school has a centuries-old tradition.
Apricale is full of life in the summer: besides the open-air theatre, the
main square also hosts the elastic-ball tournament and the festival in
September dedicated to a local sweet speciality called Pansarole. Well
worth mentioning among the local products are the Rossese superior quality
wine and the olive oil. For those who like walking, there are the
panoramic paths to Isolabuona and Baiardo as well as the excursions to be
made to Monte Semoigo (609 m.) and Monte Bignone (1299 m.). It is also
worth taking a walk and visiting the ruins of the Romanesque church of San
Pietro in Ento.
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