Finale Ligure

Finale Ligure
Comune
Comune di Finale Ligure

A frescoed gate in Finale Ligure.

Coat of arms
Finale Ligure

Location of Finale Ligure in Italy

Coordinates: 44°10′17″N 8°20′40″E / 44.17139°N 8.34444°E / 44.17139; 8.34444
Country Italy
Region Liguria
Province / Metropolitan city Savona (SV)
Frazioni Gorra, Olle, Varigotti, Calvisio, Perti, San Bernardino, le Mànie, Selva, Verzi, Monticello
Government
  Mayor Flaminio Richeri Vivaldi Pasqua
Area
  Total 34.59 km2 (13.36 sq mi)
Elevation 0 m (0 ft)
Population (30 December 2010[1])
  Total 11,638
  Density 340/km2 (870/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Finalesi
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 17024
Dialing code 019
Patron saint St. John the Baptist
Saint day June 24
Website Official website

Finale Ligure is a comune on the Gulf of Genoa in the Province of Savona in Liguria, Italy. It is considered part of the Italian Riviera.

Geography

A view on the frazione of Varigotti.

Known for its white sand beaches and its views, Finale Ligure is located directly adjacent to the Rock of Caprazoppa, a steep limestone mountain on the southwest, and much of the town extends up hill slopes. The town has a lively commercial district. The boardwalk is lined with palm trees and many restaurants from the adjacent street have located large, open-air dining rooms along it.

The town of Finale Ligure is nominally divided into three "boroughs". Finale Ligure Marina (Finalmarina) is the main seaside part of the town, most frequented by tourists, while Finale Pia (Finalpia) is the traditional center of the town, where a Benedictine abbey still stands. Finalborgo, the third borough and located further inland, consists of an old walled medieval town built at the joncion of two streams: Aquila and Pora.

Finale Ligure has furthermore some frazioni: Varigotti, an appreciated and characteristic seaside holiday destination, which was an important port in Roman and Byzantine times; Perti, also an ancient center with Roman and Medieval ruins, up into the entroterra (interior); Le Manie (e Magne in local dialect), a plateau partly cultivated, partly left to pine forest and Mediterranean Bush; Gorra, a panoramic hamlet along the steep road to the Alpine forests of Melogno pass; San Bernardino, a recent set of buildings and residences on the top of the hill overlooking Finale Marina.

The territory surrounding Finale is known as "Il Finale", and not "Il Finalese" as sometimes wrongly spelled; it is made up of limestone plateaus and canyons which host a significant biodiversity and important remains of Roman and Medieval times.

History

Map of Finale with the town wall, 17th century.
The Gavone Castle.

Caves attesting the presence of human settlements in the area as early as the Neolithic age have been found. During the Roman times, the burgh of Finale was known as Ad Fines ("On the Border"), as it marked the boundary between two of the main Ligurian tribes: the Sabatii in the east, and the Intemelii in the west.

In Roman times the area hosted a road and post station named Pollupex (Pollupice, in Italian) along the via Julia Augusta; it is supposed that it was situated where nowadays the frazione of Calvisio stands. Important was in those times also the port of Varicottis (Varigotti), now interred, as were the fortifications in Perti (Castrum Perticae, active to the Middle Ages), later integrated in the Byzantine limes against the Ostrogoths and Lombards.

The first document citing the town is from 967, when it was included in the Marca Aleramica created by Emperor Otto I. Later a possession of Bonifacio Del Vasto, it was inherited by the Del Carretto who made it the base of a powerful Marquisate which they enlarged absorbing the neighbouring fiefs, and which raised the hostility of the Republic of Genoa. After various disputes, in 1385 the Del Carretto were compelled to cede most of their lands to the Genoese; their rule was however not well accepted, and a true war ensued in 1447–48, which ended with a Genoese victory.

In 1496 Alfonso I Del Carretto obtained the investiture of the whole marquisate by Emperor Maximilian I, later confirmed by Charles V. In 1558, however, the misgovernment of Alfonso II Del Carretto created attrition with the population, with the encroachment of Genoa, which claimed new lands from the Emperor. The Spanish governor of Milan therefore occupied Finale in 1571, and the town passed under the Spanish rule in 1602.

The Marquisate was acquired by the Republic of Genoa in 1713, being confirmed in the possession by the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle of 1748. The town became part of the Kingdom of Sardinia in 1815 and of the Kingdom of Italy in 1861. At that time the Finale area was divided in several small Comuni: Finalborgo, Finalmarina, Finalpia, Gorra, Perti, Calvisio, Varigotti. Between 1869 and 1877, a time of administrative reforms, only the three Finales survived after swallowing their smaller neighbors amidst recriminations. It was the Fascist regime, bent on creating wider Comuni, to eventually unify these townships in the Comune of Finale Ligure in 1927.[2]

Façade of San Biagio church in Finalborgo.
The former convent of Santa Caterina.
Mausoleum of General Enrico Caviglia, Cape San Donato.

Main sights

Transport

The town is connected by various roads (mainly the SS1, or via Aurelia), the A10 highway Genova-Ventimiglia (exit "Finale Ligure"), and a double-track rail line.

Twin towns

Famous people

See also

References

  1. Data from Istat
  2. Caffarena, Fabio with Stiaccini, Carlo Finale Ligure 1927 - Biografia di una città dall'Unità d'Italia al Fascismo, Unicopli, Milano 2007
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Finale Ligure.
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Finale Ligure.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.