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Gradara is a typical medieval village,
placed on a hilltop overlooking the Flaminia way and enjoying a
beautiful landscape. The town is surrounded by trapezoidal
fourteenth-century walls crowned by merlons and provided with
rectangular bastions. A further curtain of walls placed in
between, the towers and an independent gate ensured a further
defence to the fortress.
The whole perimeter of the walls were run
by communication
trenches. At the western
corner the town wall was reinforced by a stout poligonal bastion,
the rocchetta. The only entrance to the tower was through
the Porta
dell'Orologio, an arch
supporting a square tower (on whose walls hanged the coat-of-arms
of the Montefeltros, the Sforzas and the Malatestas) provided by
a draw-bridge.
The castle is placed on the highest and more easily defensible
hill.
The donjon, (Mastio) around the main keep, helps to confer the fortress the idea of strenght and elegance at the same time, typical of the medieval fortresses.
The Mastio dates back to 1150 and the wings of the castle were built around it on a later time. The interior of the castle underwent radical changes in the course of the passage from a fort to a residential palace.
Of the works of arts there to embellish it, only the Battle, a painting by Aspertini (today kept in the Council-hall) and the earthenwared altarpiece by Andrea della Robbia in the chapel are left.
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Server: Microsoft-IIS/5.0 Date: Fri, 24 May 2013 04:05:51 GMT IISExport: This web site was exported using IIS Export v3.0 X-Powered-By: ASP.NET Content-Type: text/html
