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reference: 607
Box of 35 sqm very convenient to the historical center of Finalborgo. Ideal to accommodate the needs of the whole family or as a deposit for business use.
The context. Finalborgo, one of the "most beautiful villages in Italy", is a jewel a few steps from the sea that enchants with its atmosphere d 'other times. The name derives from Burgum Finarii, a borderland (ad fines) in Roman times and the administrative center of the Del Carretto marquisate between the 14th and 16th centuries. Closed between medieval walls still well preserved, interspersed with semi-circular towers and interrupted only at the gates, the Borgo di Finale (so called to distinguish it from the Marina) immediately offers the visitor a feeling of protection and recollection. The ancient defensive and community concept survives in the network of streets, arranged perpendicular to each other to form fascinating glimpses in contained spaces. Through the narrow alleys, every square is a conquest and a surprise, able to exhibit wonders in the "stone of the Finale", the slate that adorns doors, is modeled in columns, diamonds, ornaments.
The Historic Center of Finalborgo, the ancient Burgum Fiunarii, for several centuries the capital of the Marquisate and administrative center of Finale, stands in a strategic position on the alluvial plain at the confluence of the Pora and Aquila torrents.
The origin of the Borgo has always been traced back towards the end of the XII century, at the time of the Marquis Enrico il Guercio, but recent important archaeological discoveries seem to backdate its foundation of a few centuries. With the boundary walls (destroyed in 1448 and rebuilt in 1452), the different "doors": Porta Reale (from 1702 next to which you can see a large embossed coat of arms of the Del Carretto), Porta Romana, Porta Testa (del 1452) and Porta Mezzaluna (higher up towards Castel San Giovanni), the semicircular towers that interrupted the walls (the most beautiful is visible on the south side), the Borgo retains the characteristics of a fortified town in its fifteenth-century structure, after destructions resulting from the war with Genoa (1448). The 15th century and Renaissance palaces, modified during the Spanish domination, embellish the urban fabric .
Palazzo del Municipio, originally the Ricci family is one of the best examples of early Renaissance architecture in Liguria; Palazzo Cavassola (which hosted Pius VII, illustrates the decorative conceptions of the Final of the seventeenth century) and Palazzo Gallesio in via Gallesio, Palazzo Brunengo in piazza Aicardi stands out for the double arched loggia (Loggia del Ramondo) and the large family coat-of-arms which is now barely visible; Court in the homonymous square (former residence of the Del Carretto, then the Spanish and Genoese Governors, the Court of the District, and finally the Pretura), already denounces the complex transformations undergone in various eras: Palazzo Messea and Palazzo Arnaldi--9fdcc61b143e952694c04bc69c8e694f!
If you want to know more, you can talk to Paolo Folco.