Bracciano is a small town in the Italian region of Lazio , 30 kilometres (19 miles) northwest of Rome . The town is famous for its volcanic lake ( Lago di Bracciano or "Sabatino", the eighth largest lake in Italy) and for a particularly well-preserved medieval castle Castello Orsini-Odescalchi . The lake is widely used for sailing and is popular with tourists; the castle has hosted a number of events, especially weddings of actors and singers.
15-798: The Italian Air Force Museum is an aircraft museum at Vigna di Valle , on Lake Bracciano ( Lazio ), in central Italy. It is operated by the Aeronautica Militare . The museum's collection has an emphasis on Italian machines and seaplanes. While maintaining the technical and historical aspects, the museum is also dedicated to the influence aviation has had on Italian art, featuring works by Futurist painters Pietro Annigoni , Giacomo Balla , and Tato ; and contemporary art such as Flight: Papiers froissés (literally crumpled paper) by Antonio Papasso . 42°05′06″N 12°13′02″E / 42.085049°N 12.217108°E / 42.085049; 12.217108 Vigna di Valle The town
30-892: A number of historical military aircraft, including famous planes such as the MC. 202 , the Supermarine Spitfire , the Savoia Marchetti S.79 , the F-104 Starfighter , the Caproni Ca.100 and the Panavia Tornado . Also on view is a remarkable collection of three Schneider Cup racers, including the Macchi M.C.72 . The museum stages an annual 'Giornata Azzura' airshow at Pratica di Mare airport. The Köppen Climate Classification subtype for this climate
45-521: Is " Csa " (Mediterranean climate). Bracciano is twinned with Paolo Giordano II Orsini Paolo Giordano II Orsini (1591–24 May 1656) was an Italian nobleman , Patron of arts , poet, and amateur painter. He was the firstborn of Virginio Orsini, Duke of Bracciano and his wife Flavia Peretti , a niece of Pope Sixtus V . He grew in Florence, where he attended the Medici court . On
60-529: Is its castle, Castello Orsini-Odescalchi , one of the most noteworthy examples of Renaissance military architecture in Italy. 3 km (2 mi) outside the city, alongside the road leading to Trevignano Romano, is the ancient church of San Liberato (ninth century). It occupies what was once the Roman settlement of Forum Clodii , now surrounded by an herb garden , part of the complex of English-style gardens at
75-479: Is served by an urban railway (Line FR3) which connects it with Rome (stations of Ostiense and Valle Aurelia) in about 55 minutes. Close to it lie the two medieval towns of Anguillara Sabazia and Trevignano Romano . Bracciano's territory lies on the western edge of the Sabatine Hills, a low volcanic hills range encircling Lake Bracciano . There is no certain information about the origins of Bracciano, on
90-742: The Orsini to 1234. The area was later acquired by the Roman hospital of Santo Spirito in Sassia and, from 1375, was a Papal possession. In 1419 the Colonna Pope Martin V confirmed the fief of Bracciano in the Orsini family branch of Tagliacozzo . Under this powerful family the city developed into a flourishing town, famous in the whole of Italy for its castle, which was enlarged, starting from 1470, by Napoleone Orsini and his son Virginio . In 1481 it housed Pope Sixtus IV , who had fled from
105-575: The Via Cassia overlooking the lake. It probably rose from one of the numerous towers built in the tenth century as a defence against the Saracen attacks, as implied by the ancient name of Castrum Brachiani . In the eleventh century the neighbouring territory was acquired by the Prefetti di Vico family, who turned the tower into a castle. Ferdinand Gregorovius dated the possession of Bracciano by
120-587: The adjoining Villa San Librato , designed by Russell Page in 1965 for the art historian conte Donato Sanminatelli and his contessa, Maria Odescalchi, and carried out over the following decade. On the same road are the ruins of the Aquae Apollinaris , a complex of baths famous in the Roman age. At Vigna di Valle, next to the lake, the former seaplane base today houses the Italian Air Force Museum . The museum's four hangars hold
135-404: The castle, which a modern tourist tradition would have her haunting. The economy was boosted by the exploitation of sulphur and iron, the production of tapestries and paper. The latter was favoured by the construction of an aqueduct whose ruins can still be seen in the city. Bracciano in this period had some 4,500 inhabitants. However, the expensive tenor of life of the Orsini eventually damaged
150-504: The city was besieged by a papal army headed by Giovanni di Candia , son of Pope Alexander VI Borgia, though it resisted successfully. Cesare Borgia , another of Alexander's natural sons, was unsuccessful in his attempt to take the Orsini stronghold a few years later. The sixteenth century was a period of splendour for Bracciano. The notorious spendthrift and libertine Paolo Giordano I Orsini , having married in 1558 Isabella de' Medici , daughter of Cosimo I, Grand Duke of Tuscany , received
165-826: The death of his father in 1615, he inherited the dukedom of Bracciano . In Rome in 1622 he became the second husband of the widowed Isabella Appiani ( c. 1630 –1635), the last survivor of the Appiani family They not had issue, but he had a natural son, Ippolito. He was also made a prince of the Holy Roman Empire by Ferdinand II on 18 July 1623. He lived in his castle at Lake Bracciano , near Rome, where he assembled an art collection including paintings by Tintoretto , Salvator Rosa , and Daniele da Volterra , prints by Albrecht Dürer and Ottavio Leoni , sculptures by Gian Lorenzo Bernini and Johann Jakob Kornmann, among others. Paolo exchanged correspondence on
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#1732783506512180-530: The economic conditions of the city. The last great ruler was probably Paolo Giordano II , a patron of arts and literature who made Bracciano a center of culture in Italy. The decline culminated in 1696 when the castle was sold to Livio Odescalchi , nephew of Pope Innocent XI ; the Odescalchi family still retain the castle. In the castle, richly frescoed friezes and ceilings now contrast with blank walls, which were hung with richly coloured tapestries when
195-447: The lords of Bracciano were in residence. The important late-15th century frieze showing the labours of Hercules is still visible. The main economic activities are tourism, services and agriculture. Until the twentieth century the region was notoriously unhealthy for its malaria , now eradicated; as a result, none of the fine villas were built at the water's edge, but all stood on healthier rises of ground. The main monument of Bracciano
210-515: The plague in Rome; the Sala Papalina in one of the corner towers commemorates the event. Four years later, however, the city and the castle were ravaged by Papal troops under Prospero Colonna , and subsequently a new line of walls was built. In 1494 Charles VIII of France and his troops marching against Rome stopped at Bracciano. This act led to the excommunication of the Orsini, and in 1496
225-523: The title of duke of Bracciano in 1560. The castello received some modernization for the brief visit of the Medici that year. He hired the most prestigious painter available in Rome, Taddeo Zuccaro , to fresco with allegories and coats-of-arms the fortress's most prestigious room, the Sala Papalinia that had been occupied by Sixtus IV. Isabella spent the remainder of her life avoiding a return to
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