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The Duomo
The Duomo is considered
one of the best examples of 12th century Romanesque architecture in Italy.
Work began in the 11th century by order of Pope Honorius II, and it was
completed between 1130 and 1178. The façade features three orders
of loggias and is flanked by a tall gothic brick tower. The presbytery
stands exactly on the crypt and is above the floor level. The dome contains
Correggio’s famous depiction of the Virgin’s Assumption, widely
viewed as one of the most inventive and influential frescos of the Renaissance.
The Venetian painter Titian famously said of it, “Turn the dome
upside down and fill it with gold and even so, you will still not have
paid a just price for it.” In the mid-19th century, Charles Dickens
visited the cathedral and had quite a different impression:
This cathedral is
odorous with the rotting of Correggio's frescoes in the Cupola. Heaven
knows how beautiful they may have been at one time. Connoisseurs fall
into raptures with them now; but such a labyrinth of arms and legs: such
heaps of fore- shortened limbs, entangled and involved and jumbled together:
no operative surgeon, gone mad, could imagine in his wildest delirium.
Charles Dickens, Pictures from
Italy, 1846.
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