Encyclopedia Britannica
Orvieto
Town, Temi provincial in the Umbria regione of central
Italy. The town is situated atop an isolated rock 640 feet (195 m) above the
junction of the Paglia and Chiana rivers. An Etruscan and later a Roman city
(in late Roman times it was called Urbs Vetus, from which its Italian name is
derived), Orvieto was the seat of a Lombard duchy and of a Tuscan countship
before becoming an independent commune in the 12th century. After much civil
conflict and strife with neighboring cities, the town passed under the dominion
of the papacy in 1448.
Orvieto's Gothic
cathedral, which is one of the most celebrated in Italy, was begun in 1290 to
commemorate the miracle at Bolsena, a town situated just to the southwest, where
in 1263 a priest witnessed the miraculous appearance of drops of blood on a
Host that he was consecrating; a large silver shrine in the Cappelia (chapel)
del Corporale contains the Holy Corporal (linen altar cloth) from Bolsena. The
cathedral's west facade, a fine polychrome monument of richly sculptured
marble, is divided into three gables with intervening pinnacles. The interior
of the building is richly decorated with the work of a number of medieval
sculptors and painters, notably the frescoes by Luca Signorelli and Fra
Angelico in the Cappella Nuova. Many 16th-century sculptures adorn the
cathedral, which was completed in 1580.
The town's many
fine 13th-century houses and palaces include the episcopal palace, the Palazzo
del Popolo, and the Palazzo dei Papi, the last of which contains a civic museum
with many works of art and a collection of antiquities from the nearby Etruscan
necropolis of Volsinii. Also notable architecturally are the churches of San
Andrea (I Ith-12th century) and San Domenico (I 23 3 -64); the old fortress (I
3 64), which has been converted into public gardens; and the disused St.
Patrick's Well, or Pozzo di San Patrizio (I 527-40). A major civil-engineering
program to consolidate the foundations of the city's buildings was undertaken
following subsidence and landslides during the 1970s.
Orvieto is an
agricultural center noted for its white wines, especially a traditional
delicate, semisweet variety aged in tufa cliffs and a more recent dry variety.
The town's handicraft industries produce wrought iron, ceramics, and lace.
Orvieto is linked to Rome and Florence (via Arezzo) by rail and road. Pop. (1984
est.)