Forlì ( ; ; ; ) is a comune (municipality) and city in Emilia-Romagna, Northern Italy, and is, together with Cesena, the capital of the Province of Forlì-Cesena.
Situated in the Romagna plain along the Via Emilia, east of the Montone river, Forlì originated as the Roman settlement of Forum Livii. Throughout the Middle Ages and the Renaissance it developed as a significant political and cultural centre in the region, a legacy still reflected in its historic urban fabric and architectural heritage.
Today, Forlì remains an important agricultural and commercial hub, benefiting from the productivity of its surrounding countryside and its strategic position along a major historic route. The city is also noted for its cultural and artistic heritage, and as the birthplace of figures such as the painters Melozzo da Forlì and Marco Palmezzano, the humanist historian Flavio Biondo, and the physicians Geronimo Mercuriali and Giovanni Battista Morgagni.
The Forlì campus of the University of Bologna hosts programmes in economics, engineering, political science, and medicine, as well as the School of Languages and Translation (SSLMIT), one of Italy’s leading institutions for interpreter and translator training.
History
Ancient era
The surroundings of Forlì have been inhabited since the Paleolithic: a site, Ca' Belvedere of Monte Poggiolo, has revealed thousands of chipped flints in strata dated 800,000 years before the present era, which indicates a flint-knapping industry producing sharp-edged tools in a pre-Acheulean phase of the Paleolithic.
Forlì was founded after the Roman conquest of the remaining Gallic villages, about the time the Via Aemilia was built. With no clear evidence, the exact date this occurred is still under debate, though some historians believe that the first settlement of the ancient Roman Forum was built in approximately 188 BC by consul Gaius Livius Salinator (the same that fought Hasdrubal Barca and vanquished him at the banks of the Metaurus River in 207 BC), who gave it the Latin name Forum Livii, meaning "the place of the gens Livia". Others argue the town may have been founded later, during the time of Julius Caesar. In 88 BC, the city was destroyed during the civil wars of Gaius Marius and Sulla, but later rebuilt by the praetor Livius Clodius.
Middle Ages
After the collapse of the Western Roman Empire, the city was incorporated into the realms of Odoacer and of the Ostrogothic Kingdom. From the end of the 6th century to 751, Forlì was an outlying part of the Byzantine / Eastern Roman power in Italy known as the Exarchate of Ravenna. During this time the Germanic Lombards repeatedly took the city – in 665, 728, and 742. It was finally incorporated with the Papal States in 757, as part of the Donation of Pepin. against a Guelph allied force, including Florentine troops, at Civitella on 14 November 1276; and at Forlì itself against a powerful French contingent sent by Pope Martin IV, on 15 May 1282, in a battle cited by Dante Alighieri (who was hosted in the city in 1303 by Scarpetta Ordelaffi), Inferno 27. In 1282, Forlì's forces were led by Guido da Montefeltro, while the French were under Jean d'Eppe. The astrologer Guido Bonatti (advisor of Emperor Frederick II) was one of his advisors.
The following year the city's exhausted Senate was forced to cede to papal power and asked Guido to take his leave. The commune soon submitted to a local condottiere rather than accept a representative of direct papal control, and Simone Mestaguerra had himself proclaimed Lord of Forlì. He did not succeed in leaving the new signory peacefully to an heir, however, and Forlì passed to Maghinardo Pagano, then to Uguccione della Faggiuola (1297), and to others, until in 1302 the Ordelaffi came into power.
Local factions with papal support ousted the family in 1327–29 and again in 1359–75, and at other turns of events the bishops were expelled by the Ordelaffi. Until the Renaissance the Ordelaffi strived to maintain the possession of the city and its countryside, especially against Papal attempts to assert back their authority. Often civil wars between members of the family occurred. They also fought as condottieri for other states to earn themselves money to protect or embellish Forlì.
Modern age
The most renowned of the Ordelaffi was Pino III, who held the Signiory of Forlì from 1466 to 1480. Pino was a ruthless lord; nevertheless he enriched the city with new walls and buildings and was a sponsor of the arts. When he died aged 40, under suspicion of poisoning, the situation of Forlì was weakened as factions of Ordelaffi fought one another, until Pope Sixtus IV claimed the signory for his nephew Girolamo Riario. Riario was married to Caterina Sforza, the indomitable Lady of Forlì whose name is associated with the city's last independent history. Forlì was seized in 1488 by the Visconti and in 1499 by Cesare Borgia, after whose death it became more directly subject to the pope than ever before (apart from a short-lived return of the Ordelaffi in 1503–1504).
| source 2 = Climi e viaggi (precipitation days)
Economy
Forlì is a prosperous agricultural and industrial centre, with manufacture primarily focused on silk, rayon, clothing, machinery, metals, and household appliances. In the city also has seat the Ferretti Group, one of the most famous producers of yachts.
Government
Main sights
thumb|250px|right|Abbey of San Mercuriale
thumb|250px|left|Palazzo Municipale
thumb|220px|left|Porta Schiavonia
Forlì is the location of various buildings of architectural, artistic and historical significance, that include frescoes as part of their decorations. At the heart of the city sits the Piazza Aurelio Saffi, which includes a statue of Italian politician Aurelio Saffi – who was an important figure in the radical republican current within the Risorgimento movement, headed by Giuseppe Mazzini in the 19th century. The Piazza Saffi also includes the Abbey of San Mercuriale (named after Saint Mercurialis, a bishop of the city who died in the 5th century), which is the main religious building in the city; and contains the famed Sepulchre of Barbara Manfredi. Also of note is the Dominican Church of San Giacomo Apostolo; better known as the Church of San Domenico – a late medieval church built in the 13th century in the southern part of the town.
Other medieval buildings include the Rocca di Ravaldino, a fortress enlarged in the 14th century by the Ordelaffi and Gil de Albornoz, and later in the 15th century.
The city hosts the Palazzo Hercolani, with decorations dating from the 19th century; containing the artwork La Beata Vergine del Fuoco con i Santi Mercuriale, Pellegrino, Marcolino e Valeriano by Italian painter . The is a civic building which was frescoed by Adolfo de Carolis in the 20th century.
Forlì has parks located in green areas, including the Parco della Resistenza ("Resistance Park") city park, and the Parco di Via Dragoni – which provides performance facilities alongside standard amenities. The Teatro Diego Fabbri is a theatre which opened in September 2000.
Territorial subdivisions
Forlì is divided into territorial subdivisions, or .
Villafranca di Forlì
thumb|right|Landing field in Villafranca di Forlì, with hamlet in the background
Villafranca di Forlì is a hamlet which a dependency of the municipality of Forlì, located on the north side of the main town, and spans over a territory sided on the west side by the River Montone. The hamlet was the birthplace of Benito Mussolini's mother, Rosa.
An aerodrome, with a runway approximately long and wide, is close to the hamlet; it is used as a landing field for ULM and R/C model aircraft. It is the seat of the Flight School Ali Soccorso belonging to the Civil Defence.
<!---->
This recreational aerodrome is complementary to Forlì's main airport, south of the city.
Other frazioni
{|
|
- Bagnolo
- Barisano
- Borgo Sisa
- Branzolino
- Carpena
- Carpinello
- Casemurate
- Caserma
|
- Castiglione
- Ca'Ossi
- Cava
- Collina
- Coriano
- Durazzanino
- Forniolo
- Grisignano
|
- Ladino
- Magliano
- Malmissole
- Massa
- Ospedaletto
- Para
- Pescaccia
- Petrignone
|
- Pianta
- Pieve Acquedotto
- Pievequinta
- Poggio
- Ponte Vico
- Quattro
- Ravaldino in Monte
- Romiti
|
- Roncadello
- Ronco
- Rotta
- Rovere
- San Giorgio
- San Leonardo in Schiova
- San Lorenzo in Noceto
- San Martino in Strada
|
- San Martino in Villafranca
- San Tomé
- San Varano
- Vecchiazzano
- Villa Rovere
- Villa Selva
- Villagrappa
- Villanova
|}
Transport
Forlì railway station is on the Bologna–Ancona line. Opened for use in 1926, it replaced the original station, which had been in use since 1861. The passenger building of the original station still stands, about west of the present station.
Forlì Airport was closed on 29 March 2013 due to bankruptcy of the company that ran it. Operations resumed at the airport on 29 October 2020. The nearest airports are Rimini Fellini Airport, located south east, Bologna Guglielmo Marconi Airport, located north west and Florence Airport, located south east of Forlì.
In popular culture
- Somerset Maugham's second novel The Making of a Saint (1898) is set in late fifteenth century Forlì under Girolamo Riario.
- The city is featured in the 2009 video game Assassin's Creed II, where Ezio Auditore has to defend it against the Orsi brothers with Machiavelli and Caterina Sforza. Forlì is shown with prominent landmarks.
People
The best-known painter of the comune was Melozzo da Forlì, who worked in Rome and other Italian cities during the brief years of the High Renaissance. Other Forlivese painters were: Ansuino da Forlì, Marco Palmezzano, Francesco Menzocchi, and Livio Agresti. Together they formed the Forlì painting school. Carlo Cignani was not born in Forlì (but near Forlì), but painted important works there.
Other notable Forlivese people are:
- Alice, Italian singer, winner of Sanremo Festival
- Marco Sabiu, musician and composer
- Ercole Baldini
- Ilario Bandini, constructor of performance sports and race cars
- Pietro Bandini, missionary who worked with Italian American immigrants
- Flavio Biondo, Renaissance historian
- Giovanni Battista Cirri, cellist and composer in the 18th century
- Ignazio Cirri, organist and composer in the 18th century
- Alessandro Cortini, one-half of Modwheelmood and keyboard player in Nine Inch Nails
- Maria Farneti, opera singer
- Alessandro Franceschi, Bishop of Forlì (1594–1597)
- Cesare Hercolani
- Peregrino Laziosi
- Saint Peregrine Laziosi
- Pietro Leoni, Catholic priest and Gulag survivor
- Gino Mattarelli, politician
- Geronimo Mercuriali
- Matteo Montaguti, cyclist
- Romano Mussolini, musician and the youngest son of Benito Mussolini
- Giovanni Battista Morgagni
- Loris Reggiani, motorcycle road racer
- Girolamo Riario
- Aurelio Saffi
- Caterina Sforza
- Giulietta Simionato, operatic mezzo-soprano
- Vincenzo Sospiri, race car driver
- Simone Vesi, composer and singer
- Nicola Bombacci, Italian Communist who later allied with Benito Mussolini
International relations
Twin towns
Forlì is twinned with:
- Aveiro, Portugal
- Bourges, France
- Peterborough, U.K.
- Szolnok, Hungary
- Płock, Poland
- Elektrėnai, Lithuania
- Foggia, Italy
See also
References
Further reading
External links
- Forlì , Italia.it
- The Forlì Campus of the University of Bologna
- Almanacco di Forlì, an almanac of the most important events and chronicles of Forlì
- 4Live!: 4Live! Basket Team Forlì
