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{{For|the infantry division|53 Infantry Division Arezzo}}
'''Arezzo''' is a city in central [[Italy]], capital of the province of the same name, located in [[Tuscany]].
{{More citations needed|date=May 2021}}
<div style="float:right; width:233px; border:1px; border-style:solid; padding:2px; text-align:center">[[Image:Arez0000.jpg]]<br><small>
{{Infobox Italian comune
Church of Santa Maria della Pieve, Arezzo</small></div>
| name = Arezzo
Arezzo is about 80 km (50 miles) south-east of [[Florence]], at an elevation of 296 meters above sea level. In [[2001]] the population was about 91,600 people.
| official_name = Comune di Arezzo
| native_name =
| image_skyline = Piazza Grande, Arezzo.JPG
| imagesize =
| image_alt =
| image_flag = Flag of Arezzo.svg|thumb|Flag of Arezzo
| image_shield = Arezzo-Stemma.svg
| shield_alt =
| image_map =
| map_alt =
| map_caption =
| pushpin_label_position =
| pushpin_map = Italy Tuscany#Italy
| coordinates = {{coord|43|27|48|N|11|52|42|E|region:IT_type:city(96494)|display=inline,title}}
| coordinates_footnotes =
| region = {{RegioneIT|sigla=TOS}}
| province = {{ProvinciaIT (short form)|sigla=AR}} (AR)
| frazioni = see [[#Frazioni|list]]
| mayor_party =
| mayor = [[Alessandro Ghinelli]]
| area_footnotes =
| area_total_km2 = 386.25
| population_footnotes = <ref>{{cite web| url= http://dati.istat.it/Index.aspx?DataSetCode=DCIS_POPRES1 | title= GeoDemo | website=istat.it| date= 2019}}</ref>
| population_total = 100,734
| population_as_of = 1 January 2020
| pop_density_footnotes =
| population_demonym = Aretini
| elevation_footnotes =
| elevation_m = 296
| twin1 =
| twin1_country =
|istat=| saint = Saint [[Donatus of Arezzo]]
| day = 7 August
| postal_code = 52100
| area_code = 0575
| website = {{official website|http://www.comune.arezzo.it/}}
| footnotes =
}}
 
[[File:Arezzo 01.JPG|thumb|View of Arezzo]]
==Geography and information==
'''Arezzo''' ({{IPAc-en|UK|ə|ˈ|r|ɛ|t|s|əʊ|,_|æ|ˈ|r|-}} {{respell|ə|RET|soh|,_|arr|ET|soh}}, {{IPAc-en|US|ɑː|ˈ|r|-}} {{respell|ar|ET|soh}};<ref>{{Cite EPD|18|Arezzo}}</ref> {{IPA|it|aˈrettso|lang}}){{efn|{{langx|la|Arretium}}<ref>{{cite book |language=en |editor-last=Glare |editor-first=P. G. W. |date=2012 |title=[[Oxford Latin Dictionary]] |place=Oxford |publisher=Oxford University Press |edition=2nd |page=190}}</ref> {{IPA|la|arˈreːti.ũː|}}, also {{lang|la|Aretium}} {{IPA|la|aːˈreːti.ũː|}};<ref>{{cite book |language=fr |last=Gaffiot |first=Félix |date=1934 |title=Dictionnaire illustré Latin-Français |place=Paris |publisher=Librairie Hachette |page=158 |url=http://www.lexilogos.com/latin/gaffiot.php?q=Aretium |access-date=9 August 2021}}</ref> {{langx|ett|𐌀𐌓𐌉𐌕𐌉𐌌|Aritim}}.}} is a city and ''[[comune]]'' in Italy and the capital of the [[Province of Arezzo|province of the same name]] located in [[Tuscany]]. Arezzo is about {{convert|80|km|0|abbr=off}} southeast of [[Florence]] at an elevation of {{convert|296|m|ft}} [[Above mean sea level|above sea level]]. As of 2022, the population was about 97,000.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Arezzo (AR) |url=https://www.tuttitalia.it/toscana/96-arezzo/ |access-date=2022-09-28 |website=Tuttitalia.it |language=it}}</ref>
*''Regione'': Toscana
*Province: di Arezzo (AR)
*Latitude: 43° 28‘ North
*Longitude: 11° 53‘ East
*Altitude: 296 m above sea level
*Area: 386 km²
*Population density: 237 inhab./km²
*Frazioni (administrative subdivision): Olmo, Rigutino, Puliciano, Vitiano, Palazzo del Pero, Quarata, Ponte Buriano, Ponte alla Chiassa, Venere, Santa Maria alla Rassinata, Tregozzano, San Giuliano, Le Poggiola
*Comuni limitrofi (administrative subdivision): Anghiari, Capolona, Castiglion Fibocchi, Castiglion Fiorentino, Città di Castello (PG), Civitella in Val di Chiana, Cortona, Laterina, Marciano della Chiana, Monte San Savino, Monte Santa Maria Tiberina (PG), Monterchi, Subbiano
*CAP: 52100
*Telephone prefix: 0575
*ISTAT code: 051002
*Codice catastale: A390
*Italian name for residents: aretini
*Mayor: Luigi Lucherini (since June 2004)
*Town Hall address: Centralino 0575 3770
 
Known as the city of gold and of the high fashion, Arezzo was home to artists and poets such as [[Giorgio Vasari]], [[Guido of Arezzo]] and [[Guittone d'Arezzo]] and in its [[Province of Arezzo|province]] to Renaissance artist [[Michelangelo]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Pintus |first=Marta |date=2022-01-28 |title=Oro aretino: dagli etruschi a oggi, una tradizione millenaria d'artistico splendore |url=https://www.tuscanypeople.com/storia-toscana-oro-aretino/ |access-date=2022-09-28 |website=TuscanyPeople |language=it-IT}}</ref> In the artistic field, the city is famous for the frescoes by [[Piero della Francesca]] inside the [[Basilica of San Francesco, Arezzo|Basilica of San Francesco]], and the crucifix by [[Cimabue]] inside the [[Basilica of San Domenico, Arezzo|Basilica of San Domenico]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Chiesa di San Domenico e crocifisso di Cimabue |url=https://www.terredipiero.it/da-non-perdere/chiesa-san-domenico-crocifisso-cimabue/ |access-date=2022-09-28 |website=Terre di Piero della Francesca |language=it-IT}}</ref> The city is also known for the important [[Giostra del Saracino]], a game of [[chivalry]] that dates back to the Middle Ages.<ref>{{Cite web |title=La Storia – Giostra del Saracino |url=https://giostradelsaracinoarezzo.it/la-storia/ |access-date=2022-09-28 |language=it-IT}}</ref>
== History ==
Arezzo was founded by the [[Etruscans]]. It may have been one of the twelve most important Etruscan cities, the so-called Dodecapolis; the famous Chimera of Arezzo, now in Florence, was found here. As '''Arretium''' it was a flourishing city in the days of the [[Roman Empire]], well-known in particular for its pottery manufactures (Arezzo ware, bucchero).
 
==History==
During the [[Middle Ages]], much of its earlier architecture was dismantled to reuse the stones for fortifications. Arezzo was an independent city-state from the [[11th century]] until [[1384]], when it was incorporated into the Tuscan State of [[Florence]].
{{For timeline}}
Described by [[Livy]] as one of the ''Capita Etruriae'' (Etruscan capitals), Arezzo (''Aritim'' in [[Etruscan language|Etruscan]]) is believed{{by whom|date=April 2019}} to have been one of the twelve most important [[Etruscan civilization|Etruscan]] cities—the so-called [[Etruscan dodecapolis|Dodecapolis]], part of the [[Etruscan civilization#Etruscan League|Etruscan League]]. Etruscan remains establish that the acropolis of San Cornelio, a small hill next to that of San Donatus, was occupied and fortified in the Etruscan period. There is other significant Etruscan evidence: parts of walls, an Etruscan necropolis on ''Poggio del Sole'' (still named "Hill of the Sun"), and most famously, the two bronzes, the "[[Chimera of Arezzo]]" (5th century BC) and the "Minerva" (4th century BC) which were discovered in the 16th century and taken to [[Florence]]. Increasing trade connections with [[Greece]] also brought some elite goods to the Etruscan nobles of Arezzo: the [[krater]] painted by [[Euphronios]] c. 510 BC depicting a battle against Amazons (in the Museo Civico, [https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0043%3Ahead%3D%23646 Arezzo 1465]) is unsurpassed.{{citation needed|date=April 2019}}
 
[[File:ArikameduRomanCeramic.jpg|thumb|left|Roman pottery sherd from Arezzo, [[Latium]], found at [[Arikamedu]] in India (1st century AD), an evidence of the role of the city in [[Roman trade with India]] through [[Persia]] during the Augustan period. [[Musée Guimet]].]]
== Monuments and places of interest ==
Conquered by the [[Ancient Rome|Romans]] in 311 BC, ''Arretium'' became a military station on the [[via Cassia]], the road by which Rome expanded into the [[Po River|basin of the Po]]. Arretium sided with [[Gaius Marius|Marius]] (157 – 86 BC) in the [[Roman Civil War]], and the victorious [[Sulla]] ({{circa}} 138 – 78 BC) planted a colony of his veterans in the half-demolished city, as ''Arretium Fidens'' ("Faithful Arretium"). The old Etruscan aristocracy was not extinguished: [[Gaius Maecenas|Gaius Cilnius Maecenas]], whose name has become [[eponym]]ous with "patron of the arts", came of the noble Aretine Etruscan stock. The city continued to flourish as ''Arretium Vetus'' ("Old Arretium"), the third-largest city in Italy in the [[Augustus|Augustan period]], well known in particular for its widely exported pottery manufactures, the characteristic moulded and glazed [[Arretine ware]], ''bucchero''-ware of dark clay and red-painted vases (the so-called "coral" vases).
*Roman [[amphitheatre]] and museum
*cathedral of San Donato with good medieval stained glass (''il Duomo'') - Gothic tomb of Pope Gregory X (14th cent.)
*church of S. Maria della Pieve ([[Romanesque]]) the apse of which you see above
*church of [[St. Francis of Assisi|St Francis]] (San Francesco) with [[fresco]] cycle of the Legend of the True Cross by [[Piero della Francesca]] in the Bacci Chapel
*church of S. Domenico with crucifix by [[Cimabue]] (founded 1275 e completed in the early 14th cent.)
*Church of St. Michael (San Michele)
*Piazza Grande with the Vasari Loggia
*[[Medici]] [[Fortress]] (Fortezza Medicea)
*Saints Flora and Lucilla in Badia (SS. Flora e Lucilla in Badia - la Badia)
*House of Petrarch (Casa del Petrarca)
*Vasari House (Casa Vasari)
*Ivan Bruschi House and Museum (Casa-Museo "Ivan Bruschi")
*Gaio Cilnio Mecenate Archeological Museum
*Civic Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art
*Diocesan Museum (Museo Diocesano)
*State Museum of Medieval and Modern Art (Museum Statale d'Arte Medievale e Moderna)
 
Around 261 AD the town council of Arezzo dedicated an inscription to its patron [[L. Petronius Taurus Volusianus]]. See that article for discussion of the possible political/military significance of Volusianus's association with the city.
===Festivals===
Arezzo is home to an annual medieval festival called the Joust of the Saracens (''Giostra del Saracino''). In this, "knights" on horseback representing different areas of the town charge at a wooden target attached to a carving of a Saracen king and score points according to accuracy. The whole town gets dressed up in medieval costume and enthusiatically cheers on the competitors.
 
In the 3rd to 4th century Arezzo became an episcopal seat: it is one of the few cities whose succession of [[Bishop|bishops]] are known by name without interruption to the present day, in part because the bishops operated as the feudal lords of the city in the [[Middle Ages]]. The Roman city was demolished, partly in the course of the [[Gothic War (535–552)|Gothic War]] and of the late-6th-century invasion of the [[Lombards]], partly dismantled, as elsewhere throughout{{citation needed|date=April 2019}} [[Europe]]. The Aretines re-used the stones for fortifications. Only the [[amphitheater]] remained.
==Role in popular culture==
 
The [[Medieval commune|commune of Arezzo]] threw off the control of its bishop in 1098 and functioned as an independent [[city-state]] until 1384. Generally [[Ghibelline]] in tendency, it opposed [[Guelphs and Ghibellines|Guelph]] Florence. In 1252 the city founded its university, the [[University of Arezzo|''Studium'']]. After the rout of the [[Battle of Campaldino]] (1289), which saw the death of Bishop {{Interlanguage link multi|Guglielmino Ubertini|it}}, the fortunes of Ghibelline Arezzo started to ebb, apart from a brief period under the [[Tarlati]] family, chief among them [[Guido Tarlati]], who became bishop in 1312 and maintained good relations with the Ghibelline party. The Tarlati sought support in an alliance with [[Forlì]] and its overlords, the [[Ordelaffi]], but failed: Arezzo yielded to [[Florence|Florentine]] domination in 1384; its individual history became subsumed in that of Florence and of the Medicean [[Grand Duchy of Tuscany]]. During this period [[Piero della Francesca]] ({{circa}} 1415–1492) worked in the church of [[San Francesco di Arezzo]] producing the splendid frescoes, recently restored, which are Arezzo's most famous works. Afterwards the city began an economical and cultural decay, which ensured the preservation of its medieval centre.
* Arezzo has a starring role in [[Roberto Benigni]]'s [[Italian cinema|film]], ''[[Life is Beautiful]]'' (''La Vita è bella'') ([[1997]]). It is where the main characters live before they are shipped off to a [[Nazi]] [[concentration camp]].
 
In the 18th century the neighbouring marshes of the [[Val di Chiana]], south of Arezzo, were drained{{by whom|date=April 2019}} and the region became less [[malaria]]l. At the end of the-century French troops led by [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon Bonaparte]] conquered Arezzo, but the city soon turned (1799–1800) into a resistance base against the invaders with the [[Viva Maria (movement)|"Viva Maria"]] movement, winning the city the role of provincial capital. In 1860 Arezzo became part of the [[Kingdom of Italy]].
* Arretium was used in the PC game [[Rome: Total War]] as the Capital of the Roman Faction of [[House of Julii|Julii]]
 
City buildings suffered heavy damage during [[World War II]]; the Germans made a stand in front of Arezzo early in July 1944 and fierce fighting ensued before the British [[6th Armoured Division (United Kingdom)|6th Armoured Division]], assisted by New Zealand troops of the [[2nd New Zealand Division]], liberated the town 16 July 1944. The [[Commonwealth War Graves Commission]]'s [[Arezzo War Cemetery]], where 1,266 men are buried, is located to the north-west of the city.<ref>{{cite web|title= AREZZO WAR CEMETERY|url= http://www.cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cemetery/2008200/Arezzo%20War%20Cemetery|publisher= CWGC |access-date= 13 May 2014}}</ref>
== Notable people from Arezzo ==
Prominent people from Arezzo include the scholar [[Petrarch]], painter and biographer [[Giorgio Vasari]], botanist [[Andrea Cesalpino]], poet [[Guittone d'Arezzo]], [[Pope Julius II]], and [[Guido of Arezzo]], who developed the system for writing the [[musical scale]].
Arezzo also gave birth to [[Michelangelo Buonarroti]], one of the greatest painters and sculptors of all times, [[Maecenas]], who protected artists such as [[Virgil]] and [[Horace]], and the satirical poet [[Pietro Aretino]].
Gianfrancesco, also known as [[Gianfrancesco Poggio Bracciolini|Giovanni Francesco Poggio Bracciolini]], a famous humanist of the Italian Renaissance, was born near Arezzo.
From nowadays, born in Arezzo are also [[twin]] [[actor]]s [[Cole Sprouse]] and [[Dylan Sprouse]].
 
[[Pope Benedict XVI]] visited Arezzo and two other Italian municipalities on May 13, 2012.<ref>[http://press.catholica.va/news_services/bulletin/news/29102.php?index=29102&lang=en Sala Stampa<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive
==Patron Saint==
|url= https://web.archive.org/web/20121107130550/http://press.catholica.va/news_services/bulletin/news/29102.php?index=29102&lang=en |date= November 7, 2012
San Donato is the [[patron saint]] of Arezzo; his [[feast day]] is August 7.
}}
</ref>
 
==Geography==
Arezzo is set on a steep hill, rising from the [[floodplain]] of the [[River Arno]]. In the upper part of the town are the cathedral, the town hall and the Medici Fortress (''Fortezza Medicea''), from which the main streets branch off towards the lower part as far as the gates. The upper part of the town maintains its medieval appearance despite the addition of later structures. Arezzo's city proper is near the high risk areas for earthquakes, but located in a transitional area where the risk for severe earthquakes is much lower than in nearby [[Umbria]] and [[Abruzzo]], albeit it is slightly more vulnerable than [[Florence]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.thelocal.it/20161028/which-areas-of-italy-have-the-highest-risk-of-earthquakes|title=Which areas of Italy have the highest risk of earthquakes?|publisher=[[The Local Italy]]|date=28 October 2016|access-date=12 December 2016}}</ref> Notable earthquakes are still a very rare phenomenon in the [[Province of Arezzo|province]], with a 4.6 quake {{convert|25|km|mi}} to its north-east that claimed no lives on 26 November 2001 the exception.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/usp000atg4#executive|title=M 4.6 Central Italy 2001-11-26|publisher=Earthquakes USGS.gov|access-date=12 December 2016}}</ref>
 
===Climate===
== External links ==
Arezzo has a [[humid subtropical climate]] ([[Köppen climate classification|Köppen]] ''Cfa'') with hot and dry summers combined with mild and rainy winters. The annual average temperature is {{Convert|13.54|C|1}}, the hottest month in August is {{Convert|23.56|C|1}}, and the coldest month is {{Convert|4.66|C|1}} in January. The annual precipitation is {{Convert|864.03|mm|2}}, of which November is the wettest with {{Convert|120.8|mm|2}}, while July is the driest with only {{Convert|42.24|mm|2}}.
*[http://www.comune.arezzo.it/ Official Website (in Italian)]
*[http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Europe/Italy/Toscana/Arezzo/Arezzo/Arezzo/home.html Bill Thayer's site] including George Dennis's chapter on the Etruscan city and further links
*[http://www.lodgephoto.com/galleries/italy-tuscany/arezzo/ Photographs of Arezzo], including the [[Jousting|Joust]] of the Saracens
 
{{Weather box|width=auto
[[category:Cities in Italy]]
|___location = Arezzo, elevation: {{convert|248|m|abbr=on|disp=or}}, 1991-2020 normals, extremes 1938–present
|metric first = yes
|single line = yes
|Jan record high C = 17.4
|Feb record high C = 22.0
|Mar record high C = 25.8
|Apr record high C = 30.2
|May record high C = 36.0
|Jun record high C = 38.9
|Jul record high C = 40.5
|Aug record high C = 40.4
|Sep record high C = 36.2
|Oct record high C = 30.0
|Nov record high C = 23.4
|Dec record high C = 18.0
|year record high C = 40.4
|Jan high C = 9.3
|Feb high C = 11.0
|Mar high C = 14.9
|Apr high C = 18.8
|May high C = 23.4
|Jun high C = 28.0
|Jul high C = 31.4
|Aug high C = 31.7
|Sep high C = 25.7
|Oct high C = 19.9
|Nov high C = 13.9
|Dec high C = 9.8
|year high C = 19.8
|Jan mean C = 4.7
|Feb mean C = 5.5
|Mar mean C = 8.8
|Apr mean C = 12.1
|May mean C = 16.6
|Jun mean C = 20.7
|Jul mean C = 23.6
|Aug mean C = 23.6
|Sep mean C = 18.5
|Oct mean C = 14.0
|Nov mean C = 9.2
|Dec mean C = 5.4
|year mean C = 13.5
|Jan low C = 0.3
|Feb low C = 0.5
|Mar low C = 2.9
|Apr low C = 5.5
|May low C = 9.5
|Jun low C = 13.2
|Jul low C = 15.4
|Aug low C = 15.5
|Sep low C = 11.8
|Oct low C = 8.5
|Nov low C = 4.8
|Dec low C = 1.1
|year low C = 7.4
|Jan record low C = -20.2
|Feb record low C = -20.0
|Mar record low C = -10.0
|Apr record low C = -5.4
|May record low C = -3.1
|Jun record low C = 0.8
|Jul record low C = 4.8
|Aug record low C = 5.8
|Sep record low C = 0.5
|Oct record low C = -3.7
|Nov record low C = -8.0
|Dec record low C = -15.0
|year record low C =
|precipitation colour = green
|Jan precipitation mm = 52.8
|Feb precipitation mm = 57.0
|Mar precipitation mm = 63.5
|Apr precipitation mm = 71.3
|May precipitation mm = 74.5
|Jun precipitation mm = 52.8
|Jul precipitation mm = 42.2
|Aug precipitation mm = 43.0
|Sep precipitation mm = 96.0
|Oct precipitation mm = 108.7
|Nov precipitation mm = 120.8
|Dec precipitation mm = 81.6
|year precipitation mm = 864.0
|unit precipitation days = 1.0 mm
|Jan precipitation days = 6.93
|Feb precipitation days = 6.93
|Mar precipitation days = 7.27
|Apr precipitation days = 8.90
|May precipitation days = 8.57
|Jun precipitation days = 6.13
|Jul precipitation days = 3.90
|Aug precipitation days = 3.90
|Sep precipitation days = 6.97
|Oct precipitation days = 8.50
|Nov precipitation days = 10.13
|Dec precipitation days = 8.53
|year precipitation days = 86.66
|humidity colour = green
|Jan humidity = 76.4
|Feb humidity = 70.4
|Mar humidity = 67.2
|Apr humidity = 66.9
|May humidity = 67.2
|Jun humidity = 65.3
|Jul humidity = 62.0
|Aug humidity = 61.5
|Sep humidity = 66.6
|Oct humidity = 73.4
|Nov humidity = 78.3
|Dec humidity = 77.6
|year humidity = 69.4
|Jan dew point C = 1.0
|Feb dew point C = 0.3
|Mar dew point C = 2.4
|Apr dew point C = 5.5
|May dew point C = 9.7
|Jun dew point C = 13.0
|Jul dew point C = 14.1
|Aug dew point C = 14.2
|Sep dew point C = 11.8
|Oct dew point C = 9.7
|Nov dew point C = 6.1
|Dec dew point C = 2.0
|year dew point C = 7.5
|source 1 = NOAA<ref name= NOAA>{{cite web
|url = https://www.nodc.noaa.gov/archive/arc0216/0253808/1.1/data/0-data/Region-6-WMO-Normals-9120/Italy/CSV/Arezzo_16172.csv
|title = Arezzo Climate Normals 1991-2020
|publisher = [[National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration]]
|access-date = September 17, 2023
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230917225559/https://www.nodc.noaa.gov/archive/arc0216/0253808/1.1/data/0-data/Region-6-WMO-Normals-9120/Italy/CSV/Arezzo_16172.csv
|archive-date = 2023-09-17}}</ref>
|source 2 = Temperature estreme in Toscana<ref>{{cite web
|url = http://climaintoscana.altervista.org/provincia-di-arezzo/arezzo-molin-bianco/
|language = it
|title = Arezzo
|publisher = Temperature estreme in Toscana
|access-date = September 17, 2023
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230917225309/http://climaintoscana.altervista.org/provincia-di-arezzo/arezzo-molin-bianco/
|archive-date = 2023-09-17}}</ref>
}}
 
==Government==
[[de:Arezzo]]
{{See also|List of mayors of Arezzo}}
[[es:Arezzo]]
[[fr:Arezzo]]
[[it:Arezzo]]
[[nl:Arezzo]]
[[ja:アレッツォ]]
[[pl:Arezzo]]
[[pt:Arezzo]]
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==Hamlets==
Geografia
{{div col|colwidth=16em}}
Il comune di Arezzo è situato alla confluenza di tre delle quattro vallate che compongono la sua provincia. Direttamente a Nord della città ha inizio il Casentino, che è la valle percorsa dal primo tratto dell'Arno; a Nord-Ovest si trova il Valdarno Superiore, sempre percorso dall'Arno nel tratto che scorre fra Arezzo e Firenze; a Sud si trova la Val di Chiana, una pianura ricavata dalla bonifica di preesistenti paludi, il cui più importante corso d'acqua è il canale maestro della Chiana. Tramite l'agevole valico del Torrino e la valle del Cerfone, si ha accesso a Est alla quarta vallata: la Val Tiberina, percorsa dal primo tratto del Tevere.
* Agazzi
* Antria
* Badia San Veriano
* Bagnoro
* Battifolle
* Bicciano
* Campoluci
* Campriano
* Capolona
* Ceciliano
* Chiani
* Chiassa Superiore
* Cincelli
* Frassineto
* Gaville
* Giovi
* Gragnone
* Il Matto
* Indicatore
* La Pace
* Le Poggiola
* Meliciano
* Misciano
* Molinelli
* Molin Nuovo
* Monte Sopra Rondine
* Montione
* Mugliano
* Olmo
* Ottavo
* Palazzo del Pero
* [[Patrignone, Arezzo|Patrignone]]
* Pieve a Ranco
* Poggio Ciliegio
* Policiano
* Pomaio
* Ponte a Chiani
* Ponte alla Chiassa
* Pieve a Quarto
* Ponte Buriano
* Poti
* Pratantico
* Puglia
* Policiano
* Quarata
* Rigutino
* Ripa di Olmo
* Rondine
* Ruscello
* San Firenze
* San Giuliano
* San Leo
* San Marco Vill'Alba
* San Polo
* Santa Firmina
* Santa Maria alla Rassinata
* Sant'Andrea a Pigli
* San Zeno
* Sargiano
* Sereni
* Staggiano
* Stoppe d'Arca
* Subbiano
* Talla
* Torrino
* Tregozzano
* Venere
* Vitiano
{{div col end}}
 
== Population ==
Il territorio del comune è molto ampio e vario: si passa dalla pianura che si apre sulla Val di Chiana e sull'Arno, alle colline, a Sud della città, a zone montuose, soprattutto ad Est. I comuni confinanti sono numerosi: sul lato Val di Chiana ci sono Civitella in Val di Chiana e Castiglion Fiorentino; sul lato Valdarno superiore ci sono Laterina e Castiglion Fibocchi; sul lato Casentino c'è Capolona; sul lato Val Tiberina ci sono Anghiari e Monterchi e la provincia di Perugia, in Umbria.
{{Historical populations|1861|37100|1871|39054|1881|38795|1901|44027|1911|48170|1921|52340|1931|56886|1936|60284|1951|66511|1961|74992|1971|87330|1981|92105|1991|91626|2001|91589|2011|98144|2021|96717|footnote=Source: [[National Institute of Statistics (Italy)|ISTAT]]|cols=2|align=none}}
 
==Culture==
Numerose anche le frazioni e le località. Fra le altre elenchiamo, in ordine alfabetico:
===Festivals===
Arezzo is home to an annual medieval festival called the [[Saracen Joust]] (''Giostra del Saracino''). In this, "knights" on horseback representing different areas of the town charge at a wooden target attached to a carving of a Saracen king and score points according to accuracy. Virtually all the town's people dress up in medieval costume and enthusiastically cheer on the competitors.
 
Arezzo hosts an annual popular music and culture festival each July, called [[Arezzo Wave]]. Publicly funded, it attracts bands of high repute and attendees from all over Europe and North America and features some literary and film expositions.
Agazzi, Antria, Bagnoro, Battifolle, Ceciliano, Chiani, Chiassa Superiore, Cincelli, Frassineto, Gaville, Giovi, Gragnone, Indicatore, Le Poggiola, Meliciano, Molin Nuovo, Olmo, Palazzo del Pero, Patrignone, Ponte a Chiani, Ponte alla Chiassa, Ponte Buriano, Pratantico, Puglia, Puliciano, Quarata, Rigutino, Ripa di Olmo, Rondine, Ruscello, San Firenze, San Giuliano, San Leo, San Polo, Santa Firmina, Santa Maria alla Rassinata, San Zeno, Stoppe d'Arca, Tregozzano, Venere, Vitiano.
 
Arezzo also hosts an annual international competition of choral singing Concorso Polifónico [[Guido d'Arezzo]] (''International Guido d'Arezzo Polyphonic Contest'').
[modifica]
Storia
Arezzo sorse in epoca pre-etrusca in una zona abitata fin dalla preistoria, come dimostra il ritrovamento del cosiddetto "uomo dell'Olmo", risalente al Paleolitico, avvenuto nei pressi dell'Olmo durante i lavori di scavo di una breve galleria della linea ferroviaria Roma-Firenze nel 1863.
 
===In popular culture===
Fu poi una delle principali città etrusche, sede di una delle 12 lucumonie. A questo periodo risalgono opere d'arte di eccezionale valore, come la "Chimera", oggi conservata a Firenze, la cui immagine caratterizza talmente la città quasi da diventarne un secondo simbolo. Nel III secolo avanti Cristo Arezzo fu conquistata dai Romani. Durante l'epoca romana divenne un centro di lavorazione dei metalli e, soprattutto, di vasi di ceramica: i vasi prodotti ad Arezzo erano detti "corallini" per il loro colore.
Arezzo has a starring role in [[Roberto Benigni]]'s [[Italian cinema|film]] ''[[Life Is Beautiful]]'' (''La vita è bella'', 1997), which won three Academy Awards (Best Foreign Film, Best Actor, Best Original Score).{{cn|date=December 2024}} It is the place in which the main characters live before they are shipped off to a [[Nazism|Nazi]] [[concentration camp]]
 
Arretium was used in the PC game'' [[Rome: Total War]]'' as the Capital of the Roman Faction of [[House of Julii|Julii]].
Con la diffusione del Cristianesimo, Arezzo divenne sede di episcopato. Si tratta di una delle poche città di cui sono noti tutti i vescovi che si sono succeduti fino ad oggi. Durante il medio evo i vescovi assunsero anche il potere politico (vescovi-conti). A questo periodo risalgono il perduto "Duomo Vecchio" del colle del Pionta, ai cui lavori partecipò Maginardo, l'attuale Cattedrale e la Pieve di Santa Maria. Dopo il Mille, l'ordinamento della città ebbe un'evoluzione e si affermò il libero comune. La città si dotò anche di una università, lo Studium, i cui ordinamenti risalgono al 1252. La parte prevalente fu quella ghibellina ma questa subì una disfatta nella battaglia di Campaldino (1289) nei pressi di Poppi. In questa battaglia, a cui partecipò Dante Alighieri per la parte guelfa, morì anche il vescovo di Arezzo Guglielmino Ubertini. In seguito si affermò la signoria dei Tarlati di Pietramala, il cui principale esponente fu Guido Tarlati che divenne vescovo nel 1312.
 
==Main sights==
Nel 1384 Arezzo fu annessa allo stato toscano dominato da Firenze. In questo periodo furono realizzati da Piero della Francesca gli affreschi della "Leggenda della vera croce" nella basilica di San Francesco. Vi fu, poi, un decadimento economico e culturale della città.
[[File:Arezzo Piazza Grande.jpg|thumb|Piazza Grande]]
[[File:Plaza de Arezzo.jpg|thumb|Piazza Grande]]
[[File:Arezzo, Tuscany, Italy.jpg|thumb|Aerial view]]
[[File:Arezzo Loggia del Vasari.jpg|thumb|The Vasari Loggia on Piazza Grande]]
[[File:Arezzo Cathedral 01.jpg|thumb|Cathedral of Arezzo]]
[[File:Arezzo-catedral.jpg|thumb|Cathedral of Arezzo]]
[[File:Arezzo-Palazzo del Comune.JPG|thumb|The Communal Palace in Arezzo]]
[[File:Arezzo-Chiesa di San Domenico.jpg|thumb|Church of San Domenico]]
[[File:Arezzo Campanile - Santa Maria della Pieve.jpg|thumb|Santa Maria della Pieve]]
[[File:Arezzo-Chiesa di san Domenico-Crocifisso di Cimabue-closeup.jpg|thumb|Cimabue's ''Crucifix'' in the church of San Domenico, 1265–1268]]
[[File:Tarlati-polyptych-Pietro Lorenzetti Pieve di santa Maria Arezzo.jpg|thumb|The ''[[Tarlati polyptych]]'' by [[Pietro Lorenzetti]], 1320, at ''Santa Maria della Pieve''; includes a depiction of [[Donatus of Arezzo]] (far left)]]
[[File:20090725 Arezzo city wall.JPG|thumb|City wall]]
[[File:Arezzo-anfiteatro01.jpg|thumb|Roman amphitheatre]]
 
===Piazza Grande===
Nel XVIII secolo fu portata a termine la bonifica della Val di Chiana. Nel 1796 cominciò una campagna militare di invasione dell'Italia da parte dei Francesi. Il generale comandante di questa invasione era Napoleone Bonaparte. Anche Arezzo fu conquistata ma nel 1799 fu il centro del movimento del "Viva Maria", una delle insorgenze antinapoleoniche avvenute in quegli anni in Italia. In seguito a questi fatti Arezzo fu riconosciuta dal Granduca di Toscana capoluogo di provincia. Nel 1860 il Granducato di Toscana, e quindi Arezzo, entrò a far parte del regno d'Italia.
The Piazza Grande is the most noteworthy medieval square in the city, opening behind the 13th century [[Romanesque architecture|Romanesque apse]] of [[Santa Maria della Pieve]]. Once the main marketplace of the city, it is currently the site of the ''Giostra del Saracino'' ("Joust of the Saracen"). It has a sloping pavement in red brick with limestone geometrical lines. Aside from the apse of the church, other landmarks of the square include:
*The Palace of the Lay Fraternity (''Fraternita dei Laici''): 14th–15th century palazzo, with a Gothic ground floor and a [[Quattrocento]] second floor by [[Bernardo Rossellino]]
*The Vasari Loggia along the north side, a flat [[Mannerism|Mannerist]] [[façade]] designed by [[Giorgio Vasari]]
*Episcopal Palace, seat of the bishops, rebuilt in the mid-13th century. The interior has frescoes by [[Salvi Castellucci]], [[Teofilo Torri]] and [[Pietro Benvenuti]]. In front of the Palace is the Monument to Grand Duke [[Ferdinando I de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany|Ferdinando I de' Medici]] (1595), by [[Pietro Francavilla]], following a design of [[Giambologna]].
*Palazzo Cofani-Brizzolari, with the Torre Faggiolana
*Remains of the Communal Palace and the Palazzo del Popolo can also be seen.
 
===Churches===
In questo periodo, anche grazie all'avvenuta bonifica della Val di Chiana, Arezzo ritornò ad essere un nodo delle principali vie di comunicazione fra Roma e Firenze.
*[[Santa Maria della Pieve]]: the most striking feature of this [[Romanesque architecture|Romanesque]] church is the massive, square-planned bell tower with double orders of [[Mullion|mullioned windows]]. The church was built in the 12th century over a pre-existing Palaeo-Christian edifice, and was renovated a century later with the addition of the characteristic façade made of [[loggia]]s with small arches surmounted by all different-styled columns. Also from the same century is the [[lunette]] with the ''Virgin between Two Angels'' and the sculptures of the months (1216) over the main portal. the interior has a nave and two aisles, with a transept also added in the 13th century. In the following century chapels, niches and frescoes were added, including the polyptych of ''Virgin with Child and Saints'' by [[Pietro Lorenzetti]] (1320). In the crypt is a relic bust of St. Donatus (1346). From the same epoch is the hexagonal baptismal font, with panels of the ''Histories of St. John the Baptist'', by [[Giovanni di Agostino]]. The ''Pieve'' was again renovated by Giorgio Vasari in 1560.
*[[Arezzo Cathedral|Cathedral]] of [[Donatus of Arezzo|Saint Donatus]] (13th – early 16th centuries): the façade of this [[Gothic architecture|Gothic]] style church remained unfinished, and was added in the 20th century. The interior has a nave and aisles divided by massive pilasters. The left aisle has a fresco by [[Piero della Francesca]] portraying the ''Madeleine''. Noteworthy are also the medieval stained glass, the Tarlati Chapel (1334) and the Gothic tomb of [[Pope Gregory X]].
*[[Basilica of San Francesco, Arezzo|Basilica of San Francesco]] (13th–14th centuries): built in Tuscan-Gothic style. Of the projected façade cover in sculpted stone only the lower band was completed. The interior has a single nave: the main attraction is ''[[The Legend of the True Cross|The History of the True Cross]]'' [[fresco]] (1453–1464) cycle by [[Piero della Francesca]] in the Bacci Chapel. Under the church is another Basilica with a nave and two aisles (''Basilica inferiore''), today used for art exhibitions.
*[[San Domenico, Arezzo|Basilica of San Domenico]] (founded in 1275 and completed in the early 14th century): the interior has a single nave with a ''Crucifix'' by [[Cimabue]], a masterwork of 13th-century Italian art. Other artworks include a ''Sts. Philip and James the Younger and St. Catherine'' by [[Spinello Aretino]] and other 14th century painting and sculpture decorations.
*Santissimi Annunziata
*[[San Michele, Arezzo|San Michele]]: this church has a modern façade. Traces of the original Romanesque edifice and the Gothic restoration can be seen in the interior.
*[[Santa Maria in Gradi, Arezzo|Santa Maria in Gradi]]: this medieval church was initially built in the 11th or the 12th century, but reconstructed in the late 16th century by [[Bartolomeo Ammannati]]. The interior has a single nave with stone altars (17th century) and a ''Madonna of Misericordia'', terracotta by [[Andrea della Robbia]].
*Church of St. Augustine: founded in 1257, modified in the late 15th and the late 18h centuries. The façade and the interior decoration are largely from Baroque times. The square plan bell tower is from the 15th century.
*[[Badia delle Sante Flora e Lucilla]] (12th century): The abbey was built by Benedictine monks in the 12th century, it was totally restored in the 16th century under the direction of Giorgio Vasari. The octagonal bell tower is from 1650. The interior, in Mannerist style, has an illusionistic canvas depicting a false dome by [[Andrea Pozzo]] (1702). There are also a ''St. Lawrence'' fresco by [[Bartolomeo della Gatta]] (1476) and a ''Crucifix'' by [[Segna di Bonaventura|Segna di Buonaventura]] (1319).
*[[San Lorenzo, Arezzo|San Lorenzo]]: one of the most ancient of the city, having been built before the year 1000, most likely in Palaeo-Christian times. Rebuilt in the 13th century and restored in 1538, it was totally rebuilt in 1705. The apse exterior is in Romanesque style.
*[[Santa Maria delle Grazie, Arezzo|Santa Maria delle Grazie]]: a late Gothic sanctuary with a Renaissance portal by [[Benedetto da Maiano]] (1490). It has also a marble high altar by [[Andrea della Robbia]] including a pre-existing fresco by Parri di Spinello (1428–1431). The sanctuary was built over a font dedicated to [[Apollo]], which was destroyed by [[Bernardino of Siena|San Bernardino of Siena]] in 1428, building an oratory in its place. The church was erected in 1435–1444 and has a chapel entitled to St. Bernardino.
*Santa Maria a Gradi (1591): a monastery existing already in 1043. It has a Baroque interior, but with an altar by a collaborator of Andrea della Robbia.
*[[Santissima Trinità, Arezzo|Santissima Trinità]]: this church was built in 1348, it was totally renovated in 1723–1748 in Baroque style. It houses a 14th-century Crucifix, a banner painted by Giorgio Vasari in 1572, a painting of ''Noli me tangere'' by [[Alessandro Allori]] (1584) and other artworks.
*[[Santa Maria Maddalena, Arezzo|Santa Maria Maddalena]]: built in 1561 over a pre-14th century structure. It houses a ''Madonna with Child'' (Madonna of the Rose) by Spinello Aretino, visible in the high altar (c. 1525) designed by [[Guillaume de Marcillat]]. It is now private property.
*Pieve di San Paolo: erected as Palaeo-Christian baptismal church, rebuilt in the 8th-9th centuries and then rebuilt in Romanesque style in the 13th century. The bell tower is from the 14th-15th centuries. The entire church was again renovated after the 1796 earthquake. It has kept 15th-century frescoes by [[Lorentino d'Andrea]] and a cyborium. The transept entrance has granite columns with marble capitals from the 5th century AD.
*[[Pieve di Sant'Eugenia al Bagnoro, Arezzo|Pieve di Sant'Eugenia al Bagnoro]]: documented from 1012, it was one of the most important ''pievi'' of the diocese during the Middle Ages. The presbytery area is from the 12th century, while the rest is from the 11th century. The bell tower, partially ruined, stands on one of the three apses.
*Pieve di San Donnino a Maiano, at Palazzo del Pero (6th–9th centuries): documented from 1064, it replaced a Palaeo-Christian baptismal church. The frontal part was rebuilt in the 14th century. The apse has 15th century frescoes and a wooden ''Madonna with Child'' from the same age.
 
===Others===
[modifica]
*Roman [[amphitheatre]] and museum
Cultura
*Palazzo dei Priori: erected in 1333, has been the seat of the city's magistratures until today. The edifice was numerous times restored and renovated; the interior has a court from the 16th century, a stone statue portraying a ''Madonna with Child'' (1339), frescoes, busts of illustrious Aretines, two paintings by Giorgio Vasari. The square tower is from 1337.
Fra le personalità nate ad Arezzo troviamo Gaio Cilnio Mecenate, Francesco Petrarca, Giorgio Vasari, Francesco Redi, Andrea Cesalpino, Francesco Severi. Secondo alcune fonti anche Guido Monaco o Guido d'Arezzo è nato ad Arezzo; certamente vi ha trascorso gran parte della vita e vi ha svolto i suoi studi.
*Medici Fortress (''[[Fortezza Medicea (Arezzo)|Fortezza Medicea]]''): designed by [[Antonio da Sangallo the Younger]] and completed in 1538–1560. It was partly dismantled by the French in the early 19th century.
*Palazzo Camaiani-Albergotti (14th century, renovated in the 16th century), with the Torre della Bigazza
*Palazzo Bruni-Ciocchi: Renaissance edifice attributed to [[Bernardo Rossellino]]. It is seat of the State Museum of Medieval and Modern Art.
*Palazzo Pretorio: which was seat of the People's Captain until 1290. The façade has coat of armas of the captains, ''[[podestà]]'' and commissaries of the city from 14th to 18th century. Only one of the two original towers remains.
*House of [[Petrarch]] (''Casa del Petrarca'')
*[[Casa Vasari, Arezzo|Casa Vasari]] (in Via XX Settembre): an older house rebuilt in 1547 by Giorgio Vasari and frescoed by him; now open as a museum, it also contains 16th-century archives. The main rooms were decorated by Vasari in an illusionist manner. The drawing room, where Vasare painted the life journey of an artist, with the artistic virtues protected by the gods of antiquity represented as heavenly bodies, is remarkable.
*Ivan Bruschi House and Museum (''Casa-Museo Ivan Bruschi'')
*Gaio Cilnio Mecenate Archeological Museum
*Civic Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art
*[[UnoAErre]] Jewelry Museum
 
==Sports==
[modifica]
*Associazione Calcio Arezzo ([[A.C. Arezzo]])
Feste e Ricorrenze
*Vasari Rugby Arezzo
Le feste proprie della città sono quelle del patrono San Donato, il 7 agosto e quella della Madonna del Conforto il 15 febbraio. Il 10 gennaio si festeggia il Beato Gregorio X, compatrono della città.
*Club sommozzatori Calypso – Federazione Italiana Attività Subacquee – Sez. Terr. Arezzo ([[Diving (sport)|diving]])
 
==Notable people==
[modifica]
{{See also|Category:People from Arezzo}}
Manifestazioni e Fiere
* [[Guido of Arezzo|Guido d'Arezzo]] ({{circa|991–992}} – after 1033), music theorist of the Middle Ages, inventor of modern music notation. He lived in Arezzo for many years, and was possibly born there.
Ogni prima domenica del mese e il sabato precedente si tiene nel centro storico una fiera dell'antiquariato. Il 9, 10 e 11 settembre di ogni anno si tiene la "fiera di settembre" (Fiera del Mestolo). L'ultima settimana di agosto si svolge un concorso polifonico internazionale dedicato a Guido Monaco. All'inizio dell'estate si svolge "Arezzo Wave", una manifestazione di musica d'avanguardia.
* [[Margaritone d'Arezzo]] ({{circa|1250}} – 1290), 13th-century painter
* [[Giovanni Filippo Apolloni]] (1620–1688), 17th century poet and librettist
* [[Pietro Aretino]] (1492–1556), author, playwright, poet and satirist, inventor of modern literary [[pornography]]
* [[Roberto Benigni]] (born 1952), actor and director
* [[Daniele Bennati]] (born 1980), cyclist
* [[Fabio Bidini]] (born 1968), pianist
* [[Poggio Bracciolini]] (1380–1459), artist, born near the town
* [[Mario Cassi]] (born 1973), baritone
* [[Andrea Cesalpino]] (1524–1603), physician, botanist and philosopher
* [[Luc Ferrari]] (1929–2005), [[avant-garde]] composer
* [[Piero della Francesca]] (1412–1492), painter. He spent most of his life in the city of Arezzo.
* [[Bartolomeo di ser Gorello]] (1322/26 – {{circa|1390}}), author of the first town chronicle of Arezzo
* [[Vittorio Grigolo]] (born 1977), tenor
* [[Federico Luzzi]] (1980–2008), professional tennis player
* [[Michelangelo]] (1475–1564), artist, born near the town
* [[Negrita (band)|Negrita]], rock band
* [[Petrarch]] (1304–1374), poet
* [[Francesco Redi]] (1626–1697), 17th century physician
* [[Dylan and Cole Sprouse]] (born 1992), American actors
* [[Giorgio Vasari]] (1511–1574), painter, architect and biographer
 
== International relations ==
[modifica]
Giostra del Saracino
Nel quadro delle rievocazioni storiche, di cui il centro Italia è ricco, si colloca la Giostra del Saracino. Ogni anno si svolgono due edizioni della Giostra, una a giugno ed una, quella legata alla tradizione e più cara agli aretini, la prima domenica di settembre. Si tratta di una gara che consiste nel colpire un bersaglio, posto sullo scudo del "buratto" (un automa girevole che impersona il "Re delle Indie"), con un colpo di lancia al termine di una veloce carriera a cavallo, senza farsi colpire dal "mazzafrusto", imbracciato dal buratto stesso, il quale viene azionato da un meccanismo a molla.
 
=== Twin towns – sister cities ===
{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in Italy}}
Arezzo is [[Twin towns and sister cities|twinned]] with:
{|class="wikitable"
|- valign="top"
|
*{{flagicon|PRT}} [[Viseu]], [[Portugal]]
*{{flagicon|ITA}} [[Montenars]], [[Italy]], since 1977
*{{flagicon|ESP}} [[Jaén, Spain|Jaén]], [[Spain]], since 2006
||
*{{flagicon|USA}} [[Norman, Oklahoma|Norman]], [[Oklahoma]], [[United States]], since 2009<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.ci.norman.ok.us/content/sister-cities | publisher=City of Norman | title=Sister Cities | access-date=2012-01-07 | archive-date=2015-04-17 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150417220718/http://www.ci.norman.ok.us/content/sister-cities | url-status=dead }}</ref>
*{{flagicon|POL}} [[Oświęcim]], [[Poland]], since May–June 2009
*{{flagicon|USA}} [[Mount Pleasant, Michigan|Mount Pleasant]], [[Michigan]], [[United States]], since 27 November 2010
|}
 
==SportsSee also==
{{Portal|Italy|European Union|Cities}}
*Associazione Calcio Arezzo (Arezzo FC)
* [[Gian Francesco Gamurrini]] – an early Etruscologist
*Vasari Rugby Arezzo
* [[Lago di Montedoglio]]
*Club sommozzatori Calypso - Federazione Italiana Attività Subacquee - Sez.Terr. Arezzo ([[diving]])
* [[Monument to Grand Duke Ferdinand III of Lorraine, Arezzo]]
 
==Notes==
{{notelist}}
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
 
==Bibliography==
{{See also|Timeline of Arezzo#Bibliography|l1=Bibliography of the history of Arezzo}}
 
==Further reading==
*Black, Robert. 2011. ''Studies in Renaissance Humanism and Politics: Florence and Arezzo.'' Burlington, VT: Farnham.
*Brooks, Perry. 1992. ''Piero Della Francesca: The Arezzo Frescoes.'' NY: Rizzoli.
*Cygielman, Mario. 2010. ''The Minerva of Arezzo.'' Florence: Edizioni Polistampa.
*Iozzo, Mario, ed. 2009. ''The Chimaera of Arezzo.'' Florence: Edizioni Polistampa.
 
==External links==
{{Library resources box |by=no |onlinebooks=yes |others=yes |about=yes |label=Arezzo
|viaf= |lccn= |lcheading= |wikititle= }}
{{Commons category}}
 
*{{Official website|http://www.comune.arezzo.it/ }} {{in lang|it}}
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20070509111031/http://www.arezzocitta.com/ Information about Arezzo and province] {{in lang|it}}
*[http://www.giostradelsaracino.arezzo.it/default.asp?id=home/ Giostra del Saracino official web site]{{dead link|date=October 2016 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} and [https://web.archive.org/web/20090205182649/http://lodgephoto.com/galleries/italy-tuscany-arezzo/ Photos of Arezzo and the Joust]
*[http://www.portacrucifera.it Porta Crucifera's Knights], official site of the Porta Crucifera quartiere; Joust of the Saracen
*[https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Europe/Italy/Toscana/Arezzo/Arezzo/Arezzo/home.html Bill Thayer's site] including George Dennis's chapter on the Etruscan city and further links
*[http://www.visitarezzo.com/visit-arezzo-churces-museum-information-{{Not a typo|accom|odation}}-hotel-restaurant-itineraries Information about Arezzo and Province]{{dead link|date=December 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
 
{{Province of Arezzo}}
{{Cities in Italy}}
{{Subject bar |portal1=Italy |portal2=European Union |portal3=Europe |commons=y |voy=y}}
{{Authority control}}
 
[[Category:Arezzo| ]]
[[Category:Cities and towns in Tuscany]]
[[Category:Etruscan cities]]