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Lunigiana #18

Aulla and Saint Caprasio

Si sentono spesso frasi come “Ad Aulla non c’è proprio nulla di bello da vedere“, “A Villafranca non c’è niente…”. In parte può anche essere vero. Se per “nulla di bello” intendiamo “nulla di antico“, idea alla quale molto spesso, in Italia, associamo il bello, o se il termine di paragone sono i tanti villaggi medievali, borghi fortificati e castelli della nostra Valle. Beh, certo, “ti piace vincere facile” diceva una pubblicità…

Oggi mi limito a ribloggare un bel post di un collega blogger che oltre a fornire una prospettiva esterna, quella del non-lunigianese e del non-italiano, e se pur con schiettezza e senza negare la poca poesia del cemento e dell’architettura post bellica, sfata almeno in parte il mito del “non c’è niente di bello”.

Buona lettura.

From London to Longoio (and Lucca and Beyond) Part Two

“The destruction was terrible. The only building to survive in any form at Aulla was the church of San Caprasio and the old palace of the dukes of Modena”

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(Aulla in 1945)

So writes Kinta Beevor in her adorable memoir “A Tuscan childhood” (1993).

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Aulla was even more strategically placed than Sarzana in WWII, controlling the railway lines from south, west and east. Bombing raids by the allies started in 1943 shortly after the abortive September armistice when Germany moved in whole armies and occupied Italy as a foreign power.

After this time Aulla was virtually deserted when citizens fled to the safer areas of the surrounding mountains as “sfollati” (evacuees)

The real damage to Aulla, however, was not caused by the allies but by a mortar shell fired by a group of partisans which hit a German munition train with devastating results, flattening the town and killing over 600…

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