Culture of Aosta Valle D'Aosta Italy - Travel guide & Information 
This description page of Aosta, in the Italian region of Val D'Aosta, will guide you in planning your trip to Italy and help you find useful travel information about the culture of this Italian city.
Aosta is a city rich in a historical and artistic testimony that
encompasses the whole arc of the time from the prehistoric eras to present day.
The city preserves the ancient Roman city map.
The Roman Arch of Augustus was built in 25 BC, both to commemorate
the victory of the Roman troops over the proud local tribe of the Salassi, and
in homage to Augustus. The arch is the symbol of the town of Aosta.
The Pretorian Gate once constituted the eastern entrance to the
town. It dates back to the time of the foundation of Augusta Praetoria and is
the largest remaining monument from Roman times, with only a part of its marble
decoration missing.
The Cathedral represents the main expression of Christian art and
architecture in Aosta. The primitive constructions in Aosta were rebuilt into
large construction in the early Roman Empire in the area of the Roman forum.
Recent archaeological evacuations have brought to light two
baptismal fonts, architectonic fragments and decorations, mosaics, staircases,
bas-reliefs, many tombs and two Episcopal sepulchers.
The Cathedral was initiated in the 11th century. The features of the
original edifice are visible in the two bell towers, and in many Romanesque
frescos at ceiling level.
During the 15th and the 16th centuries it was rebuilt and decorated
in Gothic and Renaissance style.
In the Cathedral’s Museum of Treasure is preserved the ivory diptych
representing the Emperor Onorius, from the year 406.
The Cathedral belonged to the area of the Roman Forum: the center of
political, religious and economic life of the ancient city.
Another wonderful example of medieval architecture and art is the
Monumental Complex of Sant’Orso. Originally built in Romanesque style and
altered in the following years by works in Gothic style, it includes the
Collegiate churches of Saints Peter and Orso, the bell tower clock, the crypt
and the Museum of the Treasure, a cloister and the buildings of the
Priorate.
Aosta has many medieval towers, such as the Tour Neuve, the Lepers’
Tower, the Tower of Bramafan, and the Tour Fromage, periodically used for art
exhibitions.
Another important museum is the Regional Archeological Museum, in
the ancient convent of the Visitation, which offers a wide collection of pieces
from the prehistoric era to the Middle Ages.
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