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Ravello, was founded probably in the 4th century a.C. by Roman populations escaping from barbarians, Ravello is situated in a splendid position, on a rocky spur astride the Dragon's and Reginna's Valleys. It is situated in a more eleva­ted position than the other pearls of the Amalfi Coast and it can boast ex­ceptional landscapes that have earned Villa Cimbrone's terrace the name of "Terrace of Infinity". The writer Andre Gide has given us a splendid and synthetic description: "Ravello is nearer to the sky than it is to the shore". It already enjoyed a good economic development when it was part of the Amalfi Republic, but Ravello rebelled against the Republic when the Amalfi people betrayed the Norman king Roberta il Guiscardo in 1081, electing their own Doge. Ravello refused to fol­low the Amalfi people towards betrayal and deserved the appellation of Rebello, from which today its name still derives, by the Amalfi population. However, in that occasion, it had the support of Pope Vittore III who firstly redeemed it from subordination to Amalfi, making it a bishop's palace and subsequently (1086) making it an Episcopal seat. It then became an economic power, seat of flourishing textile industries and as a result has left indirect testi­monies in an elevated number of arti­stic treasures of churches and villas . From the pillage carried out in 1137 by people from Pisa, a slow decline began and broke off only in the last century when Ravello became a preferred destination of the Grand Tour, educa­tional and pleasure travels of European intellectuals and artists. In Ravello Wagner, Longfellow and many others stayed for a time, and everybody was enchanted by the ex­traordinary fascination of these places. Last but not least in Ravello Greta Garbo hid for one of her elopements that impassioned readers of society news all over the world in the thirties. Among the numerous churches in Ravello, undoubtedly the Cathedral and Chiesa del Toro, besides the famous S. Francesco cloister, deserve a parti­cular mention. Orso Pavicio, the first bishop of Ravello, ordered the Cathedral to be built.
The building began in 1087 and went on for many years with integrative and additional interventions aimed at increasing decoration splendour. The last remarkable intervention oc­curred in 1786; recently a restoration aimed at recovering the original parts of the sacred building has been begun. The unadorned front has been restored many times. However some original elements, such as a million window with two lights, three eyes and four co­lumns of the ancient pronaos, destroyed by an earthquake, remain. The marble portal and the bronze door of 1179 are very beautiful. The door is composed of 54 panels, built by Barisano da Trani, where he portrayed Passion scenes, and scenes of saints and warriors, one of which grasps a characteristic oriental arch in confir­mation of the Byzantium influence still exerted in Italy in that time.
The inside, with nave and two aisles, is magnificently decorated. In the centre, there is a marble pulpit of 1200, built by Niccolo di Bartolomeo from Foggia who also made the wo­man's head, a sculpture of Sigilgaita, the wife of Nicola Rufolo, the generous patron who commissioned the pulpit to the Apulian artist.
Today this sculpture is in the Museum annexed to the Cathedral that also de­serves a visit. In front of the pulpit, we can admire an ambo richly decorated by mosaics, commissioned by another bishop of Ravello, Costantino Rogadeo. The mosaics describe Giona's myth, who was swallowed and spit out again by Pistrice, a monstrous animal. On the left of the high altar there is the chapel of S. Pantaleone, to whom the Cathedral is dedicated. Here the Saint's relics and a reliquary containing his blood are preserved. According to the tradition every year his blood liquefies on July 27th in the anniversary of his martyrdom , which took place in 305. The Church of S. Giovanni del Toro was built in the 12th century and was sub­sequently restored several times over. In the inside, there is a 12th-century pulpit, commissioned by the rich fa­mily Bovio from Ravello and built by Alfano da Termoli. Like the one pre­served in the Cathedral, it is decorated by mosaics portraying Giona and Pistrice. In the crypt, it is possible to admire some 14th-century frescoes. Furthermore, an interesting 13th-cen­tury cloister is annexed to the Church of S. Francesco. The builder of Villa Cimbrone was inspired by this cloister and reproduced it inside its gardens.
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