Albino, Lombardy
Albino is a comune in the province of Bergamo, in Lombardy, northern Italy. It is located northeast of Bergamo and is situated in the valley of the river Serio. The comune is included in the perimeter of the Alpine Convention international treaty.
History
Archaeological findings have shown that the area was already settled in the Copper Age. In Roman times there were settlements in the area, though the first document mentioning a in vico Albines dates from 892 AD. Later, entangled in the struggles between Guelphs and Ghibellines, the town was strongly fortified, a castle being built in the 14th century. Later it was under the Republic of Venice, with a strong increasing of textile and iron industry, peculiarities which still characterize Albino today.Albino received the honorary title of city with a presidential decree of December 27, 1991. Since 2009, the Bergamo–Albino light rail connects the two cities.
Main sights
- Parrocchiale di San Giuliano, founded in 898. Rebuilt in neoclassicist style in the early 19th century, it houses works by Giovan Battista Moroni, Enea Salmeggia and others. The bell tower was designed by Cosimo Fanzago.
- Convent of San Bartolomeo, in Lombard-Gothic style. It includes frescoes from the 16th-century renovation, 21 wooden sculptures in the choir and polyptych in gilded wood. It is a national monument.
- Sanctuary of the Madonna del Pianto. It is home to a canvas by Moroni with Christ Carrying the Cross and one by Salmaggia, The Deposition.
- Church of the Conception. It has a notable portico and a frescoes from the 14th and 16th centuries.
- Sanctuary of the Madonna of the Snow, on the country road leading to Selvino. It dates from the 16th century, and has frescoes from the same age which were recently restored.
- Church of Sant'Anna, designed by Giovan Battista Caniana.
- Sanctuary of Altino, in the frazione Vall'Alta.
- Cistercian Abbey
- Sanctuary of Madonna della Gamba, in the frazione Desenzano al Serio. Erected from 1448, it honours a miracle that took place in 1440, when a maiden, praying the Virgin, was miraculously saved from the injuries received to her leg. It houses works by Enea Salmeggia, Palma il Giovane, Andrea Fantoni and others.
- Parish of St. Peter, a notable example of Lombard-Gothic architecture, in the frazione Desenzano al Serio.
- Casa della Misericordia, with frescoes by Moroni.
- Casa Solari.