Torrazzo of Cremona

Torrazzo of Cremona
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Religion
AffiliationCatholic Church
RegionLombardy
Location
LocationCremona
MunicipalityComune di Cremona
StateItaly
Geographic coordinates45°08′02″N 10°01′31″E / 45.133758°N 10.025159°E / 45.133758; 10.025159
Architecture
StyleRomanesque and Gothic
Groundbreaking1230
Completed1309
Height (max)112,54 metres (369,2 ft)
Website
https://museoverticale.it

The Torrazzo is the bell tower of the Cathedral of Cremona, Lombardy, in northern Italy.

The Torrazzo measures 112.54 metres (369+14 ft),[1] and it is known as the third tallest brickwork bell tower in the world, the first being the tower of St. Martin's Church in Landshut, Bavaria, and the second at the Church of Our Lady in Bruges, Belgium. However, the Torrazzo (completed in 1309) is older than the Landshut tower (completed in 1500) and the Bruges tower (completed in 1465), and it is the oldest brick structure taller than 100 m that is still standing.

According to popular tradition, construction on the tower began in 754. In reality, it was built in four phases: a first dating back to the 1230s, up to the third dripstone, a second, between 1250 and 1267, up to the dripstone under the quadriphore, a third around 1284, and the completion of the marble spire in 1309.

Its height is announced by a plaque embedded in the wall at the base of the Torrazzo itself, stating 250 arms and 2 ounces, which in the ancient measuring system of the Lombard towns translates to approximately 111 metres.

Archaeological excavations made in the 1980s have discovered the presence of underlying structures which are supposed to be the remains of a more ancient churchyard (or a cemetery associated to it), or even previous Roman buildings.