San Gimignano rises on a hill 334m high dominating the Elsa Valley with its towers. Once the seat of a small Etruscan village of the Hellenistic period (200-300BC) it began its life as a town in the 10th century taking its name from the Holy Bishop of Modena, St. Gimignano, who is said to have saved the village from the barbarian hordes.
The town increased in wealth and developed greatly during the Middle Ages thanks to the "Via Frangigena", the trading and pilgrim's route.
Such prosperity lead to flourishing of works of art to adorn the churches and monasteries.
In 1199 it became a free municipality and fought against the Bisops of Volterra and the surrounding municipalities. Due to internal power struggles it eventually divided into two factions, one headed by the Ardinghelli family (Guelphs) and the other by the Salvucci family (Ghibellines).
On 8th May 1300 Dante Alighieri came to San Gimignano as the Ambassador of the Guelph League in Tuscany. In 1348 San Gimignano's population was drastically reduced by the Black Death Plague throwing the city into a serious crisis which eventually led to its submission to Florence in 1353.
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