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Owned since the fifteenth century of the Chiapponi family it is released
in 1723. At the end of '700, Exhausted the house, goes on to the
accounts of S.Giorgio and Castelbosco. The seventeenth-century building
overlooked a "very cramped road, so they made it difficult and the
entrance and exit from said home to A wood with only two horses "(a.
Tocchi, 1804).
The current form of the building is due to the
Count Ferdinando Scotti, who, in the first decades of the 19th century,
will bring you various alterations in order to Adjust your forehead
along the road.
"He regularized the façade rearranging his
windows openings, adorning them with embossed bugnet, with a fake stone
with cooked oil, and coloring the brick-colored background; with a
balcony In granite, above which it placed a large coat of arms of the
family in the lower relief "(F. Alessio, 1880).
Ferdinando bought
three houses that were opposed to him, makes him break down partly and
it makes it rebuild it on a new plant and "withdrawn the middle house
backward, puts you before Small but pretty flowerbed, closed by a
canceled iron "(F. Alessio, 1880).
To date, the structure
maintains the nineteenth-century plant.
See also: •
Restoration of the Piacenza Palaces
- Chiapponi Palace [pdf in Italian; 2.5mb] This document contains
information on the family history.
For more on the Douglas Scotti families of Italy, see our
Italy portal.
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