Our last day in Italy was spent travelling from Assisi to Orvieto and from there to the airport at Rome, flying back to Heathrow and onward travel. From this description it could have been a dull day and disappointing to be leaving Italy after such a fabulous week.
Disappointing to leave Italy, yes. Dull, no. Why? Orvieto, of course. Although we saw little of the city itself, arriving by coach, taking a funicular railway up the steep rock and a bus journey through the narrow streets what we did see on arriving in the piazza at the top was a monumental and beautiful cathedral.
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The stripes in the walls were formed by using alternating layers of travertine and basalt, both local volcanic rocks. The interior was, until the late 19th century, richly decorated and covered in frescoes. Some of the frescoes survive – the ones by Luca Signorelli, including his Last Judgement. Michelangelo was known to have visited often and the influence of Signorelli’s work is seen clearly in his masterpieces in the Sistine Chapel; the body shapes and musculature are all clearly adopted and used.
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The other thing that the cathedral is famous for is the Corporal of Bolsena, dating from 1263 when, during a mass at Bolsena a consecrated host miraculously began to bleed onto a corporal, the cloth that is used to cover the host and chalice during the service.
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Our visit would not be complete without our own mass, held in the crypt.







































