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Cingoli, 20kms from
is a windy walled town that receives the last rays of the sun when all around is in shadow; "non
e' ancor notte a Cingoli", (it's not yet night at Cingoli) is a popular Marche
saying, meaning, "don't count your chickens before they're hatched".
The town has also earned the
title "the Balcony of the Marche" for its sweeping panoramas - the best views
are from behind the church of San Francesco. Climb up Corso Garibaldi to Piazza
Vittorio Emanuele, once the forum of Roman Cingulum and still the heart of this
stone-built town.
To one side stands a fine 16thC
Renaissance town hall with a much earlier clock tower. Inside is the smart,
newly arranged Museo Archeologico with interesting Bronze Age lumber - to see
the collection call at the library (Biblioteca comunale) in Via Mazzini 1. The
library also houses the town's Pinacoteca, or art gallery, with another of the
region's serendipity collections of paintings by
Lorenzo Lotto,
this time a splendid Madonna of the Rosary.

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