Carrara

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Comune di Carrara
Coat of arms of Comune di Carrara
Municipal coat of arms
Country Flag of Italy Italy
Region Tuscany
Province Massa-Carrara (MS)
Mayor Andrea Angelo Zubbani
Elevation 100 m (328 ft)
Area 71 km² (27 sq mi)
Population (as of December 31, 2004)
 - Total 65,296
 - Density 920/km² (2,383/sq mi)
Time zone CET, UTC+1
Coordinates 44°04.75′N, 10°06.00′E
Gentilic Carraresi
Dialing code 0585
Postal code 54033
Frazioni Codena, Bedizzano, Bergiola, Colonnata, Miseglia, Torano, Sorgnano, Avenza, Marina di Carrara, Castelpoggio, Fontia, Gragnana, Noceto
Patron San Ceccardo
 - Day June 16

Carrara is a city in the province of Massa-Carrara (Tuscany, Italy), famous for the white or blue-gray marble quarried there. It is on the Carrione River, some 100 km west-northwest of Florence. Famously referenced to in James Russell Lowell in The First SnowFall.

Contents

Fortitudo mea in rota (My force is in the wheel)

The municipality of Carrara was established in 1235.

Over the centuries it was ruled by Pisa (1235), Lucca (1322), Genoa (1329), and Milan (1343). After the death of Filippo Maria Visconti of Milan in 1477, Carrara was fought over by Tommaso Campogregoso, lord of Sarzana, and the Malaspina family.

Carrara and Massa formed the Duchy of Massa and Carrara from the 15th to the 19th century.

In 1929, the municipalities of Carrara, Massa and Montignoso were merged in a single municipality, called Apuania. In 1945 the previous situation was restored.

Carrara is the birthplace of the International Federation of Anarchists (IFA), formed in 1968.

The area around Carrara, seen from an aircraft flying at 33000 feet. The town of Carrara is at the top of the picture, nearest to the marble quarries which are the white markings on the mountains
The area around Carrara, seen from an aircraft flying at 33000 feet. The town of Carrara is at the top of the picture, nearest to the marble quarries which are the white markings on the mountains
A Carraran marble quarry
A Carraran marble quarry

Carrara marble has been used since the time of Ancient Rome; the Pantheon and Trajan's Column in Rome are constructed of it. Many sculptures of the Renaissance, such as Michelangelo's David, were carved from Carrara marble. For Michelangelo at least, Carrara marble was valued above all other stone, except perhaps that of his own quarry in Pietrasanta. The Marble Arch in London and the Duomo di Siena are also made from this stone.

In addition to the marble quarries, the city has academies of sculpture and fine arts and a museum of statuaries and antiquities. The local marble is exported around the world, and marble from elsewhere is also fashioned and sculpted commercially here.

An international stone and machinery exhibition, CarraraMarmotec, takes place in Carrara.

The word "Carrara" likely comes from the ancient term "Kar" (stone). Ancient Romans quarried the marble, loaded it onto ships at the port of Luni and took it to Rome. According to Saint Girolamo, the name Carrara derives from “car” which means "wagons" and from “iara” that means "Moon", so is the “City of the Moon on the Wagons”.

Mt Sagro and nearby quarries
Mt Sagro and nearby quarries

Another hypothesis (Repetti) is that the term is derived from the French “careers”, which in turn is borrowed from “carrariae”, a Latin term meaning quarry. Carrara may derive from a preRoman term : “kair” (Celtic) or to one from Liguria: “kar”, that means "stone" and therefore: “car+aria” meaning “place of stones”.


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