Building for Sale

Greve in Chianti
  • € 2,000,000
  • 5+
  • 6,200
  • 3+
Description

This description has been translated automatically by Google Translate and may not be accurate

BADIA The last treasure of the Chianti region. ABOUT THE ABBEY The origins of the Abbey of are lost in the Medieval nights. The historians agree on the fact that it was the fourth Abbey after Vallombrosa, founded by San Giovangualberto and they place its foundation around 1040. Emanuele Repetti (historian, 1776-1852) remembers it had been a 'monastery of secular monks' when in January of the year 1040, the noblemen of the nearby Castello di Cintoia offered the inhabitants of the convent various plots of neighbourhood land. It is most likely that after those donations St.Giovangualberto introduced the rule of the Vallombrosans. Prior Fedele Sodani, Vallombrosan and founder of the Abbey at Coltibuono, mentions the year 1038 as the foundation, but we have no idea on which documentation this statement is based. The Abbey, like other big monastic estates, has been subjugated by the Republic of Florence to a 'regime in commandam' a real disaster for the big and opulent abbeys. This regime was proclaimed by the same Florentine Republic on May 14, 1455. Various chiefs in command impoverished a part of its antique riches in favour of the Republic, but in the two following centuries the Abbey reclaimed its natural role of centre of power. The centrality of its power is also demonstrated by the numerous works that the Florentine Renaissance has produced on commission of the monks. Amongst these works, the bronze bell realised by Verrocchio, lost by now, a crucifixion attributed to Bernardo di Stefano Rosselli, that goes back to the end of the 1400's, numerous traces of frescos, hidden by layers of posthumous paint, probably dating back to the first half of the '400s, as well as the coat of arms attributed to Luca Della Robbia. The 16th and 17th centuries were rather troubled centuries for the entire Order of Vallombrosa and this consented the monks to renovate and enlarge the complex. The next 18th century, the last for the monastic community of Vallombrosa, was different. After the transfer of the last monks, the Abbey was put on auction in 1930 and bought by the noble family Rosselli Del Turco that retained ownership until the beginning of the 1990's. The premises and consistency The Abbey consists mainly of three levels (ground floor, first floor and basement)and is made of stone, cotto tiles and wood. There are two inner courts, one with a stone well on which you can see the coat of arms of the Abbey, and a loggia on two of its four sides. Worth mentioning are the huge stables in the basement, the big salon that leads to a splendid garden, the church that was bombed during WWII and partially rebuilt in 1945, Part of the complex are two farmhouses at some 100m distance of the Abbey. The total surface of the Abbey is ca. 5000m2 and 1200m2 for the farmhouses. The complex is situated in a large territory covered with forrests and surrounded by its own land of about a 100ha.
Features
Reference and listing Date
195 - 03/27/2024
contract
Sale
type
Building | Medium property class
surface
6,200 m²
rooms
5+ rooms, 3+ bathrooms
total building floors
2 floors
Car parking
4 in garage/box
availability
Available
Expenses
price
€ 2,000,000
Energy efficiency
condition
To be refurbished
energy certification
Not classifiable
Additional options

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