![]() | This article's factual accuracy is
disputed. (April 2015) |
44°01′56″N 10°08′46″E / 44.032224°N 10.14603°E
The Malaspina Castle is located in Massa, Italy. It crowns the top of a rocky hill and dominates the wide underlying plain and part of the Tyrrhenian coast. From the 17th century the main purpose of the castle was military and it served as a prison until 1946. [1] The castle was subsequently restored and reopened to the public. [1]
The first record of a castle here dates back to 1164. [1] In 1269 because of political discords with local inhabitants it was leveled to the ground by the army of the nearby city of Lucca. [1] The castle became the seat of the marquises of Massa. [1] It was visited by Dante Alighieri, who supposedly envisioned the descending circles of Hell, that inspired the corresponding part of his Divine Comedy. [2] According to legend, Dante saw the great funnel-shaped cave lying below, surrounded by a series of ledges with the slopes converging to the stream. [2]
![]() | This article's factual accuracy is
disputed. (April 2015) |
44°01′56″N 10°08′46″E / 44.032224°N 10.14603°E
The Malaspina Castle is located in Massa, Italy. It crowns the top of a rocky hill and dominates the wide underlying plain and part of the Tyrrhenian coast. From the 17th century the main purpose of the castle was military and it served as a prison until 1946. [1] The castle was subsequently restored and reopened to the public. [1]
The first record of a castle here dates back to 1164. [1] In 1269 because of political discords with local inhabitants it was leveled to the ground by the army of the nearby city of Lucca. [1] The castle became the seat of the marquises of Massa. [1] It was visited by Dante Alighieri, who supposedly envisioned the descending circles of Hell, that inspired the corresponding part of his Divine Comedy. [2] According to legend, Dante saw the great funnel-shaped cave lying below, surrounded by a series of ledges with the slopes converging to the stream. [2]