Lisciano Niccone
Lisciano Niccone
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Lisciano Niccone

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Lisciano Niccone

Lisciano Niccone is a municipality in the Province of Perugia in the Italian region Umbria, located about 25 km northwest of Perugia.

The origins of the name Lisciano Niccone are uncertain. A tradition, repeated by some earlier writers and echoed in 19th-century accounts, attributes its foundation to a certain Liciano, who is said to have owned estates in the area. This explanation is regarded as conjectural.

In antiquity the area of Lisciano Niccone occupied a strategic position as a passage between the valleys of the Tiber and the Trasimeno and the Val di Chiana. Its importance is reflected in the presence of numerous fortified castles between the Niccone and Pierle valleys.

On 29 May 1202 the community formally submitted to Perugia. In the 13th century it formed part of the contado of Porta Sant'Angelo and was governed by a vicario appointed by the Perugian authorities. After the death of Uguccione de' Casali [it], lord of Cortona, the rocca of Lisciano came into the possession of the Comune of Perugia.

In 1313 Lisciano, together with nearby settlements, took part in the reconstruction of the walls of the castle of Fiume on the border of Perugian territory. In 1370 it joined the Rocca del Miccia in rebellion against Perugia; the settlement was occupied by Papal troops, and a subsequent peace agreement granted privileges over the community to the Oddi family [it].

In the early modern period Lisciano became part of the Papal States, remaining under Papal rule until the 19th century. A document dated 18 October 1818 records the local officeholders as the gonfaloniere Francesco Ferretti and the elders Paolo Cocchi and Pietro Paolo Ballerini.

The first documented reference dates to 1200, when the Perugians seized the castle from the people of Cortona, who had held it for some time.

In 1859 the municipality had a population of 1,814 inhabitants. Of these, only 28 lived within the castle, while 1,786 resided in scattered rural farmhouses.

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