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Timeline of Novara
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Novara (anciently called Novaria) in the Piedmont region of Italy.
Prior to 18th century
- 386 - Novaria "dismantled" by Magnus Maximus.[1]
- 397 - Roman Catholic Diocese of Novara established (approximate date).[2]
- 398 - Gaudentius of Novara becomes bishop.
- 405 - Town sacked by forces of Goth Radagaisus.[1]
- 450 - Battistero del duomo di Novara (baptistery) built (approximate date).[3]
- 452 - Town sacked by forces of Hun Attila.[1]
- 569 - Lombards in power.[4]
- 774 - Franks in power.[4]
- 830 - Adalgisio of Novara becomes bishop.[5]
- 1096 - Birth of Peter Lombard, later a scholastic theologian & Bishop of Paris.[1]
- 1110 - Novara sacked by forces of Henry V.[1]
- 1123 - Litifredo becomes bishop.[3]
- 1132 - Cathedral consecrated.[3]
- 1168 - Novara joins the Lombard League.[5]
- 1178 - Communal palace built.[5]
- 1185 - Office of podestà established.[5]
- 1277 - Legal code established.[5]
- 1332 - Novara becomes part of "Milanese territory."[5]
- 1346 - Courthouse built.[1]
- 1448 - Sforza in power.[4]
- 1513 - 6 June: Battle of Novara (1513) fought during the War of the League of Cambrai.
- 1538 - Farnese in power.[4]
- 1577 - Basilica of San Gaudenzio rebuilding begins.[6]
- 1607 - San Marco church built.[6](it)
- 1664 - Palazzo Cabrino built.[7]
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18th and 19th centuries
- 1706 - Novara "occupied by the Savoy troops."[1]
- 1734 - Novara "occupied by Charles Emmanuel."[1]
- 1798 - Novara occupied by French forces.[4]
- 1814 - Novara "restored to Savoy."[1]
- 1821 - Austrian-Piedmontese conflict occurs at Novara.[1]
- 1838 - Population: 18,524.[6]
- 1842 - Market built.[1]
- 1847 - Public library founded.[8][9]

- 1849 - Battle of Novara (1849) fought during the First Italian War of Independence.[10]
- 1854 - Novara–Alessandria railway begins operating; Novara railway station opens.
- 1855 - Arona–Novara railway begins operating.
- 1856 - Turin–Novara railway begins operating.
- 1859 - Circondario di Novara (provincial district) established.
- 1861 - Population: 25,144.(it)
- 1864 - Gozzano-Novara railway begins operating
- 1869 - Novara Cathedral rebuilt.[6]
- 1871 - Banca Popolare di Novara (bank) in business.
- 1881 - Tranvia Novara-Vigevano-Ottobiano (tram) begins operating.
- 1884
- Corriere di Novara newspaper begins publication.[11]
- Tranvia Novara-Biandrate (tram) begins operating.
- 1886 - Novara–Varallo railway begins operating.
- 1888 - Teatro Coccia (theatre) opens.
- 1897 - Population: 45,189.[12]
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20th century
- 1911 - Population: 54,571.[13]
- 1912 - Novara Calcio (football club) formed.
- 1920 - Società Storica Novarese (history society) formed.[14]
- 1939 - Biella–Novara railway begins operating.
- 1943 - September: Stalag 365 German prisoner-of-war camp relocated from Włodzimierz in German-occupied Poland to Novara.[15]
- 1944 - 14 March: Stalag 365 dissolved.[15]
- 1951 - Population: 69,395.(it)
- 1952 - Istituto tecnico agrario statale Giuseppe Bonfantini founded.
- 1959 - Faraggiana Ferrandi Natural History Museum established.[16]
- 1961 - Population: 87,704.(it)
- 1970 - Archivio di Stato di Novara (state archives) established.[17]
- 1975 - Radio Azzurra (Novara) begins broadcasting.
- 1976 - Stadio Silvio Piola (stadium) opens.
- 1989 - Centro novarese di studi letterari founded.
- 1996 - Conservatorio Guido Cantelli established.
21st century
- 2004 - Novara Jazz Festival begins.
- 2013 - Population: 101,933.[18]
- 2016 - Local election held; Alessandro Canelli becomes mayor.
- 2021 - Novara ramming
See also
Timelines of other cities in the macroregion of Northwest Italy:(it)
- Liguria region: Timeline of Genoa
- Lombardy region: Timeline of Bergamo; Brescia; Cremona; Mantua; Milan; Pavia
- Piedmont region: Timeline of Turin
References
Sources
External links
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