Foligno, located along the Topino River, southeast…
1439 CE
Foligno, located along the Topino River, southeast of Perugia, had originally been an Umbrian settlement; the present site is that of the Roman town of Fulginium and still reflects the Romans' regular street plan.
The town's importance lies in its command of the main pass between the Umbrian plain (west) and the Adriatic coast (east).
A powerful rival of medieval Perugia, Foligno has prospered greatly under the government of the Trinci family as semi-independent deputies of the Holy See from 1305, but the Trincis fall at the hands of Pope Eugenius IV in 1439 and the town becomes part of the Papal States.