Valdobbiadene (original) (raw)

Comune in Veneto, Italy

Valdobbiadene Valdobiàden (Venetian)
Comune
Comune di Valdobbiadene
ValdobbiadeneValdobbiadene
Location of Valdobbiadene Map
Valdobbiadene is located in ItalyValdobbiadeneValdobbiadeneLocation of Valdobbiadene in ItalyShow map of ItalyValdobbiadene is located in VenetoValdobbiadeneValdobbiadeneValdobbiadene (Veneto)Show map of Veneto
Coordinates: 45°54′N 11°55′E / 45.900°N 11.917°E / 45.900; 11.917
Country Italy
Region Veneto
Province Treviso (TV)
Frazioni Bigolino, Guia, San Giovanni, San Pietro di Barbozza, Santo Stefano, San Vito Località: Follo, Funer, Guietta, Pianezze, Ron, Saccol, San Giovanni, Soprapiana, Villanova, Zecchei
Government
• Mayor Luciano Fregonese
Area[1]
• Total 60.70 km2 (23.44 sq mi)
Elevation 247 m (810 ft)
Population (31 December 2015)[2]
• Total 10,388
• Density 170/km2 (440/sq mi)
Demonym Valdobbiadenesi
Time zone UTC+1 (CET)
• Summer (DST) UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code 31049
Dialing code 0423
Patron saint St. Gregory the Great
Saint day Second Monday in March
Website Official website
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Official name Le Colline del Prosecco di Conegliano e Valdobbiadene
Criteria Cultural: (v)
Designated 2019 (43rd session)
Reference no. 1571
Region Southern Europe

Valdobbiadene (Italian: [ˌvaldobˈbjaːdene]; Venetian: Valdobiàden) is a town and comune (municipality) in the province of Treviso, Veneto, Italy. Valdobbiadene is a wine growing area: located below the Alpine-Dolomite areas of Veneto, the climate allows the cultivation of the Glera variety of grape.

The Conegliano Valdobbiadene area is the home of the best Prosecco, an extra dry sparkling white wine. Prosecco brands that derive from this area include Altaneve,[3] Bisol, Mionetto, Col Vetoraz, Coda, Valdo and others.

On 7 July 2019, Le Colline del Prosecco di Conegliano e Valdobbiadene was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[4]

The territory was subjected to Treviso until 1178, after which it was occupied by the Ezzelini family until 1260, when it returned under the jurisdiction of Treviso. Constantly plagued by battles and depredations, around the middle of the 14th century it fell under Venetian domination: this put an end to feudalism and, while respecting the political power of the Serenissima, Valdobbiadene was divided into its fifteen rural communities (so-called "Rules"), obtains a semblance of autonomy with the self-government of the Merighi, men democratically elected among the heads of the family. With the arrival of Napoleon and then, with the Austrian domination, the Regole disappeared and the Municipalities arose, first three, then two: Valdobbiadene, San Pietro di Barbozza and Bigolino, which survived only a few years (later also San Pietro di Barbozza will be incorporated into the Municipality of Valdobbiadene).[5]

Monuments and places of interest

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Religious architecture

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Villa dei Cedri

In the municipal territory there are 6 monumental trees of the 16 located in the province of Treviso and included in the list of approximately 22,000 trees protected by the forest guard.[8]

Demographic evolution

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Foreign ethnicities and minorities

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As of December 31, 2022, foreign residents in the municipality were 1,045, i.e. 10.5% of the population. The largest groups are shown below:[9]

  1. North Macedonia 214
  2. Morocco 179
  3. China 145
  4. Romania 144
  5. Albania 89
  6. Ukraine 70
  7. Moldova 48
  8. Brazil 38
  9. India 27
  10. Bosnia and Herzegovina 11

G. Verdi" Higher Education Institute

In the municipality there are pre-school, primary and lower secondary schools. The secondary school of some importance for the city is the "G. Verdi" Higher Education Institute (I.S.I.S.S.), which hosts the following courses: high school, technical and professional.

It was founded as an autonomous state institute in 1999, aggregating the different courses of study present in the area into a single Higher Secondary Education Institute. In the curriculum design phase, the Verdi Institute took into account both the existing directions and the training and professional needs that the territory expressed.[10]

The nascent bourgeoisie in the 19th century made up of merchants, notaries, landowners who acquired the lands of the Venetian nobility and who held political power in their hands, embellished the square with palaces. The silk industry develops, thanks to the Piva family. During World War I the territory was the target of heavy bombing and was evacuated. With the return and reconstruction, wine cultivation developed.

Valdobbiadene, nearby Conegliano and their hills are considered the cities of the Prosecco di Conegliano-Valdobbiadene wine and, in particular, of the Superiore di Cartizze type and also included in the Città del Vino circuit and has been the home of the National Sparkling Wine Exhibition, now the Sparkling Wine Forum of Italy, for over forty years.

Infrastructure and transport

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Between 1913 and 1931 Valdobbiadene represented the northern terminus of the Montebelluna-Valdobbiadene Tramway, which at the time represented an important development tool for the economy of the area.

The town is served nearby by the Alano-Fener-Valdobbiadene station on the Calalzo-Padova railway, connected directly by the MOM with bus line n.126,[11] while the center of Valdobbiadene is connected to Treviso by the MOM bus line n.110: Treviso, Postioma, Montebelluna, Valdobbiadene.[12]

Prosecco Hills Link is the new intermodal solution born from the synergy between Trenitalia and MOM-Mobilità di Marca. You will be able to arrive in Conegliano by train and comfortably reach by bus the Prosecco Hills of Conegliano and Valdobbiadene, a privileged destination for food and wine and nature tourism, now known to the international public and a place declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO world of humanity.[13]

Valdobbiadene is twinned with:

  1. ^ "Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  2. ^ All demographics and other statistics from the Italian statistical institute (Istat)
  3. ^ Negron, Isaiah. Resident Magazine. Luxury Italian Prosecco Vintner David Noto. January 1, 2014. Archived November 7, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Two cultural sites added to UNESCO's World Heritage List". UNESCO. 7 July 2019.
  5. ^ storia-comune comune.valdobbiadene.tv.it
  6. ^ "Villa Barberina Arten Viansson". culturaveneto.it. Retrieved 31 October 2021..
  7. ^ "Villa Piva, detta "dei Cedri"". culturaveneto.it. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  8. ^ Cfr. il censimento nazionale degli alberi monumentali Archived 26 June 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ ISTAT (ed.). "Demographic balance and foreign resident population at 31 December 2022 by gender and citizenship". Retrieved 31 July 2023.
  10. ^ "la nostra storia". isissverdi.it (in Italian). Retrieved 31 October 2023.
  11. ^ Alano-Fener-Valdobbiadene rfi.it
  12. ^ Routes-and-timetables suburban-service mobilitadimarca.it
  13. ^ FS news, ed. (23 June 2023). "Arriva il Prosecco Hills Link: treno+bus per un turismo sostenibile" (in Italian).