Sluderno
Sluderno (in tedesco Schluderns) è un comune dell'alta Val Venosta, in provincia di Bolzano, adagiato a 921 metri di quota sul ver...
تم التحديث في 17 يوليو 2026
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حكاية Sluderno
Sluderno in the Upper Val Venosta
Sluderno lies in the upper Val Venosta (Vinschgau), the valley that climbs from the floor of the Adige toward the Reschen Pass and the border with Switzerland and Austria, in a broad, sun-drenched stretch enclosed between the Venosta Alps to the north and the Tavarone group to the south. The municipality, home to around 1,900 residents mostly German-speaking, is built around the main town and the hamlet of Spondigna, set on the valley floor along the Val Venosta railway, while numerous scattered farmsteads dot the sunny Sonnenberg hillside. The municipal boundaries touch Glorenza, the smallest walled town in Italy, Malles Venosta, Prato allo Stelvio and Lasa, municipalities that together with Sluderno form the heart of the upper valley. Three state roads intersect in this stretch, making the village a connecting hub toward the Alpine passes, while the railway station ensures daily links with Merano and Malles.
Castel Coira (Churburg) and the Trapp Armoury
The most celebrated monument in Sluderno is Castel Coira, known in German as Churburg, built around 1259 on a rocky spur overlooking the village and transformed over the following centuries from a medieval fortress into an elegant Renaissance residence, with a refined multi-storey arcaded courtyard. Since 1504 the castle has belonged without interruption to the counts of Trapp, making it one of the rare examples in Europe of a stronghold kept for more than five hundred years by the same family. Inside, visitors can see rooms such as the Hall of Ancestors and James's Room, but the main attraction remains the armoury, held within the castle's halls: one of the most important private collections of armour and antique weapons in Europe, a genuine iron wardrobe handed down from generation to generation. The castle is open to the public from March to November with daily guided tours, offering visitors a way to retrace the history of Tyrolean nobility through its rooms and its weapons.
The Ganglegg and Rhaetic Archaeology
Just above the village, at 1,142 metres, lies the Ganglegg, one of the most important prehistoric fortified settlements in South Tyrol, reachable on foot along well-marked trails. Archaeological excavations, carried out since 1997, have uncovered traces of occupation spanning the Copper Age, between 3300 and 2200 BC, through the Bronze Age and the Iron Age, until around 15 BC, with a later reoccupation during the Roman period between the 3rd and 4th centuries AD. Numerous finds bear inscriptions in the Rhaetic alphabet used across the central Alpine arc, evidence of the presence of Rhaetic populations in this part of the valley. Reconstructed structures and information panels at the site illustrate the daily life, animal husbandry and trade of its ancient inhabitants, while the original finds are displayed at the Val Venosta Museum in Sluderno, opened in 1997, a reference point for the history of the whole middle and upper valley.
Irrigation Channels, Orchards and Farmland
The landscape around Sluderno is typical of the upper Val Venosta: broad stretches of apple orchards covering the valley floor and the lower slopes, made fertile by a centuries-old irrigation system based on channels locally called Waale. These channels, cut along the hillside to carry water from mountain streams down to the fields, have allowed cultivation for centuries in a naturally dry valley, and today the paths running alongside them, the Waalwege, are among the most popular walking routes in the area, suited to gentle strolls with views over the orchards and the surrounding peaks. Behind the village the terrain climbs quickly toward the coniferous woods and pastures of the Sonnenberg, while on the opposite side of the valley the peaks of the Venosta Alps rise sharply. This contrast between cultivated orchards and unspoiled alpine surroundings is one of the most appreciated features of Sluderno and of the whole upper valley.
History, Bilingualism and Experiences
The history of Sluderno has been intertwined for centuries with that of Castel Coira and the Trapp family, but also with the upper Val Venosta's position as a crossroads, a border land between the Tyrolean world and the passes toward Switzerland and Austria. The village, today almost entirely German-speaking but with an Italian and Ladin community also present, keeps this plural identity alive in its bilingual place names, traditions and everyday life. Since 2005 Sluderno has hosted the Medieval Games, a historical re-enactment festival bringing tournaments, duels and displays of medieval life to an area of about fifteen hectares around the castle, drawing visitors from across the region. The parish church dedicated to Saint Catherine, the village's patron saint, is also home to a colony of greater horseshoe bats, a rare species that is the subject of a conservation project. Between the castle, the archaeological site, the museums and the irrigation channels, Sluderno offers an experience combining history, nature and popular culture in a single village of the upper valley.
Not to be missed
- Castel Coira (Churburg) and the famous armoury of the counts of Trapp
- The prehistoric archaeological site of Ganglegg, from the Copper Age to the Roman period
- The Val Venosta Museum in Sluderno, home to the Ganglegg finds
- A walk along the irrigation channels (Waalwege) among the orchards of the upper valley
- The Medieval Games, the historical re-enactment festival held around the castle
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