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Agugliaro

Agugliaro e un piccolo comune agricolo adagiato sul margine meridionale dei Colli Berici, nella provincia di Vicenza, in un territ...

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Agugliaro e un piccolo comune agricolo adagiato sul margine meridionale dei Colli Berici, nella provincia di Vicenza, in un territorio di campi coltivati, rogge e cascine che cambia poco da secoli. A renderlo un nome noto ben oltre i confini locali e un solo, straordinario edificio: Villa Saraceno, una delle opere giovanili di Andrea Palladio, oggi patrimonio UNESCO come parte delle Ville Venete palladiane. Per il resto, Agugliaro resta un comune rurale nel senso piu genuino, senza pretese turistiche: poche migliaia di abitanti, un'economia legata ai campi e alle piccole imprese locali, e un ritmo di vita lento. E proprio questa combinazione, un capolavoro architettonico circondato da campagna vera e non da un contesto artificialmente turistico, a dare ad Agugliaro il suo carattere particolare, quello di un luogo autentico che merita una visita mirata piu che un soggiorno prolungato.

Aktualisiert am 12 Juli 2026

Agugliaro 23°
So. 34° 21°
Mo. 34° 22°
Di. 36° 22°
Mi. 32° 23°

Aktivitäten

Aktivitäten in Agugliaro

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Die Geschichte

Die Geschichte von Agugliaro

At the foot of the Colli Berici

Agugliaro lies in the southern part of Vicenza province, where the Colli Berici hills slope down into the Veneto plain. The municipal territory is mostly flat and agricultural, dotted with fields of cereals and fodder crops, with the hamlet of Finale hosting the town's most important monument. There are no shopping centres or major tourist infrastructure here: village life revolves around farming and a close-knit community, typical of small towns in the southern Vicenza area. Visitors almost always come here for one specific reason, and it is worth knowing this in advance, so as to plan the visit's timing and expectations realistically.

Villa Saraceno, a Palladian masterpiece

In the hamlet of Finale stands Villa Saraceno, commissioned by the patrician Saraceno family and dated to the 1540s, one of Andrea Palladio's earliest works. It is a notably sober building compared with other Palladian villas, designed to combine a gentleman's residence with agricultural functions, following a model typical of the Vicenza-born architect. Having fallen into disrepair during the twentieth century, the villa was purchased in 1989 by the British charity Landmark Trust, which completed its restoration in 1994, turning it into a holiday let open to the public on limited occasions. Today it is part of the UNESCO World Heritage site of Andrea Palladio's Venetian Villas, and it is the main reason Agugliaro's name appears in architecture guides.

A farming village among vineyards and fields

Beyond the Palladian monument, Agugliaro is very much a farming municipality, where family-run businesses grow cereals and fodder crops and, in the areas closer to the Colli Berici, also grapevines. Proximity to the Berici hill belt brings a somewhat more varied agriculture than the flat plain alone, with a few vineyards and orchards alongside arable fields. The population is modest, spread between the main village and its hamlets, and daily life follows the typical rhythms of the Vicenza countryside, with a handful of essential local businesses and a strong connection to the neighbouring Colli Berici towns, whose landscape and rural character Agugliaro partly shares.

The history of a small Veneto town

Like many towns in the southern Veneto plain, Agugliaro's history is tied to the Venetian patrician families who, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, invested in the mainland, building villas and organising the surrounding agricultural estates. The presence of Villa Saraceno testifies to this historical phase, when Venice, having passed the peak of its great maritime trade, turned capital and interest toward the inland territory. The rest of the municipal territory followed, over the centuries, the typical agricultural fortunes of the area, shaped by harvests, by the wars that swept across the Veneto plain, and, more recently, by the transformations of twentieth-century farming.

Between farming and focused cultural tourism

Agugliaro experiences a distinctive coexistence between its everyday farming vocation and the, admittedly modest, flow of visitors drawn by Palladio's name. Villa Saraceno is in fact open to the public only on limited occasions, being run as a holiday let by the Landmark Trust, which means a visit needs to be planned ahead and cannot be improvised as at a conventional museum. Far from being a limitation, this gives the place a more authentic character: those arriving in Agugliaro do not find a tourist apparatus built around the monument, but a farming village that coexists quite naturally with a piece of UNESCO World Heritage, without its rural identity being overturned.

Experiences not to miss

  • Visit Andrea Palladio's Villa Saraceno in the Finale hamlet, a UNESCO World Heritage site
  • Walk among the fields and the first slopes of the Colli Berici
  • Discover the vineyards and orchards at the edge of the hill belt
  • Combine the visit with the neighbouring Colli Berici towns
  • Experience the authentic rhythm of a small Vicenza farming village

Sehenswert

Sehenswertes in Agugliaro

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