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Belfiore

Belfiore è un piccolo comune della bassa pianura veronese, una ventina di chilometri a est di Verona, dove i filari di meli e i ca...

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Belfiore è un piccolo comune della bassa pianura veronese, una ventina di chilometri a est di Verona, dove i filari di meli e i canali di bonifica disegnano un paesaggio agricolo ordinato e silenzioso. Il nome attuale, adottato nel 1547 al posto del precedente e meno lusinghiero "Porcile", racconta la volontà delle famiglie benestanti locali di darsi un'identità nuova, ma le radici del paese affondano molto più indietro, lungo l'antica strada imperiale Porcilana che attraversava questi campi. Oggi Belfiore non è una meta turistica nel senso classico: non ci sono grandi monumenti da cartolina né folle di visitatori. È piuttosto un luogo da scoprire con calma, per chi cerca il romanico autentico di una piccola chiesa di campagna, l'architettura rurale di una villa settecentesca o semplicemente il ritmo lento della campagna veronese, tra meleti, canali e cascine ancora attive. Un comune onesto, legato alla terra e ai suoi frutti.

Aktualisiert am 12 Juli 2026

Belfiore 32°
Sa. 33° 19°
So. 34° 22°
Mo. 36° 22°
Di. 35° 22°

Aktivitäten

Aktivitäten in Belfiore

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Die Geschichte

Die Geschichte von Belfiore

Geography and Landscape

Belfiore lies in the low Verona plain, about twenty kilometres from Verona, in an area between the course of the Adige river and the land once occupied by the ancient Zerpa marsh, now fully reclaimed and cultivated. The landscape is typical of the Venetian plain: neat fields, rows of fruit trees, especially apples, and a dense network of drainage canals that regulate the water table. There are no hills or major rivers shaping the horizon, only an agricultural geometry that changes colour with the seasons, from the white of spring blossoms to the deep green of summer. It is a territory lived in mainly by those who work it, rather than by those who visit it.

From the Zerpa Marshes to Belfiore

Belfiore's history is closely tied to land reclamation. The village grew up along the ancient imperial road Porcilana, also known as Imperiale Berengaria, and for centuries its fate was intertwined with that of the Zerpa marsh, gradually drained and turned into farmland. Until the sixteenth century the village was known as Porcile: in 1547 its most prominent families petitioned the Council of Twelve in Verona to have the name changed to Belfiore, one more fitting for the image the community wished to project. Since then the village has kept a largely agricultural character, never really undergoing industrialisation.

The Romanesque Sanctuary of San Michele

Belfiore's most significant monument is the Sanctuary of the Madonna della Strà, housed in the church of San Michele, one of the best-preserved examples of rural Veronese Romanesque architecture. Its stepped facade alternates courses of tufa and brick, with a hanging porch and a central mullioned window opening the building toward the surrounding countryside. Inside, among columns and pillars, frescoes dating from the 13th and 14th centuries survive, evidence of a popular devotion that has endured through the centuries without ever fully fading. It is not a monument crowded with visitors, and precisely for that reason it retains the intimate atmosphere of a rural place of worship.

Villas and Rural Architecture

In the countryside of Belfiore, in the hamlet of Panterona, stands Villa Cipolla, an eighteenth-century complex built in 1692 and linked to the Cipolla family, made up of a manor house, a working farm courtyard and a chapel. It is a significant example of the villa architecture widespread across the Verona plain, where the power and wealth of noble families were expressed not only through urban residences but also through these rural courts, which served as management centres for agricultural estates. Villa Cipolla, like many other farm courts in the area, tells the story of an economic and social model that shaped the territory for centuries, before the arrival of modern farm mechanisation.

Fruit Growing and Local Produce

Belfiore's economy today remains firmly rooted in agriculture, particularly fruit growing. The town is best known for its apples, cultivated over large areas and destined for both the domestic market and export, though the orchards also include other fruits typical of the lower Verona area. It is a solid but unspectacular economy, built on steady field work rather than major events or attractions. For anyone passing through in spring, the blossoming orchards still offer a small natural spectacle, while in autumn the harvest brings a burst of activity to the countryside — one that here, unlike in other parts of Veneto, has not (yet) become an organised tourist product.

Experiences not to miss

  • Visit the Sanctuary of the Madonna della Strà and admire the 14th-century frescoes in the church of San Michele
  • Walk among the blossoming apple orchards of the Belfiore countryside in spring
  • Discover Villa Cipolla in Panterona, an example of an 18th-century rural farm court
  • Cycle the country roads along the Zerpa reclamation canals

Sehenswert

Sehenswertes in Belfiore

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