Brentino Belluno
Brentino Belluno è un comune della bassa Val d'Adige veronese, nato nel 1929 dall'unione dei due antichi borghi di Brentino e Bell...
Aktualisiert am 12 Juli 2026
Die Geschichte
Die Geschichte von Brentino Belluno
Two villages, one municipality in the Adige Valley
Brentino Belluno was created in 1929 from the administrative merger of Brentino, lying along the Adige Valley state road, and Belluno Veronese, a little further up towards the Baldo massif. The municipal territory develops almost entirely vertically, from around 130 metres at the valley floor near the Adige up past 1,500 metres on the ridges of Monte Baldo, packing an entire mosaic of landscapes into a few kilometres: vineyards and olive groves in the lower belt, beech woods and high-altitude pastures higher up. It is a hinge municipality between the Verona plain and the mountains, historically a crossroads along the road that follows the Adige north towards Trentino.
The Pilgrim Trail to the Madonna della Corona
The reason Brentino Belluno is known well beyond the Adige Valley is the Sentiero dei Pellegrini, also called the Sentiero della Speranza (Path of Hope): the old mule track that climbs from the valley floor to the Santuario della Madonna della Corona, set into the rock face above Spiazzi in the neighbouring municipality of Ferrara di Monte Baldo. The route, about 2.5 kilometres with 600 metres of ascent, takes roughly two hours and is among the most walked devotional and hiking itineraries in the Verona area, still used today by pilgrims, hikers and families. Setting off from Brentino means experiencing the climb in its most authentic form, with the rock of the Baldo growing ever more imposing at every bend.
Rock walls and the natural environment of Monte Baldo
The slope above Brentino Belluno is marked by imposing limestone walls, a long-standing destination for sport and trad climbing thanks to favourable exposure and solid, holdable rock; several crags in the area are equipped and popular with local and visiting climbers. Beyond the rock, the municipal territory holds a rich natural environment, with hornbeam and downy oak woods in the lower belt gradually giving way to beech and dwarf mountain pine as elevation increases towards the Baldo, a UNESCO biosphere reserve known for its botanical endemism and rare species such as the Baldo cornflower.
Farming life among vines, olives and terraces
At lower elevations, towards the Adige, the landscape of Brentino Belluno is shaped by terraces planted with vines and olive trees, held up by dry-stone walls that bear witness to generations of farming on anything but easy ground. Wine and olive oil production remains widespread among local families, more for household use and small local sale than large-scale distribution, and is an integral part of the identity of a municipality that still lives in close relationship with the land and the rhythm of the farming seasons.
A quiet base for the Adige Valley
Brentino Belluno does not aim for mass tourist accommodation: those who choose it as a base are looking for tranquillity, direct contact with the mountains and easy access along the Adige Valley, with Verona about 30 kilometres to the south and Lake Garda reachable in just over half an hour via the Val Sorda. It is a destination built for slow travel, made of walks, silence and landscape rather than concentrated attractions, and precisely for this reason it offers an authentic experience of the Verona stretch of the Adige Valley.
Experiences not to miss
- Percorrere il Sentiero dei Pellegrini fino al Santuario della Madonna della Corona
- Walk the Sentiero dei Pellegrini up to the Santuario della Madonna della Corona
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Routen in Brentino Belluno
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