Veronella
Veronella è un comune della bassa pianura veronese orientale, circa 30 chilometri a sud-est di Verona, che porta questo nome solo...
Aktualisiert am 12 Juli 2026
Die Geschichte
Die Geschichte von Veronella
From Cucca to Veronella, a new name for an old village
The municipality has been called Veronella only since 1902: previously it was known as Cucca, a name the municipal administration, led by mayor Alberto di Serego, decided to drop over an interpretation residents found disrespectful. The new name was chosen from the ancient castrum leonis, a historical reference that replaced, at the start of the 20th century, a centuries-old toponym. Beyond the name change, the site's history is far older and more layered, with evidence spanning from prehistory to the Middle Ages, when the rural settlement of Cavalpone developed in the area, favoured by the alluvial deposits carried down by the Alpone stream from the Lessini mountains.
Prehistoric origins and the Desmontà necropolis
The earliest confirmed human settlements in the Veronella area date to the Copper Age, between the middle and end of the third millennium BC, when a proto-Venetic community settled on the raised ground of Sabbionara thanks to the course of the Adige, which at that time flowed from Ronco-Albaredo toward Cucca before continuing on to Montagnana and Este. This community left behind the necropolis found near the small Caneviera lake, close to the locality of Desmontà, the subject of excavation campaigns that have yielded a detailed picture of the life and funerary rites of the peoples who inhabited these lands thousands of years before the modern municipality was founded.
The shifting course of the Adige and its traces
Veronella's landscape still bears the marks of the Adige's ancient course, which in protohistoric times crossed this territory before shifting south, leaving behind river ridges and alluvial deposits on which human settlements developed for millennia. Later it was the Alpone stream, fed by debris from the Lessini mountains, that gradually built up a raised bed running from San Bonifacio to Albaredo d'Adige, favouring the birth of the rural settlement of Cavalpone between the 11th and 12th centuries and, at the end of the 13th century, the passage of the Cucca fief under Scaligeri control. This complex hydrographic history explains the municipality's distinctive terrain.
A religious heritage worth discovering
Among the municipality's historically notable buildings is the Church of San Gregorio Magno, a religious landmark for the local community, part of a fabric of small sacred buildings scattered across the hamlets of the eastern lower Verona plain. As in many farming municipalities of the area, religious and civic life have been intertwined for centuries around the parishes, which remain today an important point of social gathering for the residents of Veronella. There are no other major monuments to note in the municipality, but the territory's historical value lies more in its archaeological and toponymic layers than in a monumental architectural heritage.
Countryside and daily life in the lower Verona plain
Today Veronella is a predominantly agricultural municipality, with cereal and forage crops occupying much of the territory, in a flat landscape shared with the neighbouring municipalities of the eastern lower Verona plain. Daily life revolves around the small hamlet communities, seasonal farming activities and initiatives promoted by the local pro loco association, which also works to showcase the village's history. It is a municipality that does not rely on major tourist attractions, but one that offers visitors the chance to discover how a small rural centre can hold, beneath an apparently simple agricultural surface, a history spanning over four thousand years.
Experiences not to miss
- Visit the Church of San Gregorio Magno
- Discover the history of the Desmontà necropolis
- Follow the traces of the Adige's ancient course through the farmland
- Cycle along the Alpone stream toward San Bonifacio
- Join the local pro loco's initiatives on local history
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Routen in Veronella
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