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Quinto Vicentino

Quinto Vicentino è un comune della pianura vicentina, a pochi chilometri a est di Vicenza, il cui centro coincide simbolicamente c...

45δραστηριότητες
Quinto Vicentino è un comune della pianura vicentina, a pochi chilometri a est di Vicenza, il cui centro coincide simbolicamente con una delle ville palladiane meno conosciute ma più affascinanti del territorio: Villa Thiene, oggi sede stessa del municipio. Il nome del paese, di origine romana, ricorda la sua posizione lungo un antico sistema di misurazione stradale legato alla centuriazione della campagna vicentina. Nel Cinquecento i fratelli Adriano e Marcantonio Thiene, nobili vicentini, avviarono la costruzione di una grandiosa residenza di campagna coinvolgendo, tra gli altri, Andrea Palladio, il cui progetto complessivo, pubblicato ne 'I quattro libri dell'architettura', non fu però mai realizzato per intero. Quinto Vicentino è oggi un comune a forte impronta residenziale, cresciuto nell'orbita del capoluogo, che affianca alla quotidianità di paese la custodia di un patrimonio architettonico di livello internazionale, riconosciuto dall'UNESCO.

Ενημερώθηκε στις 12 Ιουλίου 2026

Quinto Vicentino 31°
Σαβ 32° 20°
Κυρ 33° 21°
Δευ 34° 21°
Τρι 36° 21°

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Η ιστορία

Η ιστορία του/της Quinto Vicentino

A name that comes from Rome

The toponym Quinto, shared by several towns of the Veneto plain, comes from the Latin 'ad quintum lapidem', meaning 'at the fifth milestone', indicating the settlement's position along an ancient Roman road measured from Vicenza. This origin shows that the territory was already organised in Roman times according to centuriation, the regular subdivision of farmland whose traces are still readable today in the orientation of roads and field boundaries across the Vicenza plain. From this Roman-era nucleus, the medieval settlement and later the modern town developed over the following centuries.

The Thiene brothers and the plan for a great villa

Around 1542 the brothers Adriano and Marcantonio Thiene, sons of Gian Galeazzo, members of one of the most powerful noble families of Vicenza, began building a country residence at Quinto on land already owned by the family, in the same period the family was also building its town palace in Vicenza. The overall design, developed with the involvement of several architects including Andrea Palladio, envisioned a villa of extraordinary size and ambition, conceived as a statement of the family's prestige. Family events, including Adriano Thiene's exile in 1547, profoundly affected the completion of the work.

A masterpiece left unfinished

As also happened with the family's town palace in Vicenza, the great Palladian design for Villa Thiene was never fully carried out: the death of the two commissioning brothers and the family's growing focus on other holdings, particularly in Emilia, led to the work being halted. What can be admired today is therefore only part of a much more ambitious design, published by Palladio himself in 'I quattro libri dell'architettura' as evidence of an idea for a villa never fully realised, yet still able to represent the architectural ambition of the Vicenza Renaissance.

The frescoes and later changes

Inside, the ground-floor hall preserves a sixteenth-century fresco cycle by the Schio painter Giovanni De Mio, inspired by episodes from Greek mythology and Roman history, among the most interesting pictorial testimonies of the lesser-known Vicenza villas. During the eighteenth century the garden facade was also altered by the architect Francesco Muttoni, who updated the building according to the taste of the time. These successive layers make Villa Thiene a valuable case study for understanding how the great Venetian residences changed over time, adapting to different needs and tastes.

From villa to town hall

Over the centuries Villa Thiene changed function, eventually becoming the current seat of the Municipality of Quinto Vicentino, an unusual case of public reuse for a historic building of such value. Since 1996 the villa has been included, together with the other Palladian works of the city and province of Vicenza, in the UNESCO World Heritage serial site 'City of Vicenza and the Palladian Villas of the Veneto'. This international recognition coexists with the everyday life of a small town, where administrative offices still work today in spaces once designed to represent a great noble family.

Local life, economy and surroundings

Quinto Vicentino today is a strongly residential town, grown in close relation to nearby Vicenza, of which it is effectively a satellite for much of the population who work or study there. Alongside its residential character, craft activities and a share of plain-based farming remain, while village life centres around local services and, symbolically, around the villa that houses the town hall. Its closeness to Vicenza, reachable within a few minutes by car, makes the town a natural stop for those wishing to discover, beyond the city's great Palladian circuits, the lesser-known villas of the surrounding countryside.

Experiences not to miss

  • Visitare Villa Thiene, sede del municipio e capolavoro incompiuto legato al progetto di Andrea Palladio
  • Visit Villa Thiene, the town hall and an unfinished masterpiece linked to Andrea Palladio's design

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