Camponogara
Camponogara è un comune della città metropolitana di Venezia, nella Riviera del Brenta, l'area agricola e residenziale che si svil...
12 7月 2026 更新 · 出典: https://terredivenezia.eu/en/the-areas/the-brenta-riviera/camponogara/ · https://www.legambienterivierabrenta.org/dove-e-come-operiamo/riviera-del-brenta/camponogara/ · https://www.italia-italy.org/B554-1-veneto-turismo-cosa-vedere-camponogara
物語
Camponogara の物語
In the Riviera del Brenta
Camponogara is part of the Riviera del Brenta, the stretch of territory following the river's course between Padua and Venice, famous above all for the Venetian villas built by the Serenissima's nobility as summer residences. Unlike the better known stretches of the riviera, the municipal territory has kept a predominantly agricultural and residential character, with cultivated fields, rural courtyards and a modestly sized town centre.
From campus to village: the origins
The name Camponogara derives from the Latin campus and nux, field and walnut, a memory of the cultivations that once characterised the territory in antiquity. The first document mentioning the area dates from 897, when Emperor Berengar granted the Bishop of Padua, Peter, the investiture of the territory of Piove di Sacco and Saccisica, of which Camponogara was part. For centuries the settlement had to contend with flooding from the Brenta, a watercourse later diverted near the centre through hydraulic works promoted by the Republic of Venice.
The Venetian villas of the territory
Like much of the Riviera del Brenta, Camponogara also preserves traces of the age of the Venetian villas. Villa Papadopoli, now home to the town hall, and Villa Bembo, dating from the sixteenth century, are among the most significant examples, alongside historic rural courtyards such as Corte Canal and Campoverardo, farming clusters made up of manor houses and rows of rustic buildings. In the hamlet of Campoverardo also stands Villa Sargenti, linked to Marquis Manfredini, commander of an Austrian regiment.
The parish church
The parish church of Camponogara was begun in 1774 and preserves frescoes by Costantino Cedini, a pupil of the Venetian painter Jacopo Guarana, while the bell tower was built in 1885. The building is the town's main religious landmark and part of the historic fabric that developed around the old settlement core.
Experiences not to miss
- Visit Villa Papadopoli, now the town hall
- Admire the frescoes by Costantino Cedini in the parish church
- Discover the historic rural courtyards of Corte Canal and Campoverardo
- See Villa Bembo, an example of a sixteenth century Venetian villa
- Cycle through the countryside of the Riviera del Brenta
見どころ
Camponogara の見どころ
パス · Trovido Route
Camponogara のルート
求人 · JobFlow