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Povegliano

Povegliano è un comune della provincia di Treviso, da non confondere con l'omonimo Povegliano Veronese: si trova a nord del capolu...

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Povegliano è un comune della provincia di Treviso, da non confondere con l'omonimo Povegliano Veronese: si trova a nord del capoluogo, nella fascia di pianura compresa tra la città e il Montello, ed è composto da tre nuclei principali, il capoluogo, Camalò e Santandrà. Le sue origini più antiche sono legate agli insediamenti che sorsero attorno al Montello e alle colline vicine fin dall'undicesimo secolo avanti Cristo, mentre la colonizzazione romana della zona introdusse la centuriazione agraria di cui restano ancora tracce nell'orientamento di alcune strade attuali. Un diploma dell'imperatore Ottone III del 994 cita per la prima volta Povegliano e Santandrà, allora terre concesse al nobile Rambaldo di Collalto. Con la dominazione veneziana le antiche regole si trasformarono in ville della Podesteria di Treviso, e nobili locali costruirono qui residenze di campagna. Oggi Povegliano è un comune agricolo tranquillo, apprezzato da chi cerca la campagna trevigiana lontano dai grandi flussi turistici.

Atualizado em 12 julho 2026

Povegliano 30°
Sáb 31° 21°
Dom 32° 22°
Seg 33° 22°
Ter 34° 22°

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A história

A história de Povegliano

Between Treviso and the Montello

The municipality of Povegliano extends north of Treviso, in the plain between the provincial capital and the slopes of the Montello, the long wooded hill overlooking the Piave. It is important not to confuse this Povegliano, in the province of Treviso, with the similarly named Povegliano Veronese, a very different municipality located on the Verona plain: despite sharing a name, the two towns have distinct histories and territories. The Treviso municipality's territory is predominantly agricultural, with fields planted with cereals, forage and vines, and it develops around three main settlements: the main town, home to the town hall and library, and the hamlets of Camalò and Santandrà, each with its own historical and parish identity.

Ancient origins and Roman centuriation

Povegliano's earliest history is tied to the peoples who settled around the Montello and the nearby hills as far back as the eleventh century BC, while further north stood the so-called castellieri, defensive structures typical of pre-Roman Venetic cultures. With the Roman organisation of the territory, starting in the second century BC, the area, part of the municipium of Treviso, was divided according to the agricultural centuriation system: today's Postioma and Barrucchella roads follow the old decumani, while Via Sant'Antonio traces the path of a cardo. This Roman imprint, still legible in the countryside's road network, is one of the most interesting aspects for anyone interested in landscape archaeology in this part of Veneto.

From Otto III's diploma to the Venetian villas

The earliest documents mentioning the settlements in this territory concern Camalò, a dependency of the monastery of Santa Maria del Piave, and, in 994, Povegliano and Santandrà, named in a diploma of Emperor Otto III granting land north of the Via Postumia to Rambaldo di Collalto. With the arrival of Venetian rule, the old rural regole turned into villas of the Podesteria of Treviso, belonging to the Campagna Inferiore district: Camalò, Povegliano and Santandrà held this status for centuries. Religious institutions owned much of the land, but during the period of greatest economic prosperity of the Serenissima, Venetian and Treviso nobles also acquired local holdings, building villas and country residences whose memory still lingers in the landscape today.

Camalò and Santandrà, the town's three souls

The modern municipality of Povegliano was created in 1807, in the Napoleonic era, from the union of the main town with the hamlets of Santandrà and Camalò, which still retain a distinct identity today, with their own parish churches, squares and local traditions. Camalò, the hamlet most closely tied to the Benedictine monastery of Santa Maria del Piave, has kept a more intimate character, while Santandrà, whose name derives from Otto III's diploma, has slightly more extensive urban development. This division into three distinct settlements, typical of many municipalities in the Treviso countryside, allows visitors to discover a composite territory, where each hamlet has retained small differences in architecture and in religious and civic tradition over time.

Treviso countryside and everyday life

Honestly, Povegliano remains today a modest-sized farming municipality, with no major monuments to list, but with a territory that clearly tells the rural history of the belt between Treviso and the Montello. Agriculture, vine growing and small-scale processing of farm products remain the main economic sectors, alongside growing commuting towards the provincial capital, just a few kilometres away. Social life revolves around the parishes of the three hamlets and village festivals, while tourism, still limited, mainly involves cyclists riding the country roads between Treviso and the Montello, sometimes continuing on towards the hills of the Piave.

Experiences not to miss

  • Walk among the traces of Roman centuriation along the country roads
  • Visit to the parish churches of Povegliano, Camalò and Santandrà
  • Bike ride towards the Montello and the hills of the Piave
  • Discovering the old Venetian villas of the Podesteria of Treviso
  • Day trip to the historic centre of Treviso, just a few kilometres away

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