Belluno (; ; ) is a town and province in the Veneto region of northern Italy. Located about north of Venice, Belluno is the capital of the province of Belluno and the most important city in the Eastern Dolomites region. With its roughly 36,000 inhabitants, it is the largest populated area of Valbelluna. It is one of the 15 municipalities of the Dolomiti Bellunesi National Park.
Geography
The ancient city of Belluno rises above a cliff spur near the confluence of the
Torrente Ardo and the
Piave River. To the north is the imposing
Schiara range of the
Dolomites, with the famous
Gusela del Vescovà (Bishopric's needle), and mountains
Mount Serva and
Monte Talvena rising above the city. To the south, the
Venetian Prealps separate Belluno from the
Venetian Plain. Also to the south is the
Nevegal, in the Castionese area, a skiing resort.
History
The name of the city is derived from
Celtic languages belo-dunum which means "shining hill."
It is conjectured that the population of the area that became Belluno was largely Venetic with a strong Celtic minority. However, as the Romans expanded northward into the Alps, the Celtic either emigrated or were absorbed. The people of the area swore friendship to Rome in the 225 BC conflict with the Gauls and again during the invasion by Hannibal in the Second Punic War.
Founded perhaps around 220-200 BC the initial influence of Rome was military and commercial. Strategically located, the town protected cities to the south. Belluno also became a supplier of iron and copper. Already within the Roman sphere of influence, the town was juridically and politically incorporated into the Roman Republic by the second century BC.
Sometime between the death of Julius Caesar and the ascent of Augustus, Bellunum became a Roman municipium and its people were ascribed to the Roman tribe Papiria. The town was ruled by quattorviri juri dicendo, by quattorviri aedilicia potestate, and by a Council of Elders. Under Augustus, it became part of Regio X Venetia et Histria. Among its citizens were Caius Flavius Hostilius and his wife Domitia, whose 3rd century sarcophagus lies next to the church of San Stefano.
After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, it was ruled by the Lombards (6th century) and the Carolingians (8th century); the famous Belluno Treasure in the British Museum dates from this period. From the late 9th century it was ruled by a count-bishop and it received a castle and a line of walls. Later it was a possession of the Ghibelline family of the Ezzelino. After having long contended the nearby territory with Treviso, in the end Belluno gave itself to the Republic of Venice during the War of Padua (1404). The city was thenceforth an important hub for the transport of lumber from the Cadore through the Piave river. It remained Venetian until 1797.
After the fall of the Venetian Republic, Belluno was an austrian Empire possession, until it was annexed to the Kingdom of Italy in 1866.
The cathedral was severely damaged by the earthquake of 1873, which destroyed a considerable portion of the town, though the campanile stood firm.
Main sights
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The Duomo (Cathedral, 16th century), with the 18th-century bell tower designed by Filippo Juvarra. The church's plan is attributed to the Venetian architect Tullio Lombardo
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Palazzo dei Rettori (1491)
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The red edifice of the Communal Palace
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The Bishop's Palace, erected in 1190 by the count-bishop Gerardo de' Taccoli
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The Fountain of Piazza del Duomo
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Baroque church of San Pietro (1326), originally in Gothic style. It includes five paintings by Andrea Schiavone, three by Sebastiano Ricci.
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Palazzo del Capitano
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The 16th-century church of San Rocco
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Santo Stefano church, housing several 15th-century paintings by local masters. It also includes an Adoration of the Magi, from Tiziano's workshop.
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The Romanesque church of San Biagio
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Porta Dojona and Porta Rugo: gates in the ancient walls
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Santa Maria dei Battuti: 16th-century church
Government
Frazioni
Antole, Bes, Bolzano Bellunese, Caleipo-Sossai, Castion, Castoi, Cavessago, Cavarzano, Cet, Chiesurazza, Cirvoi, Col di Piana, Col di Salce, Collungo, Cusighe, Faverga, Fiammoi, Giamosa, Giazzoi, Levego,
Madeago, Miér, Nevegal, Orzes, Pedeserva, Pra de Luni, Rivamaor, Safforze, Sala, Salce, San Pietro in Campo, Sargnano, Sois, Sopracroda, Sossai, Tassei, Tisoi, Vezzano, Vignole, Visome.
Quarters
Baldenich, Borgo Garibaldi (or Via Garibaldi), Borgo Piave, Borgo Prà, Cavarzano, Lambioi, Mussoi, Quartier Cadore, San Lorenzo, San Pellegrino, San Francesco, Via Cairoli, Via Feltre-Maraga, Via Montegrappa.
Climate
Belluno has a warm-summer humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification:
Dfb). The average annual temperature is , and the average annual precipitation is .
Transport
State roads lead from Belluno to
Feltre, Treviso, Ponte nelle Alpi and
Vittorio Veneto.
Belluno railway station, at Piazzale della Stazione, forms part of the Calalzo–Padua railway. It was opened in 1912, replacing an earlier station opened in 1886. Its passenger building, designed by the architect Roberto Narducci, was constructed in 1928.
The bus station is also at the Piazzale della Stazione, next to the railway station.
Notable residents
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Marco Paolini (b. 1956), stage actor
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Dino Buzzati (1906–1972), novelist and journalist, born in Belluno
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Pope Gregory XVI (1765–1846)
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Andrea Brustolon (1662–1732), sculptor
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Ippolito Caffi (1809–1866), painter
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Sebastiano Ricci (1659–1734), painter
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Marco Ricci (1676–1730), painter
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Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza (1922–2018), human geneticist and pioneer of the Human Genome Diversity Project, resided and died in Belluno
-
Pope John Paul I (1912–1978)
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Bernardino Vitulini, painter
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Charles DeRudio, Italian aristocrat and later American soldier who fought in the 7th U.S. Cavalry at the Battle of the Little Bighorn.
International relations
Belluno is twinned with:
See also
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Province of Belluno
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Dolomiti Bellunesi National Park
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Roman Catholic Diocese of Belluno-Feltre
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Col Visentin
External links