Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Lomellina

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Country
  
Italy

Seat
  
Vigevano

Time zone
  
CET (UTC+1)

Area
  
1,240 km²

Region
  
Lombardy

Comuni
  
58

Website
  
Official website

Province
  
Province of Pavia

Lomellina httpsstefanobadinifileswordpresscom201401

Storie di lomellina questa la lomellina


The Lomellina (Western Lombard: Ümlína/Lümelína) is a geographical and historical area in the Pianura Padana (Po River's valley) of northern Italy, located in south-western Lombardy between the Sesia, Po and Ticino rivers. It is one of three areal divisions of the Province of Pavia.

Contents

Lomellina FileParco dei Tre Laghi Gravellona Lomellina PVJPG Wikimedia

Valle lomellina italy


Geography

Lomellina Leggende di Lomellina

Lomellina includes 58 comuni (municipalities), the most important today being Vigevano and Mortara; the name however derives from its ancient capital Lomello. The area is particularly renowned for its rice paddies: the crop has been cultivated here since the sixteenth century.

History

Lomellina Lomellina Wikipedia

In ancient times Lomellina was inhabited by the Ligurian tribes of the Laevi, and the Marici (co-founders of Ticinum, the modern Pavia) and the Libici (founders of Vercelli). Later they were Romanized. Although crossed by an important road connecting Ticinum to Augusta Taurinorum (the modern Turin), the region seems not to have been intensively urbanized under the Romans, with the exception of the area of Vigevano.

Lomellina AIA Associazione Italiana Arbitri CRA Lombardia nasce la

With the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the arrival of the Lombards, who set their capital in Pavia, Lomellina acquired importance, with a comital dynasty (Conti di Lomello) rising in Lomello. The city of Pavia conquered Lomello in 1146, and the area was later under the Visconti, as part of the Duchy of Milan.

Lomellina Mappa di Lomellina Pavia comuni con annunci di case in vendita

In 1707, after the War of Spanish Succession, a part of Lomellina was conquered by the Piedmontese House of Savoy and made an autonomous province. The area of Vigevano and Robbio, called Contado di Vigevano and which had been autonomous since 1532, was also acquired by Piedmont in 1743.

In 1859 the administrative reform promoted by Urbano Rattazzi annexed Lomellina to the province of Pavia just conquered from Austria, becoming later part of the newly formed Kingdom of Italy.

References

Lomellina Wikipedia