Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Sondrio

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Country
  
Italy

Province / Metropolitan city
  
Sondrio (SO)

Demonym(s)
  
Sondriesi

Local time
  
Sunday 9:25 PM

Region
  
Lombardy

Elevation
  
360 m (1,180 ft)

Province
  
Province of Sondrio

Sondrio httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Frazioni
  
Arquino, Colda, Gualtieri, Ligari, Moroni, Mossini, Ponchiera, Sant'Anna, Sassella, Triangia, Triasso

Weather
  
12°C, Wind NE at 8 km/h, 74% Humidity

Points of interest
  
Valtellina, Castel Masegra, Pretorio Palace, Valtellinese Museum of History a, Giardini Di Palazzo Sertoli

Sondrio [ˈsondrjo]    (archaic German: Sünders or Sonders, Latin: Sundrium, Italian: Sondrio, Lombard: Sùndri, Romansh: Sunder) is an Italian town and comune located in the heart of the Valtellina. As of 2012, Sondrio counts approximately 21,876 inhabitants (2015) and it is the administrative centre for the province of Sondrio. In 2007, Sondrio was given the Alpine Town of the Year award.

Contents

Map of 23100 Sondrio, Province of Sondrio, Italy

History

Formerly an Ancient Roman military camp, today's Sondrio was founded by the Lombards: in their language Sundrium meant "Exclusive property", referring to the status of free men (arimanni) of the holders of the city and the surrounding land.

After the fall of the Lombard Kingdom in Italy, Sondrio became part of the Holy Roman Empire. The Capitanei of Vizzola, who controlled much of the Valtellina, had it in 1040 from the emperor Henry II. From 1310 to 1335 the city was involved in the war between the Guelph and Ghibelline factions of the nearby Como, and its war against Milan. After having resisted several attacks by the Comaschi, in 1335 Sondrio and Valtellina became part of the Visconti Milanese dominions.

From the second half of the 16th Century to the end of 18th Century, Sondrio was governed by the Tre Leghe Grigie ("Three Grey Leagues") of the Grisons, as the capital city of Valtellina. After the Reformation, Sondrio was the centre of heavy struggles between the Catholic Valtellinesi and the Protestant Grisons. In 1620 the citizens, led by Giacomo Robustelli, killed 180 Protestants and declared the independence of the Valtellina.

After the Napoleonic parenthesis, in which it became part of the Cisalpine Republic (later Kingdom of Italy), Sondrio with the Valtellina was annexed to the Austrian Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia, and fought gallantly for its independence.

Geography

The town is located in the middle of the province, and borders with the municipalities of Albosaggia, Caiolo, Castione Andevenno, Faedo Valtellino, Montagna in Valtellina, Spriana and Torre di Santa Maria. Its hamlets (frazioni) are Arquino, Colda, Gualtieri, Ligari, Moroni, Mossini, Ponchiera, Sant'Anna, Sassella, Triangia and Triasso.

Economy

The territory of Sondrio is has numerous vineyards; wines produced include the Sassella and Grumello. Wine represents one of the main resources of this region, together with tourism, especially in winter.

Another important piece of Sondrio's economy is its banking industry, with the Banca Popolare di Sondrio and the Credito Valtellinese both headquartered in Sondrio and listed on the Milan Stock Exchange.

Main sights

The heart of Sondrio is its central Garibaldi Square. Not far from it is the Palazzo Sassi, that is home of the Art and History Museum of Valtellina. In a dominant position, near the ancient road to the Valmalenco, linking the town to Switzerland, stands the Masegra Castle, housing the Historical Museum of the Grisons Domination.

The church of Santi Gervasio e Protasio rebuilt in Neoclassical-style in 1838, was built in the 12th century as a Romanesque pieve and collegiate church. Other sights include the Torre Ligariana, once the collegiate's bell tower, and the Palazzo Pretorio, once the seat of the Grisons government.

People

  • Giovanni Pietro Ligario (1686–1748), painter
  • Antonio Caimi (1814–1878), painter
  • Enrico Sertoli (1842–1910), physiologist and histologist
  • Antonio Carini (1872–1950), physician, bacteriologist and professor
  • Pier Luigi Nervi (1891–1979), engineer
  • Valerio Ricetti (1898—1952), Italian-Australian hermit
  • Gianni Celati (b. 1937), writer, translator and literary critic
  • Sophia Zopatti Lewis (b.1941), Olympic Dressage Hunter/Jumper Rome 1960
  • Giulio Tremonti (b. 1947), politician
  • Benedetto Della Vedova (b. 1962), politician
  • Raffaella "Raffy" Rossi (b. 1974), ski mountaineer and skyrunner
  • Luca Colombo (b. 1984), football player
  • Matteo D'Alessandro (b. 1989), football player
  • Robert Antonioli (b. 1990), ski mountaineer
  • Michele Boscacci (b. 1990), ski mountaineer
  • Arianna Fontana (b. 1990), short track speed skatereis
  • Twin towns / Sister cities

  • Sindelfingen, Germany
  • Radovljica, Slovenia
  • São Mateus, Brazil
  • Sports

    Sondrio Calcio is the football club of the city and currently plays in Serie D.

    References

    Sondrio Wikipedia