Le Terre del Custoza
Terre del Custoza is a partnership of six municipalities, located between the city of Verona and Lake Garda and situated on the hills where the grapes that produce Custoza wine are grown. Sommacampagna, Bussolengo, Castelnuovo del Garda, Sona, Valeggio sul Mincio and Villafranca di Verona are a unique territory where agriculture, history and architecture speak the same language. Eleven cycling routes lead to each municipality: www.terredelcustoza.com/it/esperienze/itinerari-cicloturistici/ The municipalities of the Terre del Custoza are part of the Museo Diffuso del Risorgimento (MuDRi), an open-air museum made up of battlefields, exhibition halls and monuments, witnesses to the wars for Italian Independence. MuDRi: www.museodiffusodelrisorgimento.it/territorio-alto-mincio.html Cycling routes: www.alltrails.com/it-it/members/percorsi-risorgimento
Valeggio sul Mincio
Valeggio sul Mincio is located on the morainic hills between the splendid art cities of Verona and Mantua, immersed in the Mincio Valley, which lends itself well to long walks and cycling excursions. It features important medieval fortifications, the Scaligero Castle, the Visconti Bridge and the Serraglio defensive line, which still give the area suggestive views and panoramas. The real jewel in the crown of Valeggio, included in the network of Italy’s Most Beautiful Villages, is the small town of Borghetto, on the river Mincio, where the waterway and historical architecture merge into a true impressionist painting. The hamlet of Salionze is also of historical importance for the meeting that took place in 452 between Attila King of the Huns and Pope Leo the Great, who had come from Rome to stop their devastating raids; this meeting is re-enacted every year during the village festival in the middle of July. Typical Valencian dishes are deeply rooted in the tradition of the area, with great attention paid to the quality of the ingredients and their authenticity. These include the famous Valeggio tortellini and some freshwater fish dishes, such as pike in sauce. In some agritourisms and pasta factories in the area, it is possible to experience the art of tortellini preparation.
Info e contatti: www.valeggio.com/proloco
Custoza
A hamlet of the commune of Sommacampagna, Custoza is best known for the two battles of the same name, in 1848 and 1866, which saw the hills dotted with troops, young boys fighting, on the one hand to unite Italy, and on the other to strengthen the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Thousands of victims, from both sides, were buried in mass graves. In 1875, Don Gaetano Pivatelli, parish priest of Custoza, asked the King of Italy and the Emperor of Austria to build a place that would dignified the remains of the fallen soldiers. On 24 June 1879, the Custoza Ossuary was inaugurated in the presence of Prince Amedeo of Savoy, Duke of Aosta, and representatives of the Habsburg Empire. The monument stands on Belvedere Hill, visible from all the territories involved in the battle. Today, the Ossuary of Custoza houses a new museum and multimedia display of the site, with a modern language and rich content. There are non-exhaustive lists of names of the fallen soldiers kept here, from all over Italy, but also from the territories of the former Habsburg Empire.
Info e contatti: www.ossariocustoza.it – www.solferinoesanmartino.it/progetto-torelli/ricerca
Custoza is also known for its white wine, which 50 years ago obtained the DOC denomination of origin, and for the Broccoletto di Custoza, a Slow Food presidium celebrated with a dedicated event in January and February. Broccoletto of Custoza: www.broccolettodicustoza.it – www.prolococustoza.it
Sandrà
Let us pass through this hamlet in the municipality of Castelnuovo del Garda, to recount another Veronese pearl, which has been well valorised here and where visitors can learn some interesting facts: the heritage of the Veronese Bell School.
In Verona, at the crossroads of the cardinal communication routes, the art of bell-ringing has existed since at least the 7th century and since then the city has been an important point of reference in the world of bells. This is both because of the number and size of the achievements over the centuries and because of the undisputed acoustic and artistic value of the local bronzes, produced by some fifty dynasties of founders over the years. Almost as a complement to this, over the centuries, different techniques for ringing bells have coexisted, from the carillon (in jargon ‘campanò’), to ordered tolling, to the Veronese System. The latter, developed in the 18th century at the church of San Giorgio in Braida in Verona, is the only method in the world that allows real music to be performed by means of appropriate rotations of the bronzes and is still practised in the entire diocese today.
In the parish church of Sant’Andrea di Sandrà, a small exhibition itinerary has recently been set up, illustrating the art of bell-ringing in Verona (recognised in December 2024 as a Unesco heritage site) and, if you are lucky, you might even be able to attend a few concerts held by the local bell-ringing teams!
Info e contatti: www.scuolacampanariaverona.it – www.psandra.it
Discover Lake Garda and its hinterland: www.lagodigardaveneto.com – www.funiviedelbaldo.it – www.terredelcustoza.com