Capo di Ponte

Capo di Ponte
Co de Pút
—  Comune  —
Comune di Capo di Ponte
Location of Capo di Ponte in Val Camonica.
Capo di Ponte
Location of Capo di Ponte in Italy
Coordinates:
Country Italy
Region Lombardy
Province Brescia (BS)
Government
 • Mayor Francesco Rosario Antonio Manella
Area
 • Total 18 km2 (6.9 sq mi)
Population (31 December 2007)
 • Total 2,483
 • Density 137.9/km2 (357.3/sq mi)
Demonym Capontini
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 25044
Dialing code 0364
Patron saint Saint Martin
Saint day 11 November
Website Official website

Capo di Ponte (Co de Pút in camunian dialect) is an Italian comune of 2.483 abitanti[1] in Val Camonica, province of Brescia, in Lombardy.

Contents

Geography

Located 362 meters above sea level, Capo di Ponte (en. "Head of Bridge") owes its name to the location of some old houses put to the west of the bridge over the River Oglio to the hamlet Cemmo. The current country instead covers the other side of the river, expanding to the east.

History

On the land of Capo di Ponte there are a great number of rock art parks in Val Camonica

Between the 11th century and the 14th century Capo di Ponte was not a comune, but a hamlet of Cemmo (now is the inverse); its territory was part of the priory of San Salvatore of Tezze.

In 1315 the "Imesigo" marsh, which stretched on the plain of Capo di Ponte until Sellero, was covered by the flooding of the River Re.

On October 14 1336 the Bishop of Brescia Jacopo de Atti invests iure feuds for a tenth of the rights in the territories of Incudine, Cortenedolo, Mù, Cemmo, Zero, Viviano and Capo di Ponte to Maffeo Giroldo Botelli of Nadro.

In 1698 Father Gregorio Brunelli says that the village of Zero (or Serio), which stood along the banks of the River Re, east of the country today, was swept away by high water of that river. Zero has pointed out the last time in 1374, when its territory as are entrusted to the tenth of Botelli of Nadro.

After the fall of the Republic of Venice the "comune of Capo di Ponte" (1797-1798) was founded, which changed its name at first into "comune of Cemmo and Capo di Ponte" (from 1798 to 1815). Under the Lombardo-Veneto kingdom the name was changed to "comune di Capo di Ponte e Cemmo"(from 1816 to 1859). Under the Reign of Italy its name finally became Capo di Ponte (since 1859).

Main sights

Religious architectures

The churches of Capo di Ponte are:

UNESCO Heritage Site

Parks of rock Drawings in Valcamonica

References

External links