Illasi

Illasi
—  Comune  —
Comune di Illasi
Illasi
Location of Illasi in Italy
Coordinates:
Country Italy
Region Veneto
Province Province of Verona (VR)
Frazioni Cellore, Donzellino
Area
 • Total 25.0 km2 (9.7 sq mi)
Elevation 157 m (515 ft)
Population (Dec. 2004)
 • Total 5,112
 • Density 204.5/km2 (529.6/sq mi)
Demonym Illasiani
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 37031, 37030 frazioni
Dialing code 045
Patron saint Bartholomew
 day               = August 24th
 mayor             = Giuseppe Vezzari
website =

Illasi is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Verona in the Italian region Veneto, located about 90 km west of Venice and about 15 km east of Verona. As of 31 December 2004, it had a population of 5,112 and an area of 25.0 km².[1]

The municipality of Illasi contains the frazioni (subdivisions, mainly villages and hamlets) Cellore and Donzellino.

Illasi borders the following municipalities: Cazzano di Tramigna, Colognola ai Colli, Lavagno, Mezzane di Sotto, and Tregnago.

Contents

History

The area was inhabited since the Bronze Age: during 2007 a burial ground with 63 tombs, dated II millennium B.C., was discovered near the village of Arano. Several remains were found of the Roman presence in the area: the stones, now mainly in the Museo Maffeiano in Verona, show a population composed of retired veterans, to whom, after service, the Roman Emperors assigned pieces of land to be cultivated (mainly cereals, but also vineyards and olive trees). The name Illasi is supposed to be after the name "Gelasius", probably a Roman centurion. Some scholars supposed a simple derivation from "Latii", that means the Latini, people from Lazio. In the late Roman period (IV century) one of the first Christian oratories outside the city of Verona was established in the hamlet of Saint Justina(S.Giustina). It became a center of evangelization, sending missionaries to all the eastern province of Verona. The early Middleage belltower of the religious complex can still be seen. After the fall of Rome (476), the Lombards conquered Northern Italy and mixed with the Roman and barbaric population: some remains (jewelry, weapons) were found in the village of Cellore. In the Middle Age the church of Illasi was granted a status of Pieve, a religious center controlling the area and collecting taxes. The castle, that today dominates the village and surroundings, was built in the XII century. The structure, composed by a fortified palace and a single tower, surrounded by a wall, is extremely peculiar and almost unique in Europe. It is still unclear which lord built it. It already existed when the tyrant Ezzelino da Romano used it as a base for his wars. Then it became one of the main strongholds during the domination of the Della Scala family, lords of Verona. It was sieged several times, and at the end of the XIV century it was burned by the troops of the Da Carrara family, lords of Padua, just before to be conquered, like all the province of Verona, by the Republic of Venice. In the 15th century its military function was impaired by the use of guns: after an easy conquest by Milanese troops, the Venetians decided to dismiss it. They gave it to the Pompei family, one of the few noble families of Verona always faithful to Venice and without sympathies for the rival Austrian Empire. The Pompei shortly used the castle as a residence, before to move to the magnificent villas they built, down the hill, in the centre of the village (now Villa Sagramoso Perez-Pompei and Villa Pompei-Carlotti). The Pompei received the municipality of Illasi like a feud, and exercised civil jurisdiction until the arrival of Napoleone Bonaparte who ended the Republic of Venice (1797).

Demographic evolution


Notable People

References

  1. ^ All demographics and other statistics: Italian statistical institute Istat.