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Verderio
Verderio (Brianzöö: Verdé) is a comune in the province of Lecco, in Lombardy, northern Italy. It was formed in 2014 from the comuni of Verderio Superiore and Verderio Inferiore.
Formerly, the "upper" and "lower" Verderio were divided in two Comune from the preexisting Verderio in 1905.
The name Verderio probably comes from the Latin “viridarium”, which means “garden”. Other traces of the Roman civilization come from the archeological findings and from the etymology of some of the toponyms of its surroundings: for example Vicus Mercati (Vimercate), Hiberna Regis (Bernareggio), Caesarea Novella (Sernovella, a former Verderio Superiore's fraction) and Miliarium Tertium (Terzuolo, a fraction of Robbiate). In this territory the Romans – led by the consul Marcus Claudius Marcellus – defeated Insubres in an important battle in 222 b.C.
Other findings confirm, after the fall of the Roman Empire, the presence of the Lombards and then of the Franks: Villa Gallavresi, once head office of Verderio Inferiore municipality, was built on the ruins of a fortification built by the Franks in the 10th century.
Between the 12th and 14th centuries, Verderio saw the presence of the Templars, that had two important sites at Castel Negrino (now part of Aicurzio's municipality, but once included in Verderio's territory) and at Cascina Brugarola. In 1312 all of Templars' belongings were passed to the Order of Knights of Malta, after the suppression of the Order of Templars decided by Philip IV of France.
An important historical event was, on April 28, 1799, the Combat of Verderio as part of the Battle of Cassano between the Austro-Russians led by general Josef Philipp Vukassovich (under the overall leadership of Alexander Suvorov) and the cut-off French troops led by general Sérurier, who commanded a division in Moreau's army. This happened when Napoleon was in Egypt for his military campaign in the Northafrican country. Despite having suffered heavy losses, the Austro-Russian troops forced the French to surrender. The winners were acclaimed as liberators but shortly after they started plundering, burning and vandalizing the town. Today, two headstones commemorate that tragic event.
The origins of Verderio's division in the two comuni of Verderio Inferiore and Verderio Superiore is disputed: according to some historians, it dates back to the 12th century, according to others, to the suppression of the Templar's order. What is certain is that in some documents of 1412 the wording “Verderio de sora e de sotto” (“upper and lower Verderio”) can be found. A temporary unification in one comune is mentioned in some documents of 1874.
A unified parish for Verderio was established by bishop Charles Borromeo after the Council of Trent, following his pastoral visits in 1571 and 1583. This parish would nonetheless be divided in 1778, when the bishop's vicar established the parish of Verderio Inferiore and the construction of the church dedicated to Saints martyrs Nazarius and Celsus started. In 1906 this church would be replaced by a new one built on the same site following a project by architect Giovanni Barboglio; the frescoes that decorate the interior were painted in 1932 by Umberto Marigliani, helped by Vittorio Manini.
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Verderio AI simulator
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Verderio
Verderio (Brianzöö: Verdé) is a comune in the province of Lecco, in Lombardy, northern Italy. It was formed in 2014 from the comuni of Verderio Superiore and Verderio Inferiore.
Formerly, the "upper" and "lower" Verderio were divided in two Comune from the preexisting Verderio in 1905.
The name Verderio probably comes from the Latin “viridarium”, which means “garden”. Other traces of the Roman civilization come from the archeological findings and from the etymology of some of the toponyms of its surroundings: for example Vicus Mercati (Vimercate), Hiberna Regis (Bernareggio), Caesarea Novella (Sernovella, a former Verderio Superiore's fraction) and Miliarium Tertium (Terzuolo, a fraction of Robbiate). In this territory the Romans – led by the consul Marcus Claudius Marcellus – defeated Insubres in an important battle in 222 b.C.
Other findings confirm, after the fall of the Roman Empire, the presence of the Lombards and then of the Franks: Villa Gallavresi, once head office of Verderio Inferiore municipality, was built on the ruins of a fortification built by the Franks in the 10th century.
Between the 12th and 14th centuries, Verderio saw the presence of the Templars, that had two important sites at Castel Negrino (now part of Aicurzio's municipality, but once included in Verderio's territory) and at Cascina Brugarola. In 1312 all of Templars' belongings were passed to the Order of Knights of Malta, after the suppression of the Order of Templars decided by Philip IV of France.
An important historical event was, on April 28, 1799, the Combat of Verderio as part of the Battle of Cassano between the Austro-Russians led by general Josef Philipp Vukassovich (under the overall leadership of Alexander Suvorov) and the cut-off French troops led by general Sérurier, who commanded a division in Moreau's army. This happened when Napoleon was in Egypt for his military campaign in the Northafrican country. Despite having suffered heavy losses, the Austro-Russian troops forced the French to surrender. The winners were acclaimed as liberators but shortly after they started plundering, burning and vandalizing the town. Today, two headstones commemorate that tragic event.
The origins of Verderio's division in the two comuni of Verderio Inferiore and Verderio Superiore is disputed: according to some historians, it dates back to the 12th century, according to others, to the suppression of the Templar's order. What is certain is that in some documents of 1412 the wording “Verderio de sora e de sotto” (“upper and lower Verderio”) can be found. A temporary unification in one comune is mentioned in some documents of 1874.
A unified parish for Verderio was established by bishop Charles Borromeo after the Council of Trent, following his pastoral visits in 1571 and 1583. This parish would nonetheless be divided in 1778, when the bishop's vicar established the parish of Verderio Inferiore and the construction of the church dedicated to Saints martyrs Nazarius and Celsus started. In 1906 this church would be replaced by a new one built on the same site following a project by architect Giovanni Barboglio; the frescoes that decorate the interior were painted in 1932 by Umberto Marigliani, helped by Vittorio Manini.
