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Valtellina

Valtellina or the Valtelline (occasionally spelled as two words in English: Val Telline; Romansh: Vuclina (listen); Lombard: Valtelina or Valtulina; German: Veltlin; Italian: Valtellina) is a valley in the Lombardy region of northern Italy, bordering Switzerland. Today it is known for its ski center, hot spring spas, bresaola, cheeses (in particular Bitto, named after the river Bitto) and wines. In past centuries it was a key Alpine pass between northern Italy and Germany. The control of the Valtellina was much sought after, particularly during the Thirty Years' War as it was an important part of the Spanish Road.

Map of the Province of Sondrio, where Valtellina is located
Flag of Valchiavenna (upper left), Upper Valtellina (upper right) and Valtellina (lower part)
Monte Disgrazia (3,678m) in the north of the Valtellina
A view of the Valtellina from Castel Grumello
The San Marco Pass in the south of the Valtellina

Geography edit

The most important comune of the valley is Sondrio; the others major centers are Aprica, Morbegno, Tirano, Bormio and Livigno. Although Livigno is on the northern side of the alpine watershed, it is considered part of Valtellina as it falls within the province of Sondrio.

History edit

Antiquity and the middle ages edit

The region was conquered in 16 BC by the Romans. By the 5th century it was Christianized with around ten pieve (rural churches with a baptistery) under the Diocese of Como. The Lombards gained control over the area after 720, but about fifty years later Charlemagne gave the valley to Saint Denis Monastery near Paris. Later the valley returned to the Bishop of Como.[1]

Early modern period edit

 
Map of the Three Leagues with the grey area of Valchiavenna, Tre Pievi, Valtellina and Bormio ruled by it from 1512 to 1797

During the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, the Valtellina belonged to the Three Leagues (the "Grey Leagues"), which was then a mutual-defense region independent of Switzerland but is now the easternmost Swiss Canton of Graubünden. Graubünden is an area in which German, Romansh, Lombard and Italian are all spoken, and hence during 16th century rule by Graubünden, the region became known variously as Veltlin, Westtirol (West Tyrol), and the Welsche Vogteien ("Romanic Bailiwicks").

During the Thirty Years' War, the Valtellina was a theater of intense military and diplomatic struggle among France, the Habsburg powers and the local authorities which culminated in the Valtellina war of 1620–1626. Control over the routes through the Valtellina to the passes between Lombardy and the Danube watershed was at stake as it formed part of the so-called Spanish Road. The anti-Habsburg forces in the Three Leagues put together a court named 'clerical overseers' that between 1618 and 1620 handed down a number of convictions (often in absentia) against Catholics in the Leagues and Valtellina.[2] This included the arresting under false pretenses and torturing to death of the (catholic) arch-priest Nicolò Rusca of Sondrio. This and similar harsh judgments of the anti-Habsburg Thusis court led to a conspiracy to drive the Protestants out of the valley. The leader of the conspiracy, Giacomo Robustelli of the Planta family, had ties to Madrid, Rome and Paris. On the evening of 18/19 July 1620, a force of Valtellina rebels supported by Austrian and Italian troops marched into Tirano and began killing Protestants. When they finished in Tirano, they marched to Teglio, Sondrio and further down the valley killing every Protestant that they found. Between 500[3] and 600[4] people were killed on that night and in the following four days. The attack drove nearly all the Protestants out of the valley, prevented further Protestant incursions and took the Valtellina out of the Three Leagues. The killings in Valtellina were part of the conflicts in Graubünden known as the Bündner Wirren or Confusion of the Leagues.

In February 1623 France, Savoy, and Venice signed the Treaty of Paris in which all three signatories agreed to re-establish the territory of Valtellina by attempting to remove Spanish forces stationed there.

18th and 19th centuries edit

In 1797 the growing power of the First French Republic created the Cisalpine republic in Northern Italy. On 10 October 1797, the French supported a revolt in the Valtellina against the Graubünden (Grisons in French and English), and it joined the Cisalpine Republic.

After the Congress of Vienna in 1815 the Valtellina became part of the Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia, which was a constituent land of the Austrian Empire. In 1859 it came, together with Lombardy, to the Kingdom of Sardinia, and finally in 1861 it became part of the Kingdom of Italy.

At the end of the 19th century there was substantial migration out of the Valtellina for reasons of the prevailing economically depressed conditions of the region and for young men to avoid conscription.[5] Australia, especially Western Australia, was a popular destination for such migrants.[5]

Industrially, the area is famous as the home of the world's first mainline electrified railway. The electrification of the Ferrovia della Valtellina took place in 1902, using three-phase power at 3,600 V, with a maximum speed of 70 km/h. The system was designed by the brilliant Hungarian engineer Kálmán Kandó who was employed by main contractors the Budapest-based Ganz company.

Mussolini and the Valtellina Redoubt edit

During the last months of World War II, the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini and other diehard fascist leaders of the Italian Social Republic (RSI) proposed making a "last stand" against the advancing Allied armies in the Valtellina. The Fascist Party secretary Alessandro Pavolini was the main proponent of the idea, which he first raised with Mussolini in September 1944.[6] However, the fascist leadership was divided over the plan and only minimal preparatory work was carried out to establish the area as a stronghold. By the time the Allies made their final advance in April 1945, the Valtellina was not ready to be used as a redoubt.[7][8] In any event, Mussolini's capture on 27 April by the partisans at Dongo, barely short of the Valtellina, ended any possibility of a fascist last stand.[9]

Culture and language edit

The local dialect used to be a mix of Romansch and Lombard language. These days, however, only Italian and the Valtellinese variety of Lombard are spoken.

 
Panorama of the Valtellina from Alpe Piazzola in the comune of Castello dell'Acqua.

Folklore edit

L'è foeu el sginer & l'è foeu l'ors de la tana edit

On January 31st there was the tradition of l'è foeu el sginer ("January's out"), a custom very similar to that celebrated on February 2 known as l'è foeu l'ors de la tana ("the bear is out from its den"). Both celebrated the end of winter and the imminent arrival of spring. The two customs involved walking around the town and inviting people to leave their house under any pretext, like throwing a large piece of wood or a pot down the stairs. When people ran outside to check what had happened, they were greeted with the shout l'è foeu el sginer! or l'è foeu l'ors de la tana![10]

Intraverser l’ann edit

Intraverser l'èn or intraverser l'ann (literally "to put the year across") also celebrated New Year's Eve: during the night young people used to build barricades of gates, doors, benches, agricultural tools, logs, stairs, sledges, and carts in the main square or in front of the church, to prevent the old year from leaving. The next morning, the owners of the stolen objects had to go and recover them, dismantling the barricade and metaphorically opening up the way to the new year.[11]

The gabinat edit

On January 6, the custom of the gabinat is still celebrated today, especially in Tirano, in the Upper Valley, and in the nearby Poschiavo Valley (Switzerland) Traditionally, children would suddenly enter other people's homes shouting gabinat! and in exchange, they would receive a handful of cooked chestnuts, some sweets or dried fruit. The adults competed to precede the other in exclaiming gabinat when they met. Whoever lost had to pay a pledge; often, the prize at stake was established in advance and the gabinat thus became the object of bets. In order to win, various strategies were adopted: stalking, disguises, fake illnesses ... Nowadays, it is only the children who do the gabinat, and they usually show up to relatives, friends, and local shopkeepers.

The custom of the gabinat most likely comes from Bavaria, Germany, where Christmas, New Year's Eve and Epiphany were indicated with the name Geb-nacht (Gaben means "gifts" and Nacht means "night", therefore "night of gifts"): on the eve of these holidays, the poor young people sang in front of the doors of the wealthiest in the hope to receive a gift.[12]

Andà a ciamà l'erba (Let's go call the grass) edit

On the first of March, throughout Valtellina and Valchiavenna, people used to go to ciamà l'erba ("call the grass"). The children walked in the meadows making noise with cowbells to call the grass and awaken it from the winter slumber.[13] This custom also served to propitiate a bountiful harvest.[14]

The Carneval vegg (Old Carnival) edit

In the village of Grosio, the Carnival is celebrated, unlike the rest of Valtellina, on the first Sunday of Lent, according to the Ambrosian calendar in force before the Gregorian reform. For this reason, it is called Carneval vegg ("Old Carnival").

In the past, it was customary for people to gather all together to dance, sing, eat and drink. Being an agricultural ritual that represents the death of winter and the beginning of summer, Carnival officially began on January 17 with the parade of the blessed cattle adorned with coloured ribbons. It included numerous bonfires, with which the paths were cleared to facilitate the passage of farmers, their agricultural vehicles and their livestock. A straw puppet with horns on his head representing the Carnival was also burnt.[12]

Nowadays, the districts of the towns challenge each other to the sound of allegorical floats, and the parade is attended by traditional masks, eight characters representing traditions, past events, and moments of everyday life: the Old Carnival, a bearded and joyful man dressed as a mountaineer, and Lean Lent, a thin woman dressed in a humble way, with a dark handkerchief on her head and an empty basket on her arm, represent the transition from the glories of Carnival to Lenten fasts. They are accompanied by the Paralytic, the Bear Handler, a funny shepherd who dances and rolls on the ground named Toni, an old man with the butt covered with Nutella, a hunchbacked mountaineer whose hump is filled with chestnut urchins, and Bernarda, a man disguised as a baby put in a pannier supported by a fake old woman, and accompanied by another man dressed as a farmer).[15]

During the Carnival period, manzòli or manzòla, white flour and buckwheat pancakes mixed with slices of cheese and cut into the shape of a calf were eaten to propitiate the abundance of livestock parts.[12]

The Carneval di Mat (Carnival of the fools) edit

In Bormio, during the day of the Carnival of the Fools, the Mayor hands over his power to the Podestà di Mat (Podestà of the Fools) to Harlequin, and to the Compagnia di Mat ("the Company of the Fools") who give a public reading of the gossip and complaints that citizens have deposited in a box placed in the square of the Kuerc. The festival also includes a parade along the streets of the historic centre led by the Harlequins of the Company of Mat, with children escorting the Podestà.[16]

 
"Cheers to the year 1930" written on one of the doors of Mazzo di Valtellina.

La coscrizione (the conscription) edit

The conscription was originally a celebration on the occasion of the call to the draft: the tradition seems to have originated in the second half of the nineteenth century with the unification of Italy when young men were forced to serve a period in the Army. The feast of the conscripts of eighteen-year-olds was therefore a kind of rite of passage to adulthood. Today is simply the celebration of the coming of age.

The duration of the celebration varied from town to town: in Grosio the conscription could last up to ten days, during which the boys and girls met in bars, taverns, or in places specially set up for the purpose. The conscripts had the task of embroidering on the tricolour flag the symbol and possibly the motto that the group had chosen. On the walls of the villages, it was customary to write W LA CLASSE... ("cheers to the year...") followed by the year of birth: nowadays, conscripts hang a tricolour banner with the same wording and the names (or nicknames) of the members of the group.[17][18]

The feast of the conscripts is particularly felt in Alta Valtellina: in Grosio, for a week, the conscripts meet in a club to celebrate and travel through the streets of the town in a car from which the flag decorated with the symbol of the group waves. On New Year's Eve, amid fireworks and the noise of whistles, cowbells, motorcycles, and tractors, they entrust the flag to conscripts one year younger, after having it blessed in church.[19] Each group chooses different coloured sweatshirts and decorates the tricolour with a symbol that represents the group's motto or identity.[20]

 
One of the religious floats carried on the shoulders by the "Pasquali" of Bormio traditionally dressed.

I Pasquali edit

The Pasquali are allegorical floats with a religious theme, prepared during the winter by the various districts of Bormio (Buglio, Combo, Dossiglio, Dossorovina and Maggiore) for Easter (Pasqua meaning Easter in Italian). On Easter day, the Pasquali are carried on the shoulders of the boys and are accompanied by a band, folk groups, women, seniors, and children who embellish the parade with flowers and other small crafts. Everyone wears the traditional red, black and white costume. After having followed the entire Via Roma and upon arrival at the Piazza del Kuerc (the main square of the town) the ancient bell called Bajona starts tolling and a jury draws up a ranking of the best Pasquali. At the end of the parade, the floats are exhibited in Piazza del Kuerc where they stay until Easter Monday.[21]

Il Palio delle Contrade edit

Born in 1963, the Palio delle Contrade sees the inhabitants of the five districts of Bormio compete against each other, divided according to age, in downhill, cross-country, combined, and relay races. The cross-country race takes place through the streets of the town, covered with snow for the purpose.[22]

Wines edit

 
Vineyards in Valtellina

In Valtellina, wines are produced mainly from Chiavennasca (the local name of Nebbiolo grape variety) with other minor varieties such as Rossola nera permitted up to 20% for the Denominazione di origine controllata (DOC) and 10% for the Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita (DOCG). Grapes are limited to a harvest yield of 12 tonnes per hectare. The finished wine must be aged for at least two years prior to release (three years if a Riserva bottling) with a minimum alcohol level of at least 11%. Yields for the DOCG wines are further restricted to a maximum of 8 tonnes/ha. While the aging requirements are the same as the DOC, the minimum alcohol level for the DOCG wine is 12%.[23]

The best-known villages for red wines are: Grumello, Sassella, Inferno, Valgella, and Maroggia. The village names are normally indicated on the label. Additionally there is an Amarone style DOCG wine called Sforzato (Sfursat).

In the lower part of the Val Poschiavo, the valley in the Graubünden canton of Switzerland that descends into the Valtellina at Tirano, similar wines are produced - but under different regulations such as appellation and the allowance of sugar addition, or chaptalization.

Tourism edit

One of the most notable tourist attractions of the area is the Bernina Line (“Trenino Rosso”, little red train) of the Rhaetian Railway, which links the town of Tirano in the Valtellina with St. Moritz in Graubünden, Switzerland via the Bernina Pass. The mountains of the Valtellina offer numerous possibilities for sport activities: skiing and winter sports in Bormio, Aprica or Livigno, hiking and biking in the same locations and especially in the secondary valleys, and rock climbing in the Val Masino.

The Rupe Magna, a unique large rock with more than 5,000 engraved figures dating from between the 4th and 1st millennia BCE, can be found at the Rock Engraving Park in Grosio.

Notable people edit

Born in Valtellina:

See also edit

References edit

Further reading: F Pieth: Bündnergeschichte, 1982, ISBN 3-85894-002-X

  1. ^ Valtellina in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  2. ^ Graubünden's religious history[permanent dead link] (PDF; 3.95 MB) (in German)
  3. ^ Swiss History (in German) accessed 16 January 2012
  4. ^ Valtellina murders in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  5. ^ a b Paull, John (2014) "Ernesto Genoni: Australia’s pioneer of biodynamic agriculture", Journal of Organics, 1(1):57-81.
  6. ^ Ray Moseley, The Last Days of Mussolini, 176
  7. ^ Clark, Martin (2014). Mussolini. Routledge. pp. 319–320. ISBN 978-1-317-89840-5.
  8. ^ Moseley, Ray (2004). Mussolini: The Last 600 Days of Il Duce. Taylor Trade Publications. p. 168. ISBN 978-1-58979-095-7.
  9. ^ Moseley, Ray (2004). Mussolini: The Last 600 Days of Il Duce. Taylor Trade Publications. p. 269. ISBN 978-1-58979-095-7.
  10. ^ "Calendario di Valtellina e Valchiavenna - 2 febbraio". Paesi di Valtellina e Valchiavenna.
  11. ^ "Calendario di Valtellina e Valchiavenna - 31 dicembre". Paesi di Valtellina e Valchiavenna.
  12. ^ a b c Antonioli, Gabriele; Bracchi, Remo (1995). Dizionario etimologico grosino. Sondrio: Ramponi Arti Grafiche.
  13. ^ "Calendario di Valtellina e Valchiavenna - 1 marzo". Paesi di Valtellina e Valchiavenna.
  14. ^ Associazione Amatia (2013). Mazzo tra storia, tradizione e leggenda. Sondrio: Tipografia Bettini.
  15. ^ Antonioli, Gabriele; Ghilotti, Paolo; Mambretti, Ivan; Rinaldi, Giacomo (2018). Grosio. Cinquemila anni di storia. Villa di Tirano: Tipografia Poletti.
  16. ^ "Carnevàl di Mat". Valtellina.it.
  17. ^ "I Coscritti". Grosio.info.[dead link]
  18. ^ "Cosa sai della festa dei coscritti?". Calendario Valtellinese.
  19. ^ "Celebrato l'anno dei coscritti del 2001". Prima la Valtellina.it. 6 January 2020.
  20. ^ "Coscritti sì, ma responsabili. Dopo la festa fanno pulizia". La Provincia di Sondrio.it. 15 January 2015.
  21. ^ "Pasqua a Bormio? In compagnia dei Pasquali!". Bormio.eu. 10 May 2021.
  22. ^ . Bormio.info. Archived from the original on 2010-03-30. Retrieved 2022-06-06.
  23. ^ P. Saunders Wine Label Language pg 143 Firefly Books 2004 ISBN 1-55297-720-X

External links edit

  • An extensive history of the Valtellina area
  • Tourist information

46°10′N 9°52′E / 46.167°N 9.867°E / 46.167; 9.867

valtellina, comune, valmalenco, valley, chiesa, valmalenco, footballer, marco, valtulina, valpelline, valpelline, aosta, valley, valtelline, occasionally, spelled, words, english, telline, romansh, vuclina, listen, lombard, valtelina, valtulina, german, veltli. For the comune in Valmalenco valley see Chiesa in Valmalenco For the footballer see Marco Valtulina For Valpelline see Valpelline Aosta Valley Valtellina or the Valtelline occasionally spelled as two words in English Val Telline Romansh Vuclina listen Lombard Valtelina or Valtulina German Veltlin Italian Valtellina is a valley in the Lombardy region of northern Italy bordering Switzerland Today it is known for its ski center hot spring spas bresaola cheeses in particular Bitto named after the river Bitto and wines In past centuries it was a key Alpine pass between northern Italy and Germany The control of the Valtellina was much sought after particularly during the Thirty Years War as it was an important part of the Spanish Road Map of the Province of Sondrio where Valtellina is locatedFlag of Valchiavenna upper left Upper Valtellina upper right and Valtellina lower part Monte Disgrazia 3 678m in the north of the ValtellinaA view of the Valtellina from Castel GrumelloThe San Marco Pass in the south of the Valtellina Contents 1 Geography 2 History 2 1 Antiquity and the middle ages 2 2 Early modern period 2 3 18th and 19th centuries 2 4 Mussolini and the Valtellina Redoubt 3 Culture and language 4 Folklore 4 1 L e foeu el sginer amp l e foeu l ors de la tana 4 2 Intraverser l ann 4 3 The gabinat 4 4 Anda a ciama l erba Let s go call the grass 4 5 The Carneval vegg Old Carnival 4 6 The Carneval di Mat Carnival of the fools 4 7 La coscrizione the conscription 4 8 I Pasquali 4 9 Il Palio delle Contrade 5 Wines 6 Tourism 7 Notable people 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksGeography editThe most important comune of the valley is Sondrio the others major centers are Aprica Morbegno Tirano Bormio and Livigno Although Livigno is on the northern side of the alpine watershed it is considered part of Valtellina as it falls within the province of Sondrio History editAntiquity and the middle ages edit The region was conquered in 16 BC by the Romans By the 5th century it was Christianized with around ten pieve rural churches with a baptistery under the Diocese of Como The Lombards gained control over the area after 720 but about fifty years later Charlemagne gave the valley to Saint Denis Monastery near Paris Later the valley returned to the Bishop of Como 1 Early modern period edit See also Valtellina War and Spanish Road nbsp Map of the Three Leagues with the grey area of Valchiavenna Tre Pievi Valtellina and Bormio ruled by it from 1512 to 1797During the 16th 17th and 18th centuries the Valtellina belonged to the Three Leagues the Grey Leagues which was then a mutual defense region independent of Switzerland but is now the easternmost Swiss Canton of Graubunden Graubunden is an area in which German Romansh Lombard and Italian are all spoken and hence during 16th century rule by Graubunden the region became known variously as Veltlin Westtirol West Tyrol and the Welsche Vogteien Romanic Bailiwicks During the Thirty Years War the Valtellina was a theater of intense military and diplomatic struggle among France the Habsburg powers and the local authorities which culminated in the Valtellina war of 1620 1626 Control over the routes through the Valtellina to the passes between Lombardy and the Danube watershed was at stake as it formed part of the so called Spanish Road The anti Habsburg forces in the Three Leagues put together a court named clerical overseers that between 1618 and 1620 handed down a number of convictions often in absentia against Catholics in the Leagues and Valtellina 2 This included the arresting under false pretenses and torturing to death of the catholic arch priest Nicolo Rusca of Sondrio This and similar harsh judgments of the anti Habsburg Thusis court led to a conspiracy to drive the Protestants out of the valley The leader of the conspiracy Giacomo Robustelli of the Planta family had ties to Madrid Rome and Paris On the evening of 18 19 July 1620 a force of Valtellina rebels supported by Austrian and Italian troops marched into Tirano and began killing Protestants When they finished in Tirano they marched to Teglio Sondrio and further down the valley killing every Protestant that they found Between 500 3 and 600 4 people were killed on that night and in the following four days The attack drove nearly all the Protestants out of the valley prevented further Protestant incursions and took the Valtellina out of the Three Leagues The killings in Valtellina were part of the conflicts in Graubunden known as the Bundner Wirren or Confusion of the Leagues In February 1623 France Savoy and Venice signed the Treaty of Paris in which all three signatories agreed to re establish the territory of Valtellina by attempting to remove Spanish forces stationed there 18th and 19th centuries edit In 1797 the growing power of the First French Republic created the Cisalpine republic in Northern Italy On 10 October 1797 the French supported a revolt in the Valtellina against the Graubunden Grisons in French and English and it joined the Cisalpine Republic After the Congress of Vienna in 1815 the Valtellina became part of the Kingdom of Lombardy Venetia which was a constituent land of the Austrian Empire In 1859 it came together with Lombardy to the Kingdom of Sardinia and finally in 1861 it became part of the Kingdom of Italy At the end of the 19th century there was substantial migration out of the Valtellina for reasons of the prevailing economically depressed conditions of the region and for young men to avoid conscription 5 Australia especially Western Australia was a popular destination for such migrants 5 Industrially the area is famous as the home of the world s first mainline electrified railway The electrification of the Ferrovia della Valtellina took place in 1902 using three phase power at 3 600 V with a maximum speed of 70 km h The system was designed by the brilliant Hungarian engineer Kalman Kando who was employed by main contractors the Budapest based Ganz company Mussolini and the Valtellina Redoubt edit Main article Valtellina Redoubt During the last months of World War II the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini and other diehard fascist leaders of the Italian Social Republic RSI proposed making a last stand against the advancing Allied armies in the Valtellina The Fascist Party secretary Alessandro Pavolini was the main proponent of the idea which he first raised with Mussolini in September 1944 6 However the fascist leadership was divided over the plan and only minimal preparatory work was carried out to establish the area as a stronghold By the time the Allies made their final advance in April 1945 the Valtellina was not ready to be used as a redoubt 7 8 In any event Mussolini s capture on 27 April by the partisans at Dongo barely short of the Valtellina ended any possibility of a fascist last stand 9 Culture and language editThe local dialect used to be a mix of Romansch and Lombard language These days however only Italian and the Valtellinese variety of Lombard are spoken nbsp Panorama of the Valtellina from Alpe Piazzola in the comune of Castello dell Acqua Folklore editL e foeu el sginer amp l e foeu l ors de la tana edit On January 31st there was the tradition of l e foeu el sginer January s out a custom very similar to that celebrated on February 2 known as l e foeu l ors de la tana the bear is out from its den Both celebrated the end of winter and the imminent arrival of spring The two customs involved walking around the town and inviting people to leave their house under any pretext like throwing a large piece of wood or a pot down the stairs When people ran outside to check what had happened they were greeted with the shout l e foeu el sginer or l e foeu l ors de la tana 10 Intraverser l ann edit Intraverser l en or intraverser l ann literally to put the year across also celebrated New Year s Eve during the night young people used to build barricades of gates doors benches agricultural tools logs stairs sledges and carts in the main square or in front of the church to prevent the old year from leaving The next morning the owners of the stolen objects had to go and recover them dismantling the barricade and metaphorically opening up the way to the new year 11 The gabinat edit On January 6 the custom of the gabinat is still celebrated today especially in Tirano in the Upper Valley and in the nearby Poschiavo Valley Switzerland Traditionally children would suddenly enter other people s homes shouting gabinat and in exchange they would receive a handful of cooked chestnuts some sweets or dried fruit The adults competed to precede the other in exclaiming gabinat when they met Whoever lost had to pay a pledge often the prize at stake was established in advance and the gabinat thus became the object of bets In order to win various strategies were adopted stalking disguises fake illnesses Nowadays it is only the children who do the gabinat and they usually show up to relatives friends and local shopkeepers The custom of the gabinat most likely comes from Bavaria Germany where Christmas New Year s Eve and Epiphany were indicated with the name Geb nacht Gaben means gifts and Nacht means night therefore night of gifts on the eve of these holidays the poor young people sang in front of the doors of the wealthiest in the hope to receive a gift 12 Anda a ciama l erba Let s go call the grass edit On the first of March throughout Valtellina and Valchiavenna people used to go to ciama l erba call the grass The children walked in the meadows making noise with cowbells to call the grass and awaken it from the winter slumber 13 This custom also served to propitiate a bountiful harvest 14 The Carneval vegg Old Carnival edit In the village of Grosio the Carnival is celebrated unlike the rest of Valtellina on the first Sunday of Lent according to the Ambrosian calendar in force before the Gregorian reform For this reason it is called Carneval vegg Old Carnival In the past it was customary for people to gather all together to dance sing eat and drink Being an agricultural ritual that represents the death of winter and the beginning of summer Carnival officially began on January 17 with the parade of the blessed cattle adorned with coloured ribbons It included numerous bonfires with which the paths were cleared to facilitate the passage of farmers their agricultural vehicles and their livestock A straw puppet with horns on his head representing the Carnival was also burnt 12 Nowadays the districts of the towns challenge each other to the sound of allegorical floats and the parade is attended by traditional masks eight characters representing traditions past events and moments of everyday life the Old Carnival a bearded and joyful man dressed as a mountaineer and Lean Lent a thin woman dressed in a humble way with a dark handkerchief on her head and an empty basket on her arm represent the transition from the glories of Carnival to Lenten fasts They are accompanied by the Paralytic the Bear Handler a funny shepherd who dances and rolls on the ground named Toni an old man with the butt covered with Nutella a hunchbacked mountaineer whose hump is filled with chestnut urchins and Bernarda a man disguised as a baby put in a pannier supported by a fake old woman and accompanied by another man dressed as a farmer 15 During the Carnival period manzoli or manzola white flour and buckwheat pancakes mixed with slices of cheese and cut into the shape of a calf were eaten to propitiate the abundance of livestock parts 12 The Carneval di Mat Carnival of the fools edit In Bormio during the day of the Carnival of the Fools the Mayor hands over his power to the Podesta di Mat Podesta of the Fools to Harlequin and to the Compagnia di Mat the Company of the Fools who give a public reading of the gossip and complaints that citizens have deposited in a box placed in the square of the Kuerc The festival also includes a parade along the streets of the historic centre led by the Harlequins of the Company of Mat with children escorting the Podesta 16 nbsp Cheers to the year 1930 written on one of the doors of Mazzo di Valtellina La coscrizione the conscription edit The conscription was originally a celebration on the occasion of the call to the draft the tradition seems to have originated in the second half of the nineteenth century with the unification of Italy when young men were forced to serve a period in the Army The feast of the conscripts of eighteen year olds was therefore a kind of rite of passage to adulthood Today is simply the celebration of the coming of age The duration of the celebration varied from town to town in Grosio the conscription could last up to ten days during which the boys and girls met in bars taverns or in places specially set up for the purpose The conscripts had the task of embroidering on the tricolour flag the symbol and possibly the motto that the group had chosen On the walls of the villages it was customary to write W LA CLASSE cheers to the year followed by the year of birth nowadays conscripts hang a tricolour banner with the same wording and the names or nicknames of the members of the group 17 18 The feast of the conscripts is particularly felt in Alta Valtellina in Grosio for a week the conscripts meet in a club to celebrate and travel through the streets of the town in a car from which the flag decorated with the symbol of the group waves On New Year s Eve amid fireworks and the noise of whistles cowbells motorcycles and tractors they entrust the flag to conscripts one year younger after having it blessed in church 19 Each group chooses different coloured sweatshirts and decorates the tricolour with a symbol that represents the group s motto or identity 20 nbsp One of the religious floats carried on the shoulders by the Pasquali of Bormio traditionally dressed I Pasquali edit The Pasquali are allegorical floats with a religious theme prepared during the winter by the various districts of Bormio Buglio Combo Dossiglio Dossorovina and Maggiore for Easter Pasqua meaning Easter in Italian On Easter day the Pasquali are carried on the shoulders of the boys and are accompanied by a band folk groups women seniors and children who embellish the parade with flowers and other small crafts Everyone wears the traditional red black and white costume After having followed the entire Via Roma and upon arrival at the Piazza del Kuerc the main square of the town the ancient bell called Bajona starts tolling and a jury draws up a ranking of the best Pasquali At the end of the parade the floats are exhibited in Piazza del Kuerc where they stay until Easter Monday 21 Il Palio delle Contrade edit Born in 1963 the Palio delle Contrade sees the inhabitants of the five districts of Bormio compete against each other divided according to age in downhill cross country combined and relay races The cross country race takes place through the streets of the town covered with snow for the purpose 22 Wines editSee also Lombardia wine nbsp Vineyards in ValtellinaIn Valtellina wines are produced mainly from Chiavennasca the local name of Nebbiolo grape variety with other minor varieties such as Rossola nera permitted up to 20 for the Denominazione di origine controllata DOC and 10 for the Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita DOCG Grapes are limited to a harvest yield of 12 tonnes per hectare The finished wine must be aged for at least two years prior to release three years if a Riserva bottling with a minimum alcohol level of at least 11 Yields for the DOCG wines are further restricted to a maximum of 8 tonnes ha While the aging requirements are the same as the DOC the minimum alcohol level for the DOCG wine is 12 23 The best known villages for red wines are Grumello Sassella Inferno Valgella and Maroggia The village names are normally indicated on the label Additionally there is an Amarone style DOCG wine called Sforzato Sfursat In the lower part of the Val Poschiavo the valley in the Graubunden canton of Switzerland that descends into the Valtellina at Tirano similar wines are produced but under different regulations such as appellation and the allowance of sugar addition or chaptalization Tourism editOne of the most notable tourist attractions of the area is the Bernina Line Trenino Rosso little red train of the Rhaetian Railway which links the town of Tirano in the Valtellina with St Moritz in Graubunden Switzerland via the Bernina Pass The mountains of the Valtellina offer numerous possibilities for sport activities skiing and winter sports in Bormio Aprica or Livigno hiking and biking in the same locations and especially in the secondary valleys and rock climbing in the Val Masino The Rupe Magna a unique large rock with more than 5 000 engraved figures dating from between the 4th and 1st millennia BCE can be found at the Rock Engraving Park in Grosio nbsp Bernina Line of the Rhaetian Railway nbsp Tirano Bernina Line train station nbsp Rock Engraving Park Grosio Rupe Magna nbsp Rock Engraving Park Grosio Rupe MagnaNotable people editBorn in Valtellina Achille Compagnoni Mountaineer Deborah Compagnoni Alpine skier Marco De Gasperi Athlete Skyrunner Arianna Fontana Short track speed skater Fabio Meraldi Ski mountaineer Giuseppe Piazzi Priest mathematician and astronomer Luigi Torelli Patriot Giulio Tremonti Politician See also editValtellina disasterReferences editFurther reading F Pieth Bundnergeschichte 1982 ISBN 3 85894 002 X Valtellina in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Graubunden s religious history permanent dead link PDF 3 95 MB in German Swiss History in German accessed 16 January 2012 Valtellina murders in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland a b Paull John 2014 Ernesto Genoni Australia s pioneer of biodynamic agriculture Journal of Organics 1 1 57 81 Ray Moseley The Last Days of Mussolini 176 Clark Martin 2014 Mussolini Routledge pp 319 320 ISBN 978 1 317 89840 5 Moseley Ray 2004 Mussolini The Last 600 Days of Il Duce Taylor Trade Publications p 168 ISBN 978 1 58979 095 7 Moseley Ray 2004 Mussolini The Last 600 Days of Il Duce Taylor Trade Publications p 269 ISBN 978 1 58979 095 7 Calendario di Valtellina e Valchiavenna 2 febbraio Paesi di Valtellina e Valchiavenna Calendario di Valtellina e Valchiavenna 31 dicembre Paesi di Valtellina e Valchiavenna a b c Antonioli Gabriele Bracchi Remo 1995 Dizionario etimologico grosino Sondrio Ramponi Arti Grafiche Calendario di Valtellina e Valchiavenna 1 marzo Paesi di Valtellina e Valchiavenna Associazione Amatia 2013 Mazzo tra storia tradizione e leggenda Sondrio Tipografia Bettini Antonioli Gabriele Ghilotti Paolo Mambretti Ivan Rinaldi Giacomo 2018 Grosio Cinquemila anni di storia Villa di Tirano Tipografia Poletti Carneval di Mat Valtellina it I Coscritti Grosio info dead link Cosa sai della festa dei coscritti Calendario Valtellinese Celebrato l anno dei coscritti del 2001 Prima la Valtellina it 6 January 2020 Coscritti si ma responsabili Dopo la festa fanno pulizia La Provincia di Sondrio it 15 January 2015 Pasqua a Bormio In compagnia dei Pasquali Bormio eu 10 May 2021 Palio delle contrade Bormio info Archived from the original on 2010 03 30 Retrieved 2022 06 06 P Saunders Wine Label Language pg 143 Firefly Books 2004 ISBN 1 55297 720 XExternal links editAn extensive history of the Valtellina area Tourist information46 10 N 9 52 E 46 167 N 9 867 E 46 167 9 867 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Valtellina amp oldid 1204257242, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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