Cedegolo

Cedegolo
Sedégol
Comune
Comune di Cedegolo

Coat of arms
Cedegolo
Location of Cedegolo in Italy
Coordinates: 46°04′39″N 10°21′2″E / 46.07750°N 10.35056°E / 46.07750; 10.35056Coordinates: 46°04′39″N 10°21′2″E / 46.07750°N 10.35056°E / 46.07750; 10.35056
Country Italy
Region Lombardy
Province Brescia (BS)
Frazioni Grevo
Government
  Mayor Aurelia Milesi
Area
  Total 11.08 km2 (4.28 sq mi)
Population (30 June 2017)[1]
  Total 1,196
  Density 110/km2 (280/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Cedegolesi
Time zone UTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST) UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code 25051
Dialing code 0364
Patron saint St. Jerome
Saint day September 30
Website Official website

Cedegolo (Camunian: Sedégol) is an Italian comune of 1,258 inhabitants[1] in Val Camonica, province of Brescia, in Lombardy, northern Italy.

Geography

The village of Cedegolo is located in a narrow gorge formed by Oglio river, on its eastern side. It is crossed by two streams: the Val Gravagna, further north, and the Poia, to the south.

History

Center town of Cedegolo.

The comune of Cedegolo was created in 1797, at the fall of the Republic of Venice, but became a hamlet of Grevo in 1798. The bridge over the river Poglia (Pôya in eastern Lombard), in the center of the village, was completed in 1592.

From Cedegolo in July 1866 the fourth regiment of volunteers in Italy and the Second Battalion of bersaglieri moved to enter Austrian Trentino, through the Lake Arno.

Main sights

Bridge on stream Poia
  • Parish of Saint Jerome, from the early 17th century. The altar is by Pietro Ramus.

Culture

The skötöm are in camunian dialect nicknames, sometimes personal, elsewhere showing the characteristic features of a community. The one which characterize the people of Cedegolo is Lìca-tóncc'.

Cedegolo is one of the few toponyms which in Eastern Lombard requires the determinative article: el Sedegòl.

At least until the second half of the twentieth century the young men of Cedegolo followed the tradition of "tunà" (literally: to shoot) or "fa saltà le tòle" ("to make boxes jump") on the St. Jerome calendar day. It was a pretty dangerous activity involving controlled explosions of acetylene gas, prepared by mixing water with calcium carbide in a hole in the ground covered by a suitable container.

References

  1. 1 2 ISTAT Archived March 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine.



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