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Zimella

Zimella è un comune della pianura veronese orientale, circa 35 chilometri a sud-est di Verona, composto da quattro frazioni: Zimel...

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Zimella è un comune della pianura veronese orientale, circa 35 chilometri a sud-est di Verona, composto da quattro frazioni: Zimella, Santo Stefano, sede del municipio, Volpino e Bonaldo, per un totale di circa 4.900 abitanti. Il territorio, interamente agricolo, custodisce tracce di insediamento che risalgono all'epoca romana, testimoniate da stele funerarie rinvenute nell'area della chiesa di Zimella. La storia del comune si lega però soprattutto al periodo della Repubblica di Venezia, quando queste terre, annesse nel 1405 e amministrate come parte del distretto del Dogato dipendente dal sestiere di Dorsoduro, videro l'insediamento di famiglie nobili veneziane che vi costruirono alcune ville, ancora oggi presenti nella frazione di Santo Stefano. Zimella resta oggi un comune agricolo tranquillo, dove la campagna della bassa veronese convive con un patrimonio storico discreto ma autentico.

Обновлено 12 июля 2026

Zimella 23°
Вск 34° 22°
Пнд 35° 22°
Втр 36° 22°
Срд 32° 23°

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История Zimella

A municipality of four hamlets

Zimella presents itself as a mosaic of four distinct hamlets: Zimella, which gives the municipality its name, Santo Stefano, seat of the town hall, and the smaller settlements of Volpino and Bonaldo, with a total of around 4,900 residents spread across an entirely flat territory in the eastern part of the province of Verona. This multi-centre structure, common to many municipalities of the lower Verona plain, reflects a history of small rural settlements that grew around their respective parish churches before being joined into a single municipal administration. The landscape linking the four hamlets is typical of the eastern Veneto plain: cultivated fields, straight roads and scattered rural buildings, with the centre of Santo Stefano today concentrating the main services.

Roman roots and the Republic of Venice

Zimella's history reaches back to Roman times, as shown by the funerary steles found during excavations near the church of Zimella, dating to the period following the Romanisation of the Veneto territories after the Battle of Actium in 31 BC, bearing inscriptions attributable to the Romilia tribe. After a brief period of Visconti and Carraresi rule, the territory was annexed in 1405 to the Republic of Venice, which decreed that these lands, included in the so-called Dogato district, report directly to the Dorsoduro sestiere. This direct link with Venice explains the presence in the territory of interesting noble villas, a sign of the interest Venetian patrician families took in this stretch of countryside.

The Venetian villas of Santo Stefano

The hamlet of Santo Stefano holds the municipality's most significant architectural heritage, with several historic villas, including Villa Cornaro, Villa Donà delle Rose and Villa Morosini, built by the Venetian noble families who administered these lands during the Republic of Venice. Not all of these residences are open to the public, nor do they enjoy the same fame as other, better-known Venetian villas in the area, but their presence clearly attests to Zimella's role as a site of land investment and residence for the Venetian patriciate between the 16th and 18th centuries. Anyone interested in rural Veneto architecture will find in this hamlet a good example of how the villa model spread even into minor agricultural settings.

Countryside of the eastern lower Verona plain

Beyond its historical heritage, Zimella remains a deeply agricultural municipality, with cereal and forage crops occupying most of the municipal territory in a flat landscape without significant relief. The local economy rests on farms of varying size, often family-run, complemented by a fabric of small crafts and trade serving the four hamlets. It is a representative setting of the eastern lower Verona plain, where the boundaries between one municipality and the next are often blurred and the cultivated countryside forms a continuum broken only by the small built-up centres and the provincial roads connecting them.

Zimella today

Daily life in Zimella is spread across the four hamlets, with Santo Stefano acting as the reference point for administrative and school services, while Zimella, Volpino and Bonaldo retain a more markedly rural identity, tied to their respective parish communities. There are no major tourist events or a single recognisable historic centre, but the combination of Roman traces, the Venetian villas of Santo Stefano and the surrounding countryside offers visitors an authentic picture of the eastern Verona plain, away from the busier circuits but rich in historical layers to discover at leisure.

Experiences not to miss

  • Admire the historic villas of Santo Stefano
  • Trace the Roman remains near the church of Zimella
  • Cycle between the four hamlets through cultivated fields
  • Discover farming life in the lower Verona plain
  • Visit the parish churches of Volpino and Bonaldo

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