Castelnuovo del Garda


Castelnuovo del Garda is an Italian comune, in the Province of Verona, in Veneto, on a couple of morainic hills few kilometers south-east from Lake Garda. Verona is about 20 km to the east, Venice is 140 km east and Milan 140 km west.
Castelnuovo del Garda has a short beach on the lake, between the municipalities of Peschiera del Garda and Lazise. The comune borders the following municipalities: Bussolengo, Lazise, Peschiera del Garda, Sona, and Valeggio sul Mincio.
Gardaland, the biggest amusement park in Italy, is expanding mainly within the Castelnuovo municipality, close to Lake Garda shores.

History

From few archaeological rests found on the top of the main hill, probably Castelnuovo del Garda was already inhabited during the prehistorical age.
During the Roman period, it was first known as Beneventum, and after renamed Quadrivium which literally means 4 roads, or crossroad. Indeed, its location was strategical being at the crossroad between the Via Gallica, and a connection with the Via Claudia Augusta.
In the 12th century, Quadrivium has been destroyed by Frederick Barbarossa. Consequentially rebuilt as a fortify town, Quadrivium was renamed Castrum Novum, and the name has remained unchanged with the Italian version Castelnuovo.
During the centuries, Castelnuovo passed under different political controls, from the Lord of Verona, the Lord of Milano, the Venetian Republic, the Austrian empire, and eventually becoming part of the Regno d'Italia with the third Italian independence war and the consequential Armistice of Cormons, in the 1866.
Only in 1970, Castelnuovo took its actual name Castelnuovo del Garda, to highlight its location close to the lake Garda shores.

The Castelnuovo Massacre – 11 April 1848

On 11 April 1848 Castelnuovo del Garda was almost totally destroyed and burned by the Austrian empire army, during the first Italian independence war. That day, 400 men of the fought against 3000 Austrian soldiers, which consequentially burned the city killing around 89 local citizens as reprisal for the revolutionary actions that were taking place in the region.
The Austrian army was headed by the field marshal Joseph Radetzky, who was serving in Verona, and the commander Whillerm Thurn. The Italian Volontari had being sent by the major Luciano Manara and commanded by Agostino Noaro.

Main Historical Sites

Events

Twin towns