Lavina (Rezzo)


Lavina is a frazione of the municipality of Rezzo, in Liguria, northern Italy. Up to 1928 it was a self-standing comune.

Geography

The village of Lavina is located close to the Giara di Rezzo, mostly on its right banks, while the hamlet of Borghetto is on the opposite side of the creek. The former comune of Lavina also encompassed woodland and meadows on the surrounding mountain slopes, thus permitting some cattle breeding.
The area of Lavina is prone to landslides, which caused heavy damages both in the past and in recent years.

History

A first document referring to Lavina is of 1320 and mentions the parish church of Sant'Antonio Abate. The "Statuti di Lavina" were written in 1357, when the village was part of the Maro feud. Those statutes regulated several mattere like the use of pastures and waters, municipal and judicial offices and several aspects of property transferts. In 1455 Lavina was given by the House of Ventimiglia to the Lascaris, along with the rest of the valley, and so it passe under the control of the Contea di Tenda. Generally speaking Lavina followed the fate of Rezzo and of its valley, which was later absorbed by casa Savoia. The village was originally located in a place high on the river but it was destroyed by a landslide and had to be reconstructed in the present-day location. Between the 18th and 19th century, during the period defined by some historians as the French Regime, the comune of Lavina was united with the neighbouring comune of Cenova. Both the villages obtained their autonomy at the end of the First French Empire and maintained it until 1928. In that year they were both absorbed by the comune of Rezzo, so that the whole Giara valley was unified from the administrative point of view.

Relevant buildings

Three architects who worked in Liguria and Piedmont between the 16th and 17th centuries were born in Lavina: