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Mussolente

Mussolente
Comune
Comune di Mussolente
Mussolente is located in Italy
Mussolente
Mussolente
Location of Mussolente in Italy
Coordinates: 45°47′N 11°49′E / 45.783°N 11.817°E / 45.783; 11.817Coordinates: 45°47′N 11°49′E / 45.783°N 11.817°E / 45.783; 11.817
Country Italy
Region Veneto
Province / Metropolitan city Vicenza (VI)
Frazioni Casoni
Area
 • Total 15.36 km2 (5.93 sq mi)
Elevation 117 m (384 ft)
Population (31 December 2010)
 • Total 7,760
 • Density 510/km2 (1,300/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Misquilesi
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 36065
Dialing code 0424
Patron saint SS. Pietro e Paolo
Saint day 29 June
Website Official website

Mussolente is a town in the province of Vicenza, Veneto, Italy. It is north of SS248.

Mussolente consists of two distinct zones: a hilly area in the northern part and flatlands with an abundance of water in the southern part. For centuries, the hilly area to the north was dominant in the town's development. In the 2nd millennium BC it had been occupied by groups of shepherds and wool spinners. There is archeological evidence from the 6th and 5th centuries BC that a settled community of Venetic people had been established there. Beginning in the 3rd century BC, the area gradually came under Roman domination. The demonym "Misquilesi" for the locality's residents is thought to derive from the Roman period on the basis of the inscription on a Roman soldier's tomb found in nearby Borso del Grappa referring to the "paganis misquilen" ("Misquiline people"). The period of Roman colonization coincided with increasing settlement and agricultural use of the flatlands to the south.

With the fall of the Western Roman Empire and the subsequent Barbarian invasions, the flatlands were gradually abandoned as the inhabitants sought refuge in the hilly area which was more easily defended. By the middle of the 10th century AD the town was ruled by the prince-bishops of Belluno. In 1149, the Bishop of Belluno conferred the fief of Mussolente on Ezzelino I da Romano, and it remained in control of the Ezzelini family until their fall in 1260. It was then briefly under the control of Padua until 1262 when Treviso destroyed Mussolente's castle and took control of the town. In the early 14th century Mussolente's allegiance to the Scaligeri family made it a target of militias from other cities in the region who attacked and burnt down much of the town in 1320.

In 1339 Mussolente, along with the rest of the Trevisan territory, came under the dominion of the Republic of Venice. The town prospered under Venetian rule. The flatlands were cleared and returned to agricultural use with a village established in what is now the frazione Casoni di Mussolente. In the 1580s, several inhabitants of Mussolente were accused of Lutheran heresy and brought before the Inquisition in Belluno. Lorenzo Busnardo (1532–1598), described in the Inquisition documents as a "vagabond priest" from Mussolente, was accused of using chess games to lure people into seditious religious conversations. Busnardo (twice cleared of the charges) was one of the first Italian chess players to play at international level and to have his games published. With the fall of the Venetian Republic and the takeover of northern Italy by the Austrian Empire, Mussolente again went into a period of decline marked by poverty and significant emigration which continued through the first decades of the Kingdom of Italy.


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