
The name "Soiano"
comes from the latin "Solis Ianua" meaning "Gateway
to the Sun" (Porta del Sole). Soiano is located in the hills
of Valtenesi and allows visitors to enjoy the atmosphere of the village,
its hospitality, events, culture and entertainment.
HISTORY
Some remains from the Bronze Age (stilts in peat-bogs of Chizzoline) testify
to the presence of prehistoric man; marble inscriptions have been found
dating back to Roman times and the suffix "ano" is clearly of
Roman origin.
In 899 Hun populations destroyed many Roman monuments and buildings including
a temple to Jove. The Castle was built after this invasion and battlements
and walls were built in the upper villages of Valtenesi.
The Castle became the focus of the local community: both
as defence and for peaceful meetings.
Generally representatives of the local communities of Chizzoline and Soiano
met to approve laws, settle disputes and appoint administrators. In the
Middle Ages Soiano was administered by the Bishop of Verona, following
a donation by Federico I in 1134.
The first religious settlement was probably around 1300 by the Franciscan
order which founded the convent of San Rocco, not far
from Soiano, on the road to Padenghe.
In 1427, this and other villages in Valtenesi became part of the Venetian
Republic. In 1735, fearing the advance of the Savoy armies, the
village closed off the Castle. From 1928 to 1947 the village became part
of Padenghe. The parish is still part of the diocese of Verona, whilst
the Castle returned to the village authority. The community makes wine,
oil and cereals. On August 15, the pageant of San Rocco
takes place. On the last Sunday of September the patron saint S. Michele
Arcangelo is celebrated.
DON'T MISS IT
The Castle was built in the tenth century to defend against
the invading Huns. It is located above the village at the end of a tree-lined
avenue. In the Middle Ages it was a Ghibellina fortress contested by Brescia
and Verona.
The outer walls are polygonal with a square tower in a trapezoid layout.
Access is from the west over the bridge, next to the pedestrians entrance
which is now walled up. Slits above the drawbridge can be seen above the
entrances. The manor is on the right of the entrance, raised and transformed
into a bell-tower.
A second archway was used for defence. At the beginning of the seventeenth
century the tower had two bells, one large and one small, to notify the
community of important events.
The Parish Church of S. Michele, built in the sixteenth
century, contains an organ built by Antonio Franchino di Montichiari in
1694: originally above the main entrance, it was moved to the right at
the beginning of the nineteenth century.
It has a gold-leafed wooden structure win baroque style. The altar is
made of marble, in baroque style, and was inaugurated in 1790. Behind
the altar, on the far wall of the apse, the oil painting on canvas is
by Andrea Bertanza.
In Chizzoline: the Church of S. Carlo is in Lombard style,
and was built in 1610 in honour of S. Carlo Borromeo, on the site where
he is supposed to have stopped to talk to the crowds. The seventeenth
century altar has sixteenth century statues either side, taken from the
S. Rocco convent. The oil painting on canvas above the altar is by Andrea
Bertanza. The Chapel of S.Elisabetta is private property:
it has a Romanesque structure and was built using pre-existing walls.
The chapel has recently been renovated. It contains the apse of the original
church at the centre of the old monastery.