Annone Veneto

Anona Veneto is a municipality with 4011 inhabitants ( 31 December 2012) in the region of Veneto, Province of Venice. Adjacent communities are Meduna di Livenza (TV), Motta di Livenza (TV), Portogruaro, Pramaggiore, Pravisdomini (PN) and Santo Stino di Livenza.

History

Custard apple, Annona as Veneto was called up to the connection to the Kingdom of Italy, was named probably from the Latin ' ad nonum lapidem ' because it was the Postumia, which was built from 148 BC road from Genoa to Aquileia, and there nine Roman miles of Oderzo. In the south of the municipality of the Via Annia, which ran parallel to the coast and the Adriatic via Padua, Altinum and Concordia happened association with Aquileia.

In 42 BC, the Iulia Concordia, the area between Livenza and Tagliamento, as an area for veterans goods was provided. From this period there were modest remains of three farming villages.

Custard was first mentioned in the copy of a document from the year 762. In this document Lombard nobles forgave goods for the foundation of the monastery of Sesto al Reghena. About the Municipality Lorenzaga it was thus dependent on the abbey and the Patriarch of Aquileia.

Despite the fierce fighting between Guelphs and Ghibellines, the village received a solid economic basis, so that only the patriarch Bertold it took three times as a seat for his court days.

1420 was the Patriarchate of Venice, the region has remained in his hand until 1797. In protracted negotiations that succeeded the community, to break away from Lorenzaga and 1622 the municipality of San Vitale martire was recognized. Custard apple belonged to Gastaldia of Medusa. This Venice rigorously protected his local forest resources, which were for the shipbuilding industry of the utmost importance.

In the era of the French and Austrian rule from 1797 to 1866, the economic and social situation of the late Venetian rule persisted. Beginning of the 20th century was the town hall, while the old casoni gradually disappeared. The last of them were demolished in the 1950s. Many Annonesen migrated to the long period of economic decline from the Veneto region in the second half of the 19th century. After the First World War, the forests were cut down to Loncon, to make way for agriculture.

Even after the Second World War, the emigration continued again, a wave that ended only in the 1970s.

The municipality is now the craft developed, industrial jobs have been created in the near Pordenone. But the wine and tourism could be strengthened.

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