VALTELLINA

vältāl-lēˈnä, Alpine valley of the upper Adda River, c.75 mi (120 km) long, in Lombardy, N Italy, extending from Lake Como to the Stelvio Pass. The main towns are Sondrio and Tirano. The valley is a fertile agricultural region, known for its wine. With the adjoining counties of Bormio and Chiavenna, the Valtellina was seized (1512) from Milan by the Grisons, which subsequently ruled the district—its richest and most populous possession—as a subject territory. By the start of the Thirty Years War (1618–48), the stoutly Roman Catholic inhabitants of the Valtellina were ready for revolt against the Grisons, the majority of whose population was Protestant; in 1620 they rose and massacred their Protestant masters. These internal troubles quickly assumed European proportions, because the valley commanded the passages between Austria and the Grisons and Venice and Spanish-held Milan. The Valtellina became the pawn of the participants in the Thirty Years War and the victim of their complicated intrigues. The massacre of 1620 led to a series of military interventions by Spain, Austria, the pope, the Catholic party of the Grisons, France, and the Protestant majority of the Grisons (largely financed by Venice). The valley was sacked in turn by these armies and in 1627 passed under Spanish control; transportation of Spanish reinforcements through the Valtellina into Germany contributed to several victories by the imperial party, notably at Nördlingen (1634). When France fully entered the war on the Protestant side, a French army was again dispatched (1635) to the Valtellina. Henri de Rohan conquered the valley but failed to restore it to the full control of his Grisons allies. Incensed, the Grisons Protestants, led by the preacher-soldier George Jenatsch, secretly negotiated with the Catholic powers, who promised to restore the Valtellina to the Grisons if the French were expelled. However, Rohan, ill and weakly supported by the French government, had to evacuate the Grisons in 1637. By the Peace of Milan (1639) the Grisons fully recovered the Valtellina; it remained in the Grisons until 1797, when it was incorporated into the Cisalpine Republic. The Valtellina passed (1815) to the Lombardo-Venetian kingdom (held by Austria), and later it passed (1859) to Italy.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Valtellina
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books on: Valtellina  - 102 results

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...and menhirs in the Valcamonica-Valtellina area, Alpine Italy ANGELO FOSSATI 93 Valcamonica-Valtellina and its engraved boulders 93...petroglyph complex of Valcamonica and Valtellina 93 The maps: a short...
...13. Calvinism in Lombardy and the Valtellina 222...226 The Valtellina 230...The "Holy Massacre" in the Valtellina 391...
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journal articles on: Valtellina  - 2 results

 
 
...across the northernmost border of Italys Valtellina (Lombardy), mainly in the 1850s, and...by the Italian occupation of the Valtellina in 1859, which brought military conscription...the Poschiavo Valley and neighbouring Valtellina. Between 1512 and 1797 the Valtellina...
...on the spot enabled Zurich to foster congregations in the Valtellina, the Valchiavenna, and the Valbregaglia, whose doctrinal reliability...up and attacked Protestant churches and communities in the Valtellina, killing hundreds. Many survived only by fleeing the area...


 

newspaper articles on: Valtellina  - 7 results

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...NORTH East student Sandra Hyslop has won a double kayak gold at the Wild Water Racing European Junior Championships in Valtellina, Italy. The 17-year-old from Hexham beat her nearest Czech rival by a staggering 11.4 seconds in a nineminute race. Hyslop...
...are planted on the mountainsides of the Valtellina south and north of Tirano, but the Alta Valtellina, where we were headed, is too cold...Livigno and the other resorts in the Valtellina, the high season is Christmas and February...
...year-old Sandra Hyslop from Hexham won an individual silver and team gold medal at the championships, held on the River Adda in Valtellina - taking her medal tally in world and European events to nine. Wild water racing is paddling a kayak as fast as possible down...
...thought that I skied it before anyone else. One bonus to emerge from the world championships is that key resorts in the Alta Valtellina region, including Bormio, Santa Caterina, Livigno and Oga-Valdidentro, have agreed that one lift pass will cover their impressive...
...centuries to place you deep in the heart of medieval and Renaissance Italy. From the beech and pine forests at the base of the Valtellina valley, we took the San Marco pass over the Orobie mountains. Why? Because they were there. Its a 6,500ft climb that snakes...
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encyclopedia articles on: Valtellina  - 11 results

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VALTELLINA valtal-le na, Alpine valley of the upper Adda River...the adjoining counties of Bormio and Chiavenna , the Valtellina was seized (1512) from Milan by the Grisons , which...1618 48), the stoutly Roman Catholic inhabitants of the Valtellina were ready for revolt against the Grisons, the majority...
...central Alps, N Italy, near the Swiss and Austrian borders. It is crossed by the highest road in the Alps, connecting the Valtellina with the upper Adige River valley. The road, extending c.30 mi (50 km) from Bormio to Trafoi, was begun in 1820 by the Austrians...
TIRANO tera no, town (1991 pop. 8,919), Lombardy, N Italy, on the Adda River, in the Valtellina , near the Swiss border. It is an agricultural and silk market. Nearby is the Church of the Madonna di Tirano (1503), a popular...
...of Sondrio prov., Lombardy, N Italy, on the Mallero River near its confluence with the Adda River. The chief town of the Valtellina , it is an agricultural market and an industrial and tourist center. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University...
...slope to the rich, irrigated Po valley in the south. The Valtellina valley is in the northeast. Rice, cereals, forage, flax...Brescia (1428) and Cremona (1529) were lost to Venice and the Valtellina valley was taken by the Grisons (1512). After the end (mid-16th...
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