Este, Veneto

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Este
Comune
Comune di Este
Este Castle
Este Castle
Este is located in Italy
Este
Este
Location of Este in Italy
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Country Italy
Region Veneto
Province / Metropolitan city Padua (PD)
Government
 • Mayor Giancarlo Piva (PD)
Area
 • Total 32.7 km2 (12.6 sq mi)
Population (30 April 2009)
 • Total 16,963
 • Density 520/km2 (1,300/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Atestini
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 35042
Dialing code 0429
Patron saint Santa Tecla
Website Official website

Este (/ˈɛst/; Italian: [ˈɛste]) is a town and comune of the Province of Padua, in the Veneto region of northern Italy. It is situated at the foot of the Euganei Hills. The town is a centre for farming, crafts and industry worthy of note.

History

Este had given its name to the Este culture, a proto-historic culture existing from the late Italian Bronze Age (10th/9th century BC, proto-venetic phase) to the Roman period (1st century BC) and which was located in the present territory of Veneto.

Giovanni Battista Tiepolo, St. Thecla Liberating the City of Este from the Plague, 1758-59.

During the Iron Age Este was a major center of the Veneti who left a number of inscriptions on funerary and votive objects.

During the late 3rd century BC, Este peacefully fell under the sway of Rome and became a Roman colony. When the much of northern Italy was granted Roman citizenship in 49 BC, the citizens of Este were inscribed into the Roman tribe of Romilia. Following the battle of Actium, Emperor Augustus settled soldiers of the V and XI legions in territory of Este comprising Galzignano, Teolo, Lonigo, Noventa Vicentina, Trecenta, Pernumia, Monselice, and Cinto Euganeo.

In Late Antiquity, Este was devastated and reduced to a rural village because of barbarian invasions, especially that of Attila. It arose again only after the 10th century, when Azzo II d'Este built a castle there and named himself and his family after it, establishing the House of Este. The House of Este would hold the city until 1240, when it moved its capital to Ferrara. Este, meanwhile, was conquered twice by Ezzelino da Romano III, in 1238 and 1249. It was disputed during the 14th century by the Scaligeri, the Carraresi and the Visconti, until it surrendered spontaneously to Venice in 1405.

Under the Republic of Venice, Este went through a period of economic growth, interrupted only by the plague of 1630.

After the fall of the Republic in 1797 and the Napoleonic Wars, the town, with the whole Veneto region, became part of the Austrian Empire, until it was annexed by the Kingdom of Italy as a consequence of the Third Independence War of 1866.

Main sights

Villa Contarini

Villa Contarini, also known as Vigna Contarena, is a villa veneta. It was built in the 17th century by Giorgio Contarini, a Senator of the Republic of Venice and a descendant of the prestigious branch of “degli Scrigni”.
Vigna Contarena can boast some of the best frescoes among all the ville venete of the area. The main frescoes are placed in the eastern side of the villa, more exactly in the ballroom, in the Stanzette Affrescate (« Frescoed Chambers ») and in the Sala dei Fauni (« Chamber of the Fauns »).
The villa is surrounded by a large park where it is possible to admire several ancient trees and an Enclosed Garden (Hortus Secretus or Hortus Conclusus).

Villa Contarini, also known as « Vigna Contarena »

Twin towns

See also

External links