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Bagni di Craveggia

Coordinates: 46°11′54″N 8°32′22″E / 46.19833°N 8.53944°E / 46.19833; 8.53944
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Bagni di Craveggia
Bagni di Craveggia as seen from the Swiss border
Bagni di Craveggia as seen from the Swiss border
Bagni di Craveggia is located in Italy
Bagni di Craveggia
Bagni di Craveggia
Location of Bagni di Craveggia in Italy
Coordinates: 46°11′54″N 8°32′22″E / 46.19833°N 8.53944°E / 46.19833; 8.53944
CountryItaly
Region Piedmont
ProvinceVerbano-Cusio-Ossola (VB)
ComuneCraveggia
Elevation
986 m (3,235 ft)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
28852
Dialing code(+39) 0324

Bagni di Craveggia is a frazione of the municipality of Craveggia, in Piedmont, northern Italy. It is located in the Onsernone Valley at 986 m (3,235 ft), on the border of Switzerland. Road access is through Spruga, a village in the municipality of Onsernone, which lies across the Isorno river. It owes its name to a source of thermal water at 28 °C (82 °F).

History

Early mentions

Bagni di Craveggia was mentioned for the first time indirectly in the phrase "flumen de aqua calida" (warm water flow) on 11 January 1299 on the occasion of a land cession to the Locarnese Orelli family of recorded in Toceno.[1] Obviously, the thermal springs had been known in the region for a long time. The first direct mention can be found in a document from Craveggia from 1352, which speaks of the healing properties of water in rachitic and lymphatic diseases.[2] Another mention followed in 1406.[3]

Territorial changes

For centuries, Bagni di Craveggia belonged to the Comune di Onsernone, which dates back to the High Middle Ages and has been a federal subject area (Ennetbergische Vogteien) since the late Middle Ages. From this community in the farthest part of Valle Onsernone, limited pasture and corresponding passage rights to the municipality of Craveggia have been granted since 1406. B. the right of felling in the forests still the sovereignty (confirmed in the contract of the two municipalities of 31 October 1767).[4]

In 1806/1807, however, the furthest valley was ceded to the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy. The definitive Italian-Swiss border treaty was drawn up in the chapel of Acquacalda in 1807 (Convenzione d’Acquacalda, including the final settlement of the claims of the Italian community of Dissimo, which today belongs to the community of Re in Valle Vigezzo).[5]

Thermal hotel and World War II

In 1819, a six-story hotel with thermal facilities was built at the thermal spring belonging to the municipality of Craveggia. Although it was the only significant thermal spring in the area, inconvenient access slowed down the development of the thermal resort. The thermal guests, including those from Italy, usually traveled via Locarno in Switzerland to Comologno in an eight-hour carriage ride before they had to cover the last three to four kilometers through Spruga with their luggage on mules or on foot on a mule track. The extension of the road from Comologno to the thermal baths, which the Italian municipality of Craveggia was striving for, only met with limited hearing from the Ticino authorities in the 1930s, when the footpath was upgraded to a fourth-class road.[6]. Until today, the road is only publicly accessible to Spruga.

Towards the end of World War II, Bagni di Craveggia belonged to the partisan republic of Ossola. On 18 and 19 October 1944, the battle of the Bagni di Craveggia took place here, a border incident between German-Italian fascists, who were pursuing fleeing partisans, and the Swiss Army.

In the Winter of Terror, an avalanche fell from the north (Swiss side) on the Bagni and almost completely destroyed it; only the basement of the bath building and the slightly higher chapel remained. Further damage occurred on the occasion of the storm of 1978. After an Italian hydropower project that had not been implemented,[7] two new pools (one with river water and one with thermal water) and two new tubs (refillable with thermal water) were opened on 1 August 2015.[8]

References

  1. ^ Paolo Norsa (Hrsg.): Invito alle Valle Vigezzo. Dante Giovannacci Editore, Domodossola, 1970, S. 134, zu Primärdokument: pergameno n. 9, Vol. I, dell’Archivio comunale di Toceno.
  2. ^ Raffaele Fattalini: L’Ossola e il Sempionen nei diari di viaggio. In: Antonio Pagani (Hrsg.): Terra d’Ossola. Lions Club, Domodossola, 2005, S. 255.
  3. ^ Rocco Ragazzoni: Analisi ed osservazioni sulle acque termali di Craveggia. Miglio, Novara 1823, S. 13; Giacomo Gubetta: Craveggia: Comune della Valle Vigezzo (Ossola) sue memorie antiche e moderne. Porta, Domodossola 1891, S. 124.
  4. ^ Lindoro Regolatti: Il Comune di Onsernone: Ordinamento civile delle cinque antiche squadre. Mazzuconi, Lugano 1934, S. 13.
  5. ^ Schweizerische Eidgenossenschaft: Repertorium der Abschiede der eidgenössischen Tagsatzungen vom Jahre 1803 bis Ende des Jahres 1813 oder während des Zeitraums, da die mediationsmässige Bundesverfassung Geltung hatte. Carl Rätzer, Bern, 1842, S. 182.
  6. ^ Angelo Del Boca: Il mio Novecento. Neri Pozza, Vicenza 2008, ISBN 978-88-545-0271-0, S. 14–18.
  7. ^ Interpellation Abate von 2007; NZZ vom 18. November 2010: Die Bäder von Craveggia im Onsernone-Tal werden renoviert: Renaissance am Ende der Welt
  8. ^ Website Ticinonews vom 2. August 2015: Un successo di cooperazione transfrontaliera Archived 2015-08-12 at the Wayback Machine; Zeitung La Stampa vom 2. Dezember 2014: Alleanza tra Italia e Svizzera per il futuro dei Bagni di Craveggia.

Media related to Bagni di Craveggia at Wikimedia Commons