Frisanco Explained

Frisanco
Official Name:Comune di Frisanco
Coordinates:46.2167°N 56°W
Region:Friuli-Venezia Giulia
Province: (PN)
Frazioni:Poffabro, Casasola, Colvere
Mayor:Sandro Rovedo
Area Total Km2:61
Population Total:702
Population As Of:31 December 2008[1]
Population Demonym:Frisanchini
Elevation M:500
Postal Code:33080
Area Code:0427

Frisanco (Friulian: Frisanc) is a town and Italian: [[comune]] (municipality) in the Regional decentralization entity of Pordenone in the region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia, north-eastern Italy. Its Italian: [[frazione]] (borough) of Poffabro is one of Italian: [[I Borghi più belli d'Italia]]|i=no ("The most beautiful villages of Italy").[2]

History

As early as 1492 a church stood in the center of the village.

A fire swept through the mountain village in 1606, destroying much of the town including all of the town's public and religious records. In the archives of the Curia of Udine there are the documents from 1648 to 1650 regarding a trial of the inquisition against witches who were said to meet for sabbats in the meadow of Malgustât, behind Mt. Raut. In one document it is written that the, "village of Frisanco in particular is said to be the witches’ nest".

On 28 September 1810 by Napoleonic decree Frisanco became the administrative center of the Val Colvera which included annexing Poffabro.

Main sights

Culture

As of 2007, there is an annual circus arts festival, Brocante, based in Frisanco. There are shows in Frisanco and neighboring villages. The festival takes place in late July and lasts for four days, ending with a parade through the older parts of Frisanco.

Villages

Colvere (Colvuri in Friulian) lies in the Val Colvera, and takes its name from the stream. It has five borghi (boroughs), Gobbo and Cudili on the west bank of the Colvera, Fornasatte, Polàz and Mènis on the east bank. In the 17th and 18th centuries, the west bank was mostly settled by people from Casasola, and from Poffabro on the west bank.

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Data from Istat
  2. Web site: Friuli Venezia Giulia. 31 July 2023. it.