Lade eine App auf Deinem Smartphone-Store herunter, um die GPX-Tracks anzuzeigen.

Einige Apps, wie Komoot und Wikiloc, bieten eine (kostenpflichtige) Track-Navigator-Funktion.
Lade den GPX-Track der gewünschten Tour herunter.
Lade die Strecke* auf die App hoch und folge der Tour, orientiere Dich aber auch an den CAI-Wegweisern.
Vor einer Tour informiere Dich immer über das Wetter!
*GPX-Tracks sind nicht getestet worden.
close info
close info
close

Hike from Cuzzego to Cardezza

The Roman road, the Lossetti tower and the "bread road"

Nationalpark Val Grande

share pinterest share copy share https://www.itinerarium.it/reiseroute/151
Link copied to clipboard!
open info
length icon Streckenlänge:
5.4 Km
time icon Gehzeit:
1h45' zu Fuß
climb icon Höhenunterschied:
400 mt
height icon mind. und max. Höhenmeter:
225 mt - 475 mt
track ring icon Art der Tour:
Rundweg
surface icon Oberfläche:
steps - trail
panorama icon Panorama:
Roman road - historic architecture
coverage icon Netzvempfang:
groß
winter icon Im Winter:
ja
bike icon Mit dem Fahrrad:
nein

The ring itinerary goes from Cuzzego to Cardezza along the Roman road and from Cardezza to Cuzzego along the “bread road”.
There was a time when the Toce’s water came close to the mountains’ slopes with recurring floodings, so the roads and houses were built at a “safe” altitude, leaving the plain empty. The same was true for a paved road that, back in 196 A.D., used to connect Lake Maggiore with Ossola and Simplon. The road was built (or restored) by the Emperor Settimio Severo as stated by a plaque, which stands today in a monument just outside the center of Dresio. Such an important proof that it has been protected and kept intact, so much that it caused a modification of the railway track built in 1903.
Along this path the “minur” is met: a lists way used to carry the gneiss, extracted by the “picasass” (stone miners, in dialect), down towards the valley.
From the Roman road, the Lossetti tower is reached: a watchtower that was part of a larger system of fortifications, overseeing the means of communication that, in the Middle Age, directly connected Milan to Switzerland.
From the town of Cardezza it then reaches the Oratory of Sant’Antonio da Padova, going downwards to Cuzzego along the “bread road”: the path used to carry the bread, in the baskets, from Cuzzego’s oven to the houses of the inhabitant, after a ceremony with the blessing of the loaves.


go to map
zur Karte gehen
ITINERARIUM
shop
Mit Ihren Einkäufen unterstützen Sie das Projekt ITINERARIUM, das weiterhin die Geschichte unseres Territoriums, seine Schönheit, seine Geschichte und seine Kuriositäten erzählen wird, indem es alle Informationen frei zugänglich macht!
Zoom auf die Tour zoom track
navigation
BRING MICH ZUM
START (Parkplatz)