Cadenabbia
is the ashore cluster of Griante. The origins of its name
are bound to different etymological traditions, one of which
says that it comes from the contraction of Ca dei Nauli
(boatmens house). As a matter of facts, in old times,
on that very spot there was an Inn to which all boatmen coming
from Como or Lecco to deliver their goods to the along shore
villages used to stop and taste the excellent local wine:
the Griantino. At the beginning of the 19th century, G.Gianella
turned it into the very first hotel for tourists and visitors
on this area, which immediately became well known among travellers
all over the world. For a long time Cadenabbia has been one
of the favoured places for the British and a large community
lived here. For that reason it was built the Anglican Church,
the very first one on Italian soil, which was consecrated
in 1891.
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Griante
The
village lies on a wide plateau overlooking the lake, at about
50 mt. above lake level. It faces the promontory of Bellagio
with the dolomite massifs of the Grigna and Grignetta in the
background, which gives the opportunity to enjoy unique landscape
views both for beauty and charm.
For
many centuries Griante Gave hospitality to a number of great
visitors. It would be enough to quote Giuseppe Verdi, who
in the quietness of villa Margherita wrote the most beautiful
airs of his La Traviata. Stendhal, who dedicated many pages
of his masterpiece La Chartreuse de Parme to describe the
village and its environment. The enchanting beauty of the
place rapped Longfellow, the American poet, who wrote many
poems about this place.
Here
came the British Queen Victoria, the German Kaiser William
II, Nicolas II of Russia, the Prince of Piedmont (the last
Italian King), Pius XI, until he was elected Pope, and the
German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, who used to call Griante:
my second hometown.
Many
pages of modern history have been written in the peaceful
atmosphere of Griante, the village the Celts called Griant
- Tir, that is to say: The land of the sun.
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