'Mestre' is a town in
Veneto, northern
Italy, a ''
frazione'' of the ''
comune'' of
Venice. Located on the mainland, together with the neighbouring
Marghera,
Chirignago,
Favaro Veneto and
Zelarino it includes c. 170,000 inhabitants of the ''comune'', the islands of Venice proper accounting for c. 90,000.
The city is connected to Venice by a large rail and road bridge, called ''Ponte della Libertà'' (Freedom Bridge).
Mestre is the largest city in Italy not to have the status of autonomous ''comune''.
History
According to a legend, Mestre was founded by Mesthles, a companion of the hero
Antenor, a fugitive from
Troy who founded
Padua. The true origins of the city are uncertain, although it is known that a Roman ''oppidum'' (fortress) existed in the place, which was destroyed by
Attila and probably rebuilt in the
10th century.
The first historical mention is from an
Imperial diploma by
Otto III, by which Rambald, count of Treviso, received a terrain in the area named Mestre. In
1152 a bull by
Pope Eugene III recognized the bishop of Treviso as lord of Mestre, citing the existence of the church of St. Lawrence, a castle and a port. In
1257 the bishops ceded it to
Alberico da Romano.
The port benefited of the economical growth of
Venice, constituting its main connection towards the Italian mainland. In 1274 a fire destroyed the castle, and the inhabitants moved to a location nearby, ''Castelnuovo'' (new Castle). No traces remain today of the old castle.
In the 14th century the
Scaliger family from Verona conquered Mestre and Treviso in
1323. The Venetians, fearing the excessive Veronese power in the mainland, conquered on
September 29 1337. An artificial channel was built to favour the goods transport.
The Venetian domination ended on
july 16 1797. In
1808 Mestre, following the French practice, constituted itself into a free commune. It remained such under the subsequent Austrian and Italian rules, receiving the title of city in 1923. Three years later, however, a Royal Decree annexed Mestre and some other neighbouring ''comuni'' (Chirignago, Zelarino and Favaro Veneto) to the ''comune'' of Venezia.
In the 1960s and 1970s Mestre experimented a huge demographic growth, spurred mainly by the construction of a huge industrial district in the nearby Marghera.
Main sights
★ Cathedral of St. Lawrence (17th century)
★ ''Palazzo da Re''
★ ''Torre dell'Orologio'' (Watchtower, 1108)
★ ''Palazzo
podestarile''
★ ''Provvedaria''