Arzergrande
Arzergrande is a farming municipality in the Saccisica, the area of the lower Padua plain between the Brenta river and the Venice...
Updated 12 July 2026
The story
The story of Arzergrande
In the Saccisica, a land of reclamation
Arzergrande belongs to the Saccisica, the section of the low Padua plain between the course of the Brenta and the edges of the Venice lagoon, a territory whose present appearance is owed to centuries of hydraulic engineering. Canals, embankments and pumping stations still regulate water flow today in an area historically prone to flooding, while fields of cereals, vegetables and forage cover almost the entire municipal territory. It is a flat landscape, shaped by human hands more than by nature, where the boundary between land and water remains a constant matter of balance, carefully managed by the land reclamation consortia operating in the area.
A name born from the Brenta's embankment
The place name Arzergrande comes from the dialect word «arzere», meaning embankment, and refers to the bank of one of the branches through which the Brenta river once reached the sea, identified by scholars as the watercourse known in Roman times as the Medoacus Minor. The town therefore literally grew up around a hydraulic structure, in a territory where the presence of water has always shaped human settlement, agriculture and communication routes. This direct link between name and geography is a feature common to many towns in the Saccisica, where place names still tell, with great precision, the hydraulic history of the land.
Two thousand years of history between the Romans and the Serenissima
Arzergrande's origins are very ancient: the territory was inhabited since the time of the Eneti, the ancient Venetic people, who established trade relations with the Romans, who in turn built major roads such as the Via Annia, the Via Postumia and the Via Popilia. In Roman times Arzergrande became a road, river and commercial hub of some importance, as shown by finds dating to the first century AD. In the Middle Ages the town was a Lombard centre, later passing under the Bishop of Padua and the Count of Piove di Sacco, experiencing the harsh lordship of Ezzelino III da Romano and coming under Carraresi rule, before entering, in 1405, the orbit of the Republic of Venice, which shaped its development for the following centuries.
The great twentieth-century reclamation
The most important chapter for understanding Arzergrande's present-day landscape is that of land reclamation, begun as early as the Benedictine era and continued by the Venetians, but only completed between the late nineteenth century and the post-war period, when comprehensive reclamation works permanently turned marshy areas into farmable land. This long process allowed agriculture, and consequently the local economy, to be reborn, laying the foundations for the rural landscape that characterises the municipality today. The land reclamation consortia operating in the area, heirs to this centuries-old tradition, continue to manage water in a territory that remains naturally vulnerable, but has been made productive by generations of collective work.
Countryside and lagoon within reach
Honestly, Arzergrande is today a modest-sized farming municipality, with no major monuments to point to, but with an interesting geographic position: it is close to Padua, reachable in a short time, and not far from the southern Venice lagoon and Chioggia, an ideal destination for those wanting to combine exploring the Saccisica countryside with a trip to the lagoon environment. The town's economic life remains tied to agriculture, with cereal and vegetable crops, while tourism, still limited, mostly involves cyclists riding the embankment roads or travellers seeking a quiet base between Padua and the coast.
Experiences not to miss
- Passeggiata o pedalata lungo gli argini del ramo storico del Brenta
- Walk or bike ride along the embankments of the Brenta's historic branch
Routes · Trovido Route