St. Hubertus
St. Hubertus is a historic chapel nestled in the Val Gardena valley of South Tyrol, northern Italy, dedicated to the patron saint of hunters and foresters. Set against the dramatic backdrop of the Dolomites, the chapel represents centuries of Alpine religious tradition and the deep bond between mountain communities and their faith. Its remote setting at the edge of forests and pastures makes it one of the most evocative pilgrimage points in the Ladin cultural heartland.
At a glance
- Type
- Alpine chapel
- Period
- Medieval, with later Baroque additions
- Style
- Alpine vernacular / Baroque interior
- Location
- Val Gardena, Province of South Tyrol, Italy
- Coordinates
- 46.5716° N, 11.9313° E
Overview
St. Hubertus chapel stands in Val Gardena, one of the principal Dolomite valleys and a stronghold of Ladin culture and language. The chapel is dedicated to Saint Hubertus (Hubert of Liège), the eighth-century Frankish nobleman who, according to tradition, experienced a conversion vision while hunting on Good Friday. In Alpine communities across the Alps, chapels bearing his name traditionally served as blessing points for hunters setting out into the mountains each season.
History
The origins of the cult of St. Hubertus in South Tyrol date to the early medieval period, when Frankish ecclesiastical influence spread through the Alpine passes. Local chapels dedicated to the saint multiplied from the 11th century onwards, built by noble hunting families and mountain communities seeking divine protection. The Val Gardena chapel was likely established during the late medieval period when the valley was under the lordship of the counts of Tyrol, and was subsequently enriched with Baroque decorative elements during the 17th and 18th centuries, a pattern common throughout the region. Annual blessings of hunting dogs and rifles, held on the feast day of St. Hubertus (3 November), remain a living tradition at the site.
What you see
The chapel presents a modest exterior typical of Alpine sacred architecture: whitewashed walls, a small bell tower, and a steep-pitched roof designed to shed heavy snowfall. The interior, though small, features painted devotional imagery and wooden furnishings characteristic of South Tyrolean craftsmanship, a tradition for which Val Gardena is internationally renowned. The setting itself is part of the experience — the chapel sits at the meeting point of forest and open Alpine meadow, framed by the jagged silhouettes of the Dolomite peaks that surround the valley.
Cultural significance
Val Gardena is one of the few surviving strongholds of the Ladin language and culture, and its sacred sites are inseparable from Ladin identity. Chapels like St. Hubertus serve not merely as places of worship but as landmarks of a distinct Alpine civilization that predates both Italian and Austrian national boundaries. The feast of St. Hubertus continues to be observed with traditional mountain pageantry, connecting present-day communities to medieval ritual.
Practical information
- Location
- Val Gardena, Province of Bolzano / South Tyrol, 39047
- Access
- Accessible on foot via local hiking trails; check local mountain guides for current path conditions
- Hours
- Generally open during daylight hours; key feast day is 3 November (feast of St. Hubertus)
- Admission
- Free
Getting there
Val Gardena is reached by car via the SS242 road from Bolzano (approximately 40 km). The SAD bus company operates regular services from Bolzano railway station into the valley, stopping at Ortisei, Santa Cristina, and Selva. From any of these villages local hiking paths lead through the valley. The nearest railway station is Chiusa / Klausen on the Brenner line, with connecting bus services.
