Ancient Prisons (Le Vecchie Prigioni)
The Ancient Prisons (Le Vecchie Prigioni) of San Vito al Tagliamento are a historic carceral building constructed in the first half of the 19th century on Via Filippini, in the historic centre of this small Friulian town in the Province of Pordenone. Built under Austrian rule on a site with an older civic history, the building has since been converted into a cultural venue and museum, preserving and interpreting the memory of incarceration in this corner of northeast Italy.
At a glance
- Type
- Historic prison building, now cultural venue and museum
- Period
- Built in the first half of the 19th century; site previously occupied as attested by a 1761 map
- Style
- Austrian-period civic architecture of the Friuli region
- Location
- Via Filippini 1, 33078 San Vito al Tagliamento (PN), Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy
- Coordinates
- 45.9135 N, 12.8524 E
- Current use
- Cultural venue, museum, and community space
Overview
The building of the Ancient Prisons stands on Via Filippini in the historic centre of San Vito al Tagliamento, a medieval town on the Tagliamento river that served as an important administrative and commercial centre in the Friuli region. The structure was raised in the early 1800s on a site that a 1761 civic map records as having been occupied by a coterie of blacksmiths and farriers, between Via Filippini and Via Falcon Vial. Its construction reflects the Austrian administration’s organisation of public order infrastructure across the Lombard-Venetian Kingdom following the Congress of Vienna in 1815.
History
The prisons were built during the period of Austrian rule over Friuli, when the Habsburg administration undertook systematic construction of civil and judicial infrastructure across the Lombard-Venetian Kingdom. The site, as documented from 1761, had a longer history of artisanal use before being repurposed for detention. The building functioned as the town’s main place of incarceration for the better part of two centuries, accumulating a social history that is today interpreted through the cultural programming housed within its walls.
What you see
The exterior of the building presents the sober, functional aesthetic typical of Austrian-period civic construction in northeast Italy, with solid masonry and regulated openings. Inside, the conversion to a museum and cultural venue has preserved structural elements that speak to the building’s carceral past, while the programming explores local history, memory, and civil society. The surrounding Via Filippini area is part of San Vito al Tagliamento’s medieval and early-modern historic centre.
Cultural significance
The conversion of former places of detention into cultural spaces is a widespread heritage strategy across Italy, transforming sites of social exclusion into places of civic engagement and historical reflection. Le Vecchie Prigioni participates in this tradition, making visible the history of justice and punishment in a community that has witnessed the full arc of Italian unification, World Wars, and post-war reconstruction. For the Friuli region, marked by the catastrophic 1976 earthquake and subsequent rebuilding, such places of memory carry additional resonance.
Practical information
Address: Via Filippini 1, 33078 San Vito al Tagliamento (PN), Friuli Venezia Giulia, Italy.
Opening hours: Check current hours via the official Facebook page or local tourism office, as cultural programming varies by season.
Getting there
San Vito al Tagliamento is located approximately 60 km northeast of Venice and 30 km east of Pordenone. By car, take the A28 motorway from Portogruaro or Pordenone and exit at San Vito al Tagliamento. By rail, the town is served by the Venice-Udine regional line; the station is a short walk from the historic centre. Connections from Pordenone by regional train take approximately 20 minutes.
