Centallo

Eventually, the Bolleri family, connected to the King of France, established themselves in Centallo, surviving until the extinction of their lineage.

In the 16th century, as conflicts intensified in the northern Italian territory between the French and the Spanish, Centallo began to emerge as an important area.

The sieges brought attention to the area, with Torquato Tasso, the author of "Jerusalem Delivered", recounting the "liberation" of Centallo by Spanish forces coming to the aid of trapped Cuneo and Fossano, which were against the French.

[3] The flag appears "red, with a blue belt charged with three heraldic golden roses, studded with the same and placed in a band.

With generous and spontaneous altruistic fervor, the entire population came to the aid of the girls residing in the local orphanage, which had been destroyed by a bombing with high-explosive devices dropped by an allied aircraft.

In an extraordinary display of solidarity, numerous volunteers tirelessly dug with their bare hands through the rubble to extract the victims and the severely injured survivors, carrying them on foot to the local hospital, despite the threat of air raid alarms and curfew.

Additionally, during the school term, there is a bus service connecting to the Hotel Management Institute in Dronero (line 188).