Albogasio is a fraction of the geographical territory of Valsolda, in the province of Como, located west of the village on the border with Switzerland, along the road that runs along the Swiss town of Lugano to the Gandria. Albogasio was an ancient town of Milan.
During Spanish rule, the town hall, like everyone else in the valley, had limited powers given to the practical needs of everyday life had meant that most of the public functions were managed jointly by the General Council of the Valsolda. In 1786 he entered Albogasio for five years to be part of the Province of Como, and then keep changing the references administration in 1791, in 1797 and in 1798. In 1799, he counted 270 souls, and it was finally brought under Como in 1801. Suppressed the parish since 1797 the arrival of the French revolutionary armies, the valley soon found its administrative unit through the merger of the municipalities into a single entity that the proclamation of the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy in 1805 appear to have 1044 inhabitants. in 1807, the municipality was expanded further by annexing Top of the finding of a royal decree of Napoleon, although the latter place he had not historically links with the rest. The return of the Austrians, however, meant the dissolution of all marriages, and Albogasio opened more than a century of separate administration. In 1853, the town turned out to be populated by 353 souls, which rose to 373 in 1871. In 1921 he recorded 623 residents. It was the Fascist regime in 1928 to decide definitively abolished the common restoring the ancient unity of the valley, creating the City of Valsolda.
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