In the marvelous setting of the hills of Lower Monferrato, surrounded by a charming village, lies this residence with an important past, where Napoleon signed, in 1797, the peace treaty that put an end to the war between the Republic of Genoa and the first French Republic .
The property is a historic residence recognized by the Ministry for Cultural Heritage and Activities.
Its origins date back to the 15th-16th century. In 1711 it was the home of the castellan Giovanni Giacomo Paltro. At the end of the 19th century, on the arch of the portico under the palace there was the date 1462, which most likely refers to restoration and expansion works. Following the Treaty of Utrecht, the French armies of Napoleon arrived here too and, on 5 June 1797, he signed peace with the Republic of Genoa in the palace. The Italian garden rests on a large terrace supported by ancient retaining walls and was designed in the first half of the 20th century by Giuseppe Roda from Turin, one of the most successful landscape architects in Piedmont and Lombardy of the period.--df139572b198ddfaea2cfedf02f273ab!