Pieve di Soligo is one of the oldest rural agglomerations of the Quartier del Piave. Archaeological finds indicate a probable settlement already in Roman times. The historic center offers numerous architectural highlights worthy of interest, such as the seventeenth-century Villa Chisini-Daniotti, the coeval Palazzo Ciassi and Morona with the baroque church of the Madonna del Carmine, the nineteenth-century Balbi Valier palace and the adjacent Borgo Stolfi. Reaching Piazza Vittorio Emanuele II you can see the nineteenth-century Loggia dei Grani, while the main square overlook the "Battistella-Moccia" municipal library, the attached Municipal Auditorium "Battistella-Moccia" and the restored building of the Hotel Stella d'Oro. The imposing cathedral dedicated to Santa Maria Assunta, dates back to the early 1900s, and houses an altarpiece by Francesco da Milano (1540), a "crucifixion" by Giovanni Possamai, a "Virgin with the Child Jesus" by Marta Sammartini and the tomb of Giuseppe Toniolo. Near the cemetery, at the end of the Cal Santa, the path of the Via Crucis, stands the oratory of Calvario, a simple 16th century chapel with a beautiful crucifix and some stucco decorations.
