Site overview

The Pozzo Clara forms part of the Parco Internazionale Geominerario di Raibl at Cave del Predil, the former lead and zinc mining complex in the Friuli Venezia Giulia Alps, situated ten kilometres south of Tarvisio in the province of Udine. Known historically as the Miniera di Raibl, the site exploited lead and zinc ores — primarily sphalerite (blenda) and galena — in Triassic dolomitic limestones of the Monte Re massif. Documentary evidence of extraction dates to 1320, when Duke Frederick of Habsburg granted a mining concession to a consortium of local miners.

The mine grew through phases of Habsburg state and private ownership and became one of the most important lead and zinc mines in Europe. Pozzo Clara served as a principal extraction shaft; in 1898 the first hydroelectric power station at Cave del Predil was constructed specifically to supply electricity to the winding engine of Pozzo Clara. At its peak in the 1940s and 1950s the mine employed 1,148 workers.

The underground system eventually comprised more than 130 kilometres of galleries distributed across 19 levels, reaching 520 metres below the level of the village. The mine closed on 30 June 1991, not due to ore exhaustion — reserves of over 3 million tonnes had been confirmed — but because extraction could not compete economically with imported metals. Following closure, the site was converted into the Parco Internazionale Geominerario, an educational and heritage ecomuseum offering guided tours by electric train through some 1,200 metres of accessible galleries.

The site lies in a narrow Alpine valley at Cave del Predil, where steep slopes and clustered settlement frame a compact but clearly legible historic mining complex.

Map

Map markers and directions links are provided for location reference only and do not indicate public access or permission to enter a site.
No site photograph is currently available. Images will be added as field visits are carried out.

History

The locality of Cave del Predil, situated at 900 metres above sea level between Monte Re, Monte Cinque Punte, and the Lago di Raibl in the Valcanale, owes its existence entirely to the mining of lead and zinc from the adjacent Monte Re. Exploitation of the ore deposits is believed to date from pre-Roman times; the mineral veins were worked in Phoenician and Roman antiquity. The first written documentary evidence is a concession granted in 1320 by Duke Frederick I of Habsburg to a consortium of miners in the Tarvisio area.

The deposits consist principally of sulphide mineralisation — sphalerite, galena, pyrite, and marcasite — in a gangue of dolomite, calcite, and baryte, in Triassic dolomitic limestones at contact with Upper Permian limestones. Through the medieval and early modern period the mine operated with varying fortunes under both public and private management. In 1456 the Bishop of Bamberg granted Osvaldo Raibl the right of extraction; for many centuries thereafter the mine was administered by the Rechbach family.

In 1759 Raibl and its mine passed into the possession of the Habsburgs. Towards the end of the eighteenth century, one portion of the mine came under direct Imperial government management — designated Raibl I — employing 186 workers within a year and developing industrialised extraction methods. The private portion, designated Raibl II, continued in separate management successively under the Struggl family, the Schnablegger family, and then the counts Henckel von Donnersmarck, who purchased the private portion in 1871.

In 1883 the population of Cave del Predil stood at 479 inhabitants, with miners commuting from surrounding villages. At the close of the nineteenth century the mine was enriched by technological transformation. In 1898 the first hydroelectric power station was constructed at Cave del Predil — powered by the local watercourse — specifically to supply electricity to the winding engine of the principal extraction shaft, Pozzo Clara; the village of Cave del Predil was among the first in the region to benefit from domestic electric lighting as a consequence.

In January 1910 a mining disaster occurred when a gallery wall collapsed and water from the overlying lake penetrated the mine, causing the village hospital to subside and sink and killing seven people. A monument was erected to commemorate the victims. During the First World War, the mine's principal long drainage gallery — 4,877 metres in length, excavated in the late nineteenth century to drain the deepest working levels at 240 metres below the village level, and crossing into what is now Slovenian territory — was converted into a military transit route.

In 1917 it was equipped with a narrow-gauge railway capable of transporting 170 tonnes of material and 600 soldiers per day, permitting Austro-Hungarian forces to move unseen toward the front at Caporetto. In the weeks before the Battle of Caporetto, approximately 270,000 troops and 22,000 train movements passed through the gallery. Following the First World War, the Treaties of Saint-Germain and Rapallo transferred the Tarvisio area, including the mine, to Italy.

The historic toponym Raibl was Italianised as Cave del Predil. In the post-war period, the mine was reorganised under the Società Anonima Miniere Cave del Predil. Operations intensified through the interwar period and reached their workforce peak in the 1940s and 1950s, when 1,148 employees were engaged and the gallery network had extended to over 110 kilometres.

From 1953 a period of crisis set in. The Società Mineraria del Predil (Raibl), successor to the post-war company, transferred management to the Società Mineraria Metallurgica di Pertusola in 1956. In 1963 the concession passed to the Azienda Mineraria Metallurgica Italiana S.p.A. (AMMI), a state-controlled company.

In 1965 the Regione Friuli Venezia Giulia became the owner of the mine. In 1979 management of the deposit was delegated to Samim S.p.A. (Società italiana miniere), a company within the ENI group. A 1988 operating convention was extended to 30 June 1991.

By the end of operations, the underground system comprised more than 130 kilometres of horizontal galleries distributed across 19 levels descending to 520 metres below the level of the village, and over 150 kilometres of total gallery if all developments are included. The mine was confirmed to hold proven reserves in excess of 3 million tonnes of ore at closure. Despite these reserves, the Regione Friuli Venezia Giulia and ENI (the effective manager through Samim) declared the mine uneconomical given competition from imported metals.

In January 1991 it was announced that the Region would not renew the concession beyond June 1991. Miners occupied Pozzo Clara for 17 days in protest, but an agreement signed on 22 February 1991 — providing for environmental remediation, museum conversion of parts of the gallery system, and an industrial metallurgical facility managed by Gruppo Cividale — ended the occupation. The mine closed on 30 June 1991.

Of the commitments made in the February 1991 agreement, the museum conversion was subsequently realised. The former mine became the Parco Internazionale Geominerario di Raibl, a publicly accessible heritage ecomuseum. The visitor circuit traverses 1,200 metres of accessible galleries by electric train, including working chambers, mineralised faults, the Camerone di Santa Barbara, and the Pozzo Layer with its winding gear still operational.

An associated documentary museum, the Miniera Lab, housed in the former mine offices building, and a military history museum were established in the same complex. The mine archive was preserved at the Archivio di Stato di Trieste under the designation Archivio Raibl — Società Mineraria del Predil. The closure of the mine marked a severe demographic crisis for Cave del Predil, with the population declining from 2,100 in 1968 to approximately 400.

Timeline

1320
Legislation

First documented mining concession at Raibl

Duke Frederick I of Habsburg granted a mining concession at Raibl to a consortium of miners from the Tarvisio area, providing the first written documentary evidence of organised extraction at the site.
1759
Legislation

Mine passes into Habsburg possession

In 1759 the village of Raibl and its mine became part of the Habsburg domain. The state portion of the mine was subsequently developed under direct Imperial administration as Raibl I, with a rapid expansion of the workforce.
1871
Legislation

Counts Henckel von Donnersmarck acquire private portion of mine

In 1871 the private portion of the Raibl mine (Raibl II) was purchased by the counts Henckel von Donnersmarck, following earlier management by the Struggl and Schnablegger families.
1898
Construction

First hydroelectric power station built; Pozzo Clara electrified

In 1898 the first hydroelectric power station at Cave del Predil was constructed to supply electricity to the winding engine of Pozzo Clara, the principal extraction shaft. Cave del Predil was among the first settlements in the region to receive domestic electric lighting.
1910
Operation

Mine flooding disaster; hospital destroyed, seven deaths

On 8 January 1910 a gallery wall collapsed, allowing water from the overlying lake to flood the mine. The inflow caused the village hospital to subside and sink in the hours that followed, killing seven people. A memorial monument was subsequently erected.
1917
Operation

Mine gallery converted to military transit route for Battle of Caporetto

In 1917 the principal drainage gallery — 4,877 metres long, crossing into present-day Slovenia — was equipped with a narrow-gauge railway. In the weeks before the Battle of Caporetto, approximately 270,000 Austro-Hungarian troops and 22,000 train movements passed through the gallery unseen by Italian observers.
1919
Legislation

Mine transferred to Italy; Raibl renamed Cave del Predil

Under the Treaties of Saint-Germain and Rapallo following the First World War, the Tarvisio area including the mine was transferred to Italy. The historic toponym Raibl was Italianised as Cave del Predil. The mine passed to Italian management under the Società Anonima Miniere Cave del Predil.
1940–1950
Operation

Peak workforce of 1,148 employees; gallery network exceeds 110 kilometres

In the 1940s and 1950s the mine reached its maximum workforce of 1,148 employees. The gallery network extended to over 110 kilometres distributed across 19 extraction levels reaching 520 metres below the level of the village.
1953
Operation

Start of prolonged economic crisis

From 1953 a period of crisis began from which the mine could not recover, leading to a succession of ownership and management changes over the following decades.
1956
Legislation

Management transferred to Società Mineraria Metallurgica di Pertusola

In 1956 the Società Mineraria del Predil (Raibl) transferred management of the mine to the Società Mineraria Metallurgica di Pertusola.
1963
Legislation

Concession transferred to AMMI S.p.A.

In 1963 the mining concession passed to the Azienda Mineraria Metallurgica Italiana S.p.A. (AMMI), a state-controlled company. This was contested at the time, with competing regional political and industrial interests favouring continued private management under Pertusola.
1965
Legislation

Regione Friuli Venezia Giulia becomes mine owner

In 1965 the Regione Friuli Venezia Giulia became the proprietor of the mine. The Region then granted management concessions to successive operating companies.
1979
Legislation

Management delegated to Samim S.p.A. (ENI group)

In 1979 the management of the Cave del Predil deposit was delegated to Samim S.p.A. (Società italiana miniere), a company within the ENI group. Samim proposed restructuring extraction according to modern criteria and concentrating smelting in a single facility.
1991
Closure

Miners' occupation of Pozzo Clara ends; closure agreement signed

Following the announcement that the mine would close, miners occupied Pozzo Clara for 17 days. An agreement signed on 22 February 1991 provided for environmental remediation, conversion of part of the gallery system into a museum, and an industrial facility to be managed by Gruppo Cividale. The occupation ended after 17 days.
1991
Closure

Mine closed definitively on 30 June 1991

The Miniera di Cave del Predil closed on 30 June 1991. The closure was attributed to the uneconomical nature of extraction relative to competition from imported metals, not to exhaustion of the ore body, which was confirmed to hold reserves exceeding 3 million tonnes.
1991
Heritage

Conversion to Parco Internazionale Geominerario di Raibl

Following closure, the mine was converted into the Parco Internazionale Geominerario di Raibl, a publicly accessible heritage ecomuseum. The visitor circuit traverses 1,200 metres of accessible galleries by electric train, including working chambers, mineralised faults, the Camerone di Santa Barbara, and Pozzo Layer with original winding gear. A documentary museum (Miniera Lab) was established in the former mine offices building.

Sources and records

Italian Wikipedia: Miniera di Cave del Predil
Consiglio regionale del Friuli Venezia Giulia, exhibition catalogue: Storia della Miniera di Raibl di Cave del Predil
Musei Tarvisio, Parco Internazionale Geominerario di Raibl, official museum description
Italiadascoprire.net, Le Cave del Predil — local history and ownership chronology
Nonsolocarnia.info, Storia di Cave del Predil – Raibl, parts 1 and 3 — detailed historical account using Tessitori and Zucchini sources
Friuli.vimado.it, Storia della Miniera del Predil — ownership chronology
Mindat.org, Raibl Mines, Cave del Predil — geological and mineralogical record; exact closure date
Explorer FVG, Miniera Cave del Predil — visitor description and 1991 closure account
Miniere d'Italia (Google Sites), Raibl-Cave del Predil: l'occupazione dei pozzi contro la chiusura della miniera — 1991 protest account using Tessitori source
InHeritage, Archivio Raibl — Società Mineraria del Predil — corporate archive description
Touring Club Italiano, Polo museale di Cave del Predil — museum description
Discoveralpigiulie.eu, Parco Geominerario di Cave del Predil — visitor circuit description
Girofvg.com, Visite guidate alla ex miniera di Cave del Predil e polo museale
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