San Giusto Canavese is a young municipality whose territory historically belonged to the neighboring municipality of
San Giorgio. Before gaining independence, San Giusto was indeed a
hamlet of San Giorgio with the name "
Gerbo Grande di San Giorgio." In fact, its inhabitants are still traditionally called "gerbolini" (they are also nicknamed with the popular Piedmontese term 'Tirapere,' meaning 'Stone-throwers' in Italian). After at least two centuries of disputes and battles against the neighboring municipality, fought with slings and stones, on 9 October 1778, King
Vittorio Amedeo III issued the decree of dismemberment, and Gerbo Grande thus gained independence from San Giorgio with the name "
Cantone del Gerbo Grande." Just under a year later, on 3 September 1779, King Vittorio Amedeo III, with a royal decree, recognized the new municipality with the name
San Giusto, chosen by the inhabitants as their protector. In 1862, the name of the municipality was definitively changed to
San Giusto Canavese by the decree of King
Vittorio Emanuele II to avoid confusion with other "San Giusto" locations in Italy. The contrast between the communities of San Giorgio and Gerbo Grande was rooted both in political-religious aspects and within the class struggle since the people of San Giusto were mainly farmers, traders, and small landowners, while the people of San Giorgio were represented by nobles (Biandrate lineage) and artisans from the castle district of Biandrate. The aspiration of the Gerbolini (inhabitants of Gerbo, or 'L Zerb) was to achieve both the independence of their municipality and their parish. To achieve this, they carried out a bloody and sometimes violent struggle that divided the two communities (San Giusto and San Giorgio), which are only 3 kilometers apart, and gave the Sangiustesi the nickname 'Tirapere,' based on the type of "weapons" they used in battle. After achieving administrative independence, even while paying hefty taxes to the Kingdom of Sardinia (money collected through a collection among Sangiustesi household heads), the struggle continued fiercely to obtain their own parish and priest. The reasons were linked to the fact that the authorities of San Giorgio prevented San Giusto from having a priest in order to channel the faithful (and their offerings) to their own parish. The community of San Giusto, now more numerous than San Giorgio, had been working for about fifty years to build a new Baroque church (the
Church of Saints Fabiano and Sebastiano), but the bishop, under pressure from the noble Sangiorgesi, did not recognize it. An emblematic episode of this rivalry, which actually occurred in 1750 during religious processions for the blessing of the fields, was the theft of the crucifix from the church of San Giorgio, carried out by a group of Gerbolini on the border of the two towns. This gesture created a strong impression throughout Canavese and gave rise to the nickname '
Rubacristi' (Christ-thieves) for the inhabitants of San Giusto. The Gerbolini responded to the nickname given to them by the people of San Giorgio by calling them '
Mangia-Cristiani' (Christian-eaters), referring to the case of "Jena," a butcher sentenced to death for numerous crimes and accused of making sausages with the flesh of his young victims. After heated discussions, well-documented in the records of the time, the curia granted a priest to San Giusto, and the relic was returned, but the nicknames remained. Scant and incomplete are the traces of the inhabitants of the plain of San Giusto before the 18th century. The oldest artifact found in the area is a trough for watering animals, bearing the date 1606. Its sole value lies in the fact that it has been in the same location for many decades, testifying to the connection between the Sangiustesi and the work of farmers and breeders, still significantly present in the social life of the village today. Regarding the first evidence of human settlement in the area, there is a document mentioned, drafted by the counts of Biandrate in 1174. It attests to the bequest by Guido di Biandrate of a
Mansio and the corresponding lands and adjacent woods located in the region called Ruspaglie (southeast of San Giusto Canavese) to the Knights Templar. == Society ==