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Gorizia

Gorizia (Italian pronunciation: [ɡoˈrittsja] ; Slovene: Gorica [ɡɔˈɾìːtsa]), colloquially stara Gorica 'old Gorizia'[3][4] to distinguish it from Nova Gorica (Standard Friulian: Gurize, Southeastern Friulian: Guriza; Bisiacco: Gorisia; German: Görz [ɡœʁts] ), is a town and comune (municipality) in northeastern Italy, in the autonomous region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia. It is located at the foot of the Julian Alps, bordering Slovenia. It is the capital of the Regional decentralization entity of Gorizia and is a local center of tourism, industry, and commerce. Since 1947, a twin town of Nova Gorica has developed on the other side of the modern-day Italy–Slovenia border. The region was subject to territorial dispute between Italy and Yugoslavia after World War II: after the new boundaries were established in 1947 and the old town was left to Italy, Nova Gorica was built on the Yugoslav side. The two towns constitute a conurbation, which also includes the Slovenian municipality of Šempeter-Vrtojba. Since May 2011, these three towns have been joined in a common trans-border metropolitan zone, administered by a joint administration board.[5]

Gorizia
Gorica (Slovene)
Gurize (Friulian)
Guriza (Eastern Friulian)
Gorisia (Venetian)
Comune di Gorizia
Občina Gorica
Comun di Gurize
The old part of Gorizia seen from the castle in August 2008
Location of Gorizia
Gorizia
Location of Gorizia in Friuli-Venezia Giulia
Gorizia
Gorizia (Friuli-Venezia Giulia)
Coordinates: 45°56′N 13°37′E / 45.933°N 13.617°E / 45.933; 13.617
CountryItaly
RegionFriuli-Venezia Giulia
ProvinceGorizia
FrazioniCastello, Lucinico (Ločnik), Oslavia (Oslavje), Piuma (Pevma), San Mauro (Šmaver), Sant'Andrea (Štandrež), Straccis (Stražišče), Vallone dell'Acqua, Gradiscutta, Piedimonte (Podgora)
Government
 • MayorRodolfo Ziberna (Forza Italia)
Area
 • Total41 km2 (16 sq mi)
Elevation
86 m (282 ft)
Population
 (November, 2022)[2]
 • Total33,584
 • Density820/km2 (2,100/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Goriziani (Italian)
Goričani (Slovene)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
34170
Dialing code0481
ISTAT code031007
Patron saintSaints Hilary and Tatian
Saint dayMarch 16
WebsiteOfficial website

The name of the town comes from the Slovene word gorica 'little mountain', which is a common toponym in Slovene-inhabited areas.[6]

History edit

Middle Ages edit

Originating as a watchtower or a prehistoric castle controlling the fords of the Isonzo River, Gorizia first emerged as a small village not far from the former Via Gemina, the Roman road linking Aquileia and Emona (modern Ljubljana). The name Gorizia was recorded for the first time in a document dated April 28, 1001, in which Holy Roman Emperor Otto III donated the castle and the village of Goriza to the Patriarch of Aquileia John II and to Count Verihen Eppenstein of Friuli. The document referred to Gorizia as "the village known as Goriza in the language of the Slavs" ("Villa quae Sclavorum lingua vocatur Goriza").

 
The medieval center of Gorizia

Count Meinhard of the Bavarian Meinhardiner noble lineage, with possessions around Lienz in Tyrol, is mentioned as early as 1107; as a vogt of the Patriarchate of Aquileia he was enfeoffed with large estates in the former March of Friuli, including the town of Gorizia, and as early as 1127 called himself Graf von Görz, Count of Gorizia. In the late 13th century, the House of Gorizia emerged as one of the most important noble houses in the Holy Roman Empire. The borders of the County changed frequently in the following three centuries due to frequent wars with Aquileia and other counties, and also to the subdivision of the territory in two main nuclei: one around the upper Drava river with the center in Lienz, the other around Gorizia itself. Between the 12th century and early 16th century, the town served as the political and administrative center of this essentially independent County of Gorizia, which at the height of its power comprised the territory of the present-day regions of Goriška, southeast Friuli, the Karst Plateau, central Istria, western Carinthia and East Tyrol, and the Windic March with Bela Krajina.

From the 11th century, the town had two different layers of development: the upper castle district and the village beneath it. The first played a political-administrative role and the second a rural-commercial role. The name of the central square, known to this day in both languages as Travnik or Traunig ("meadow", in Slovene), testifies to this period.

In the late 15th century, the city rights were expanded to the lower town.

 
The Leopold Gate, built in the late 17th century in honor of Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor

Habsburg rule edit

In 1500, the dynasty of the Counts of Gorizia died out and their County passed to Austrian Habsburg rule, after a short occupation by the Republic of Venice in the years 1508 and 1509. Under Habsburg dominion, the town spread out at the foot of the castle. Many settlers from northern Italy moved there and started their commerce. Gorizia developed into a multi-ethnic town, in which Friulian, Venetian, German, and Slovene were spoken.

In mid-16th century, Gorizia emerged as a center of Protestant Reformation, which was spreading from the neighboring northeastern regions of Carniola and Carinthia. The prominent Slovene Protestant preacher Primož Trubar also visited and preached in the town. By the end of the century, however, the Catholic Counter-Reformation had gained force in Gorizia, led by the local dean Johann Tautscher, who later became bishop of Ljubljana. Tautscher was also instrumental in bringing the Jesuit order to the town, which played a role in the education and cultural life in Gorizia thereafter.

Gorizia was at first part of the County of Gorizia and since 1754, the capital of the Princely County of Gorizia and Gradisca. In ecclesiastical matters, after the suppression of the Patriarchate of Aquileia in 1751, the Archdiocese of Gorizia was established as its legal successor on the territory of the Habsburg monarchy. Gorizia thus emerged as a Roman Catholic religious center. The archdiocese of Gorizia covers a large territory, extending to the Drava River to the north and the Kolpa to the east, with the dioceses of Trieste, Trento, Como and Pedena subject to the authority of the archbishops of Gorizia. A new town quarter developed around the Cathedral where many treasures from the Basilica of Aquileia were transferred. Many new villas were built conveying to the town the typical late Baroque appearance, which characterized it up to World War I. A synagogue was built within the town walls, too, which was another example of Gorizia's relatively tolerant multi-ethnic nature.

During the Napoleonic Wars, Gorizia was incorporated to the French Illyrian Provinces between 1809 and 1813. After the restoration of the Austrian rule, the Gorizia and its county were incorporated in the administrative unit known as the Kingdom of Illyria. During this period, Gorizia emerged as a popular summer residence of the Austrian nobility, and became known as the "Austrian Nice". Members of the former French ruling Bourbon family, deposed by the July Revolution of 1830, also settled in the town, including the last Bourbon monarch Charles X who spent his last years in Gorizia. Unlike in most neighboring areas, the revolutionary spring of nations of 1848 passed almost unnoticed in Gorizia, thus reaffirming its reputation of a calm and loyal provincial town.

 
The Strassoldo Palace, residence of the Bourbon family in exile
 
Gorizia at the beginning of the 20th century (Austria-Hungary)

In 1849, the County of Gorizia was included in the Austrian Littoral, along with Trieste and Istria. In 1861, the territory was reorganized as the Princely County of Gorizia and Gradisca and granted regional autonomy. At that time, Gorizia was a multi-ethnic town; Italian and Venetian, Slovene, Friulian, and German were all spoken in the town center, while in the suburbs Slovene and Friulian prevailed. Although some tensions between the Italian-Friulian and the Slovene population existed, the town continued to maintain a relatively tolerant climate in which both Slovene and Italian-Friulian cultures flourished.

On the eve of World War I, Gorizia had around 31,000 inhabitants and was the third-largest city in the Austrian Littoral, following Trieste and Pula (Pola). Another 14,000 people lived in the suburbs, making it one of the most populous urban agglomerations in the Alpe-Adria area, ahead of Klagenfurt, Maribor, Salzburg, Bozen or Trento. Within the city limits, about 48% of the population spoke Italian or Friulian as their first language, while 35% were Slovene speakers. In the suburbs, the Slovene speaking population prevailed, with 77% versus 21% Italian/Friulian speakers.

World War I edit

Gorizia was not on the frontline during the first 10 months of World War I, but the first Gorizian victim of the war occurred as early as August 10, 1914, when Countess Lucy Christalnigg was shot by Landsturmer guards while driving her car on a mission for the Austrian Red Cross.[7]

Italy entered World War I on the Allied side and conflict with Austria-Hungary began on May 24, 1915. The hills west of Gorizia soon became the scene of fierce battles between the Italian and Austro-Hungarian armies. The town itself was seriously damaged and most of its inhabitants had been evacuated by early 1916. The Italian Army occupied Gorizia during the Sixth Battle of the Isonzo in August 1916, with the front line moving to the eastern outskirts of the town. With the Battle of Caporetto in October and November 1917, when the Central Powers pushed the Italians back to the Piave River, the town returned to Austro-Hungarian control.

After the Battle of Caporetto, Gorizia became the focus of three competing political camps: the unified Slovene nationalist parties that demanded a semi-independent Yugoslav state under the House of Habsburg, the Friulian conservatives and Christian Socialists who demanded a separate and autonomous Eastern Friuli within an Austrian confederation, and the underground Italian irredentist movement working for unification with Italy. At the end of World War I, in late October 1918, the Slovenes unilaterally declared an independent State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, while the Friulians continued to demand an autonomous region under Habsburg rule. Gorizia became a contested town. In early November 1918, it was occupied by Italian troops again, who immediately dissolved the two competing authorities and introduced their own civil administration.

Kingdom of Italy edit

In the first years of Italian administration, Gorizia was included in the Governorate of the Julian March (1918–1919). In 1920, the town and the whole region became officially part of Italy. The autonomous County of Gorizia and Gradisca was dissolved in 1922, and in 1924 it was annexed to the Province of Udine (then called the Province of Friuli). In 1927 Gorizia became a provincial capital within the Julian March administrative region. During the fascist regime, all Slovene organizations were dissolved, and the public use of Slovene was prohibited. Underground Slovene organizations, with an anti-Fascist and often irredentist agenda, such as the militant insurrectionist organization TIGR, were established as a result. Many Slovenes fled to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and to South America, especially to Argentina. Many of these emigrants became prominent in their new environments. Very few Slovene-speaking intellectuals and public figures decided to stay in the town, and those few who did, like the writer France Bevk, were subject to persecution.

The town, heavily damaged during World War I, was rebuilt in the 1920s according to the plans laid out by the local architect Max Fabiani. Several rationalist buildings were built during this period, including some fine examples of Fascist architecture. The borders of the town were expanded, absorbing the suburbs of Salcano (Solkan), Podgora, Lucinico, and San Pietro di Gorizia (Šempeter pri Gorici), as well as the predominantly rural settlements of Vertoiba (Vrtojba), Boccavizza (Bukovica) and Sant'Andrea (Štandrež). According to the Italian census of 1921, the expanded town had around 47,000 inhabitants, among whom 45.5% were native Slovene, 33% Italian (mostly Venetian), and 20.5% Friulian speakers.

Benito Mussolini visited the town twice: in 1938 and in 1942.

After the Italian armistice in September 1943, the town was shortly occupied by the Slovene partisan resistance, but soon fell under Nazi German administration. Between 1943 and 1945 it was incorporated into the Operational Zone Adriatic Littoral. The town was briefly occupied by the Yugoslav Army in May and June 1945. With the arrival of the Yugoslav partisans in Gorizia in May 1945, a fierce repression began against the opponents, or potential opponents of the regime. At least 1,048 Italian civilians and military disappeared.[8] According to some historians, many of the killings and violence suffered by the Italian ethnic group in Gorizia (and the rest of Friuli and Venezia Giulia) by the Yugoslav army were perpetrated as part of an ethnic cleansing practiced by Tito. Soon the administration was transferred to the Allies, who ruled the town for more than two years, amidst fierce ethnic and political turmoil.

Postwar partition and return to Italy edit

See also Morgan Line, Treaty of Peace with Italy, 1947

On September 15, 1947, the town was assigned to Italy. Several peripheral districts of the municipality of Gorizia (Solkan, Pristava, Rožna Dolina, Kromberk, Šempeter pri Gorici, Vrtojba, Stara Gora, Ajševica, Volčja Draga, Bukovica, and Vogrsko) were handed over to the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia, together with the vast majority of the former Province of Gorizia. Around a half of the prewar area of the municipality of Gorizia, with an approximate 20% of the population, were annexed to Yugoslavia. The national border was drawn just off the town center, putting Gorizia into a peripheral zone. Several landmarks of the town, such as the Kostanjevica Monastery/Convento di Castagnevizza, Kromberk Castle/Castello Coronini, the Sveta Gora/Monte Santo pilgrimage site, the old Jewish cemetery, and the northern railway station, remained on the other side of the border. In 1948, the authorities of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia (with president Josip Broz Tito's special support) started building a new town called Nova Gorica ('New Gorizia') on their side of the border.

From the late 1940s onward, Gorizia gave refuge to thousands of Istrian Italians that had fled the regions annexed to Yugoslavia. Many of those settled in the town and had a role in shaping its postwar national and political identity.

Though a border city, Gorizia was only in part crossed by the border with Yugoslavia. Some important old buildings once belonging to Gorizia were included in the Yugoslav territory: these include the old railway station of the Transalpina line that connected Trieste to Villach, as well as to the town landmarks. Although the situation in Gorizia was often compared with that of Berlin during the Cold War, Italy and Yugoslavia had good relations regarding Gorizia. These included cultural and sporting events that favoured the spirit of harmonious coexistence that remained in place after Yugoslavia broke up in 1991.

With the breakup of Yugoslavia, the frontier remained as the division between Italy and Slovenia until the implementation of the Schengen Agreement by Slovenia on December 21, 2007.

Geography edit

Climate edit

Gorizia has a humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification Cfa). The town is located at the confluence of the Isonzo and Vipava Valleys. It lies on a plain overlooked by the Gorizia Hills. Sheltered from the north and from the east by a mountain ridge, Gorizia is completely protected from the cold bora wind, which affects the rest of the neighboring areas. The town thus enjoys an exceptionally mild climate throughout the year, making it a popular resort town.

Climate data for Gorizia (1971–2000)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 18.4
(65.1)
23.1
(73.6)
26.0
(78.8)
28.9
(84.0)
33.7
(92.7)
37.4
(99.3)
38.5
(101.3)
38.7
(101.7)
36.8
(98.2)
30.1
(86.2)
25.5
(77.9)
19.6
(67.3)
38.7
(101.7)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 7.2
(45.0)
8.6
(47.5)
12.8
(55.0)
16.7
(62.1)
21.8
(71.2)
25.4
(77.7)
28.0
(82.4)
27.9
(82.2)
23.7
(74.7)
18.2
(64.8)
12.5
(54.5)
8.9
(48.0)
17.6
(63.8)
Daily mean °C (°F) 3.3
(37.9)
4.7
(40.5)
8.3
(46.9)
12.0
(53.6)
17.1
(62.8)
20.5
(68.9)
23.0
(73.4)
22.6
(72.7)
18.9
(66.0)
13.8
(56.8)
7.8
(46.0)
4.0
(39.2)
13.0
(55.4)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −0.1
(31.8)
0.8
(33.4)
4.1
(39.4)
7.8
(46.0)
12.7
(54.9)
16.1
(61.0)
18.3
(64.9)
17.7
(63.9)
14.3
(57.7)
9.6
(49.3)
4.0
(39.2)
0.6
(33.1)
8.8
(47.8)
Record low °C (°F) −14.2
(6.4)
−12.9
(8.8)
−8.1
(17.4)
−4
(25)
0.9
(33.6)
5.7
(42.3)
8.9
(48.0)
9.2
(48.6)
5.2
(41.4)
−2.9
(26.8)
−7.8
(18.0)
−15.5
(4.1)
−15.5
(4.1)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 49.6
(1.95)
46.8
(1.84)
60.1
(2.37)
76.3
(3.00)
77.6
(3.06)
70.5
(2.78)
69.6
(2.74)
68.5
(2.70)
89.2
(3.51)
101.2
(3.98)
83.4
(3.28)
60.2
(2.37)
853
(33.58)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 6.0 5.2 5.7 8.3 8.2 8.6 5.9 6.1 5.9 6.7 5.8 5.9 78.3
Average relative humidity (%) 82 78 75 74 71 72 70 69 74 77 80 81 75.8
Mean monthly sunshine hours 77.8 100.4 144.5 179.7 228.1 249.9 285.7 261.3 210.4 144.0 99.8 62.4 2,044
Source: MeteoAM (sun and humidity 1961–1990)[9][10]

Main sights edit

  • The castle, built within the medieval walls, was once the seat of the administrative and judiciary power of the county. It is divided into the Corte dei Lanzi (with foundings of a high tower demolished in the 16th century), the Palazzetto dei Conti (13th century) and the Palazzetto Veneto. The Lanzi were the armed guards, the term being an Italian form of Landsknecht. The palatine chapel, entitled to Saint Bartholomew houses canvases of the Venetian school of painting and traces of Renaissance frescoes. There is also a Museum of the Goritian Middle Ages.
  • The cathedral (originally erected in the 14th century), like many of the city's buildings, was almost entirely destroyed during World War I.[citation needed] It has been rebuilt following the forms of the 1682 edifice, a Baroque church with splendid stucco decoration. A Gothic chapel of San Acatius is annexed to the nave.
  • The church of Gorizia of St. Ignatius of Loyola, built by the Jesuits in 1680–1725. It has a single nave with precious sculptures at the altars of the side chapels. In the presbytery Christoph Tausch painted a Glory of St. Ignatius in 1721.
  • The Palazzo Attems Petzenstein (19th century), designed by Nicolò Pacassi.
  • Saint Roch's Church.
  • Palazzo Cobenzl, today seat of the archbishops.
  • The Counts of Lantieri's house, which housed emperors and popes in its history.
  • The Palazzo Coronini Cronberg, including an art gallery.
  • Transalpina railway square, divided by an international border.
  • The Department of International and Diplomatic Sciences of the University of Trieste, hosted in the "Seminario Minore", is an academic course in foreign affairs.
  • Oslavia War Memorial

Border crossings edit

 
Informal border crossing on Transalpina Square

The Italy-Slovenia border runs by the edge of Gorizia and Nova Gorica and there are several border crossings between the cities. The ease of movement between the two parts of town has depended very much on the politics of both countries, ranging from strict controls to total free movement since December 21, 2007, when Slovenia joined the Schengen area.

Designated border crossings are (Gorizia-Nova Gorica):

  • Casa Rossa-Rožna Dolina: main international crossing checkpoint
  • Via San Gabriele-Erjavčeva ulica: previously only for local traffic with passes, nearest crossing to Nova Gorica center
  • Via del Rafut-Pristava: previously only for local traffic with passes
  • San Pietro (Via Vittorio Veneto)/Šempeter pri Gorici (Goriška ulica)
  • Transalpina Square: open pedestrian square dissected by the border that was once fenced. The square was never an official crossing and signboards were erected to prohibit people from crossing the square from one side to the other
  • The major highway crossing at Sant'Andrea-Vrtojba is located nearby to the south of the city.

Government edit

Historical demography edit

The chart shows the historical development of the population of Gorizia from the late 18th century to the eve of World War I, according to official Austrian censuses. The figures show the population of the municipality of Gorizia in the boundaries of the time. The criteria for the definition of the ethnical structure were changing over the years: in 1789, only the religious affiliation of the population was taken into account; in 1869 the ethnic affiliation was also recorded, with Jews counted as a separate category; in 1880 the category of ethnicity was replaced by the mother tongue, and from 1890 to 1910 only the "language of everyday communication" (German: Umgangsprache) was recorded. After 1869, the Jews were only recorded as a religious community, under the official category of "Israelites". The data below refer to the population within the current borders of the city:

Census[11][12] Ethnic structure
Year Population Italians Slovenes Germans Jews
1789 7,639 n.a. n.a. n.a. 3.9%
1850 10,581 n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a.
1857 13,297 n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a.
1869 16,659 66.6% 21.0% 10.8% 1.8%
1880 26,080 59.4% 25.7% 8.4% (1.4%)
1890 27,521 60.8% 26.5% 4.8% n.a.
1910 38,279 45.3% 39.6% 8.9% (0.9%)
1921 39,829 60.8% 37.1% n.a. n.a.
1924 45,540 70.6% 28.5% n.a. n.a.
1936 52,065 68.1% 30.0% n.a. n.a.

Demographic evolution edit

Foreign ethnicities and minorities edit

As of December 31, 2022, foreigners residents in the municipality were 3,715, i.e. 11.1% of the population. The largest groups are shown below:[13][14]

Culture and education edit

Although the majority of the population identifies with the Italian culture, Gorizia is a center of Friulian and Slovene culture.[15] Before 1918, the trilingual Gorizia Grammar School was one of the most important educational institutions in the Slovene Lands and for the Italians in the Austrian Littoral.[16]

Nowadays, Gorizia hosts several important scientific and educational institutions. The University of Trieste, the University of Udine and the University of Nova Gorica all have part of their campuses and faculties located in Gorizia.

Gorizia is also the site of a choral competition, the "C. A. Seghizzi" International Choir Competition, which is a member of the European Grand Prix for Choral Singing.[17]

Religion edit

 
Gorizia's synagogue

The majority of the population of Gorizia is of Roman Catholic denomination. The town is the seat of the Archbishop of Gorizia, who was one of the three legal descendants of the Patriarchate of Aquileia (along with the Patriarchate of Venice and the Archdiocese of Udine). Between mid-18th century and 1920, Gorizia was thus the center of a Metropolitan bishopric that comprised the Dioceses of Ljubljana, Trieste, Poreč-Pula and Krk. Religious figures who lived and worked in Gorizia during this period include Cardinal Jakob Missia, Bishop Frančišek Borgia Sedej, theologians Anton Mahnič and Josip Srebrnič, and the Franciscan friar and philologian Stanislav Škrabec.

There are many important Roman Catholic sacral buildings in the area, among them the sanctuaries of Sveta Gora ("Holy Mountain") and the Kostanjevica Monastery, both of which are now located in Slovenia.

Until 1943, Gorizia had a Jewish community; most of its members were murdered in the Holocaust.[18] A Lutheran community exists in Gorizia.

Sports edit

The city was host of the EuroBasket 1979.

People edit

Authors edit

Artists and architects edit

Politicians and public servants edit

Religious figures edit

Scholars and scientists edit

Sportspeople edit

Others edit

International relations edit

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Gorizia is twinned with:[19][20]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved March 16, 2019.
  2. ^ "Popolazione Residente al 1° Gennaio 2018". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved March 16, 2019.
  3. ^ Meinhof, Ulrike Hanna (2002). Living (with) Borders: Identity Discourses on East-West Borders in Europe. Aldershot: Ashgate. p. 50.
  4. ^ Fidermuc, Katarina (May 14, 2017). "Za železnico lahko hkrati stojiš v dveh Goricah". Delo (in Slovenian). Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  5. ^ di Francesco Fain (May 12, 2011). (in Italian). Il Piccolo. Archived from the original on March 10, 2012. Retrieved August 25, 2012.
  6. ^ Snoj, Marko (2009). Etimološki slovar slovenskih zemljepisnih imen. Ljubljana: Modrijan. p. 144.
  7. ^ L'ultima estate, Nello Cristianini, 2014 – ISBN 978-1495363924
  8. ^ "L'ELENCO DEI MILLE DEPORATI IN SLOVENIA NEL 1945" (PDF). digilander.libero.it (in Italian). 2006. Retrieved July 10, 2023.
  9. ^ . Italian Air Force National Meteorological Service. Archived from the original on November 23, 2018. Retrieved December 5, 2013. [dead link]
  10. ^ "Tabella CLINO". MeteoAM. Retrieved June 22, 2013.
  11. ^ Branko Marušič, Pregled politične zgodovine Slovencev na Goriškem (Nova Gorica: Goriški muzej, 2005)
  12. ^ http://www.sistory.si/publikacije/prenos/?urn=SISTORY:ID:836 [bare URL PDF]
  13. ^ ISTAT (ed.). "Demographic balance and foreign resident population as at 31 December 2022 by gender and citizenship". Retrieved July 31, 2023.
  14. ^ Cittadini stranieri tuttiitalia.it
  15. ^ Lo spirito di Gorizia, esempio per l'Europa.avvenire.it
  16. ^ Secondary School Legislation in Austria (1849-1914) zdjp.si
  17. ^ 59th “SEGHIZZI” International Choral singing competition seghizzi.it
  18. ^ "Gorizia". jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved December 10, 2021.
  19. ^ . comune.gorizia.it (in Italian). Gorizia. Archived from the original on June 11, 2022. Retrieved December 19, 2019.
  20. ^ "A settembre il gemellaggio tra Gorizia e Zalaegerszeg". ilpiccolo.gelocal.it (in Italian). Il Piccolo. July 14, 2014. Retrieved December 19, 2019.

External links edit

  • Comune di Gorizia Official Homepage
  • Pictures of Gorizia and information in English language
  • Gorizia oggi: news from Gorizia
  • Giovanni Maria Cassini (1791). "Lo Stato Veneto da terra diviso nelle sue provincie, seconda parte che comprede porzioni del Dogado del Trevisano del Friuli e dell' Istria". Rome: Calcografia camerale. (Map of Gorizia region).

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For other uses see Gorizia disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Gorizia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Gorizia Italian pronunciation ɡoˈrittsja Slovene Gorica ɡɔˈɾiːtsa colloquially stara Gorica old Gorizia 3 4 to distinguish it from Nova Gorica Standard Friulian Gurize Southeastern Friulian Guriza Bisiacco Gorisia German Gorz ɡœʁts is a town and comune municipality in northeastern Italy in the autonomous region of Friuli Venezia Giulia It is located at the foot of the Julian Alps bordering Slovenia It is the capital of the Regional decentralization entity of Gorizia and is a local center of tourism industry and commerce Since 1947 a twin town of Nova Gorica has developed on the other side of the modern day Italy Slovenia border The region was subject to territorial dispute between Italy and Yugoslavia after World War II after the new boundaries were established in 1947 and the old town was left to Italy Nova Gorica was built on the Yugoslav side The two towns constitute a conurbation which also includes the Slovenian municipality of Sempeter Vrtojba Since May 2011 these three towns have been joined in a common trans border metropolitan zone administered by a joint administration board 5 Gorizia Gorica Slovene Gurize Friulian Guriza Eastern Friulian Gorisia Venetian ComuneComune di GoriziaObcina GoricaComun di GurizeThe old part of Gorizia seen from the castle in August 2008FlagCoat of armsLocation of GoriziaGoriziaLocation of Gorizia in Friuli Venezia GiuliaShow map of ItalyGoriziaGorizia Friuli Venezia Giulia Show map of Friuli Venezia GiuliaCoordinates 45 56 N 13 37 E 45 933 N 13 617 E 45 933 13 617CountryItalyRegionFriuli Venezia GiuliaProvinceGoriziaFrazioniCastello Lucinico Locnik Oslavia Oslavje Piuma Pevma San Mauro Smaver Sant Andrea Standrez Straccis Strazisce Vallone dell Acqua Gradiscutta Piedimonte Podgora Government MayorRodolfo Ziberna Forza Italia Area 1 Total41 km2 16 sq mi Elevation86 m 282 ft Population November 2022 2 Total33 584 Density820 km2 2 100 sq mi Demonym s Goriziani Italian Goricani Slovene Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code34170Dialing code0481ISTAT code031007Patron saintSaints Hilary and TatianSaint dayMarch 16WebsiteOfficial website The name of the town comes from the Slovene word gorica little mountain which is a common toponym in Slovene inhabited areas 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Middle Ages 1 2 Habsburg rule 1 3 World War I 1 4 Kingdom of Italy 1 5 Postwar partition and return to Italy 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Main sights 4 Border crossings 5 Government 6 Historical demography 7 Demographic evolution 7 1 Foreign ethnicities and minorities 8 Culture and education 9 Religion 10 Sports 11 People 11 1 Authors 11 2 Artists and architects 11 3 Politicians and public servants 11 4 Religious figures 11 5 Scholars and scientists 11 6 Sportspeople 11 7 Others 12 International relations 12 1 Twin towns sister cities 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksHistory editMiddle Ages edit Further information County of Gorizia Originating as a watchtower or a prehistoric castle controlling the fords of the Isonzo River Gorizia first emerged as a small village not far from the former Via Gemina the Roman road linking Aquileia and Emona modern Ljubljana The name Gorizia was recorded for the first time in a document dated April 28 1001 in which Holy Roman Emperor Otto III donated the castle and the village of Goriza to the Patriarch of Aquileia John II and to Count Verihen Eppenstein of Friuli The document referred to Gorizia as the village known as Goriza in the language of the Slavs Villa quae Sclavorum lingua vocatur Goriza nbsp The medieval center of Gorizia Count Meinhard of the Bavarian Meinhardiner noble lineage with possessions around Lienz in Tyrol is mentioned as early as 1107 as a vogt of the Patriarchate of Aquileia he was enfeoffed with large estates in the former March of Friuli including the town of Gorizia and as early as 1127 called himself Graf von Gorz Count of Gorizia In the late 13th century the House of Gorizia emerged as one of the most important noble houses in the Holy Roman Empire The borders of the County changed frequently in the following three centuries due to frequent wars with Aquileia and other counties and also to the subdivision of the territory in two main nuclei one around the upper Drava river with the center in Lienz the other around Gorizia itself Between the 12th century and early 16th century the town served as the political and administrative center of this essentially independent County of Gorizia which at the height of its power comprised the territory of the present day regions of Goriska southeast Friuli the Karst Plateau central Istria western Carinthia and East Tyrol and the Windic March with Bela Krajina From the 11th century the town had two different layers of development the upper castle district and the village beneath it The first played a political administrative role and the second a rural commercial role The name of the central square known to this day in both languages as Travnik or Traunig meadow in Slovene testifies to this period In the late 15th century the city rights were expanded to the lower town nbsp The Leopold Gate built in the late 17th century in honor of Leopold I Holy Roman Emperor Habsburg rule edit See also Inner Austria Gorizia and Gradisca Austrian Littoral Austrian Riviera and Italian irredentism In 1500 the dynasty of the Counts of Gorizia died out and their County passed to Austrian Habsburg rule after a short occupation by the Republic of Venice in the years 1508 and 1509 Under Habsburg dominion the town spread out at the foot of the castle Many settlers from northern Italy moved there and started their commerce Gorizia developed into a multi ethnic town in which Friulian Venetian German and Slovene were spoken In mid 16th century Gorizia emerged as a center of Protestant Reformation which was spreading from the neighboring northeastern regions of Carniola and Carinthia The prominent Slovene Protestant preacher Primoz Trubar also visited and preached in the town By the end of the century however the Catholic Counter Reformation had gained force in Gorizia led by the local dean Johann Tautscher who later became bishop of Ljubljana Tautscher was also instrumental in bringing the Jesuit order to the town which played a role in the education and cultural life in Gorizia thereafter Gorizia was at first part of the County of Gorizia and since 1754 the capital of the Princely County of Gorizia and Gradisca In ecclesiastical matters after the suppression of the Patriarchate of Aquileia in 1751 the Archdiocese of Gorizia was established as its legal successor on the territory of the Habsburg monarchy Gorizia thus emerged as a Roman Catholic religious center The archdiocese of Gorizia covers a large territory extending to the Drava River to the north and the Kolpa to the east with the dioceses of Trieste Trento Como and Pedena subject to the authority of the archbishops of Gorizia A new town quarter developed around the Cathedral where many treasures from the Basilica of Aquileia were transferred Many new villas were built conveying to the town the typical late Baroque appearance which characterized it up to World War I A synagogue was built within the town walls too which was another example of Gorizia s relatively tolerant multi ethnic nature During the Napoleonic Wars Gorizia was incorporated to the French Illyrian Provinces between 1809 and 1813 After the restoration of the Austrian rule the Gorizia and its county were incorporated in the administrative unit known as the Kingdom of Illyria During this period Gorizia emerged as a popular summer residence of the Austrian nobility and became known as the Austrian Nice Members of the former French ruling Bourbon family deposed by the July Revolution of 1830 also settled in the town including the last Bourbon monarch Charles X who spent his last years in Gorizia Unlike in most neighboring areas the revolutionary spring of nations of 1848 passed almost unnoticed in Gorizia thus reaffirming its reputation of a calm and loyal provincial town nbsp The Strassoldo Palace residence of the Bourbon family in exile nbsp Gorizia at the beginning of the 20th century Austria Hungary In 1849 the County of Gorizia was included in the Austrian Littoral along with Trieste and Istria In 1861 the territory was reorganized as the Princely County of Gorizia and Gradisca and granted regional autonomy At that time Gorizia was a multi ethnic town Italian and Venetian Slovene Friulian and German were all spoken in the town center while in the suburbs Slovene and Friulian prevailed Although some tensions between the Italian Friulian and the Slovene population existed the town continued to maintain a relatively tolerant climate in which both Slovene and Italian Friulian cultures flourished On the eve of World War I Gorizia had around 31 000 inhabitants and was the third largest city in the Austrian Littoral following Trieste and Pula Pola Another 14 000 people lived in the suburbs making it one of the most populous urban agglomerations in the Alpe Adria area ahead of Klagenfurt Maribor Salzburg Bozen or Trento Within the city limits about 48 of the population spoke Italian or Friulian as their first language while 35 were Slovene speakers In the suburbs the Slovene speaking population prevailed with 77 versus 21 Italian Friulian speakers World War I edit Main articles Italian Front World War I and Battles of the Isonzo Gorizia was not on the frontline during the first 10 months of World War I but the first Gorizian victim of the war occurred as early as August 10 1914 when Countess Lucy Christalnigg was shot by Landsturmer guards while driving her car on a mission for the Austrian Red Cross 7 Italy entered World War I on the Allied side and conflict with Austria Hungary began on May 24 1915 The hills west of Gorizia soon became the scene of fierce battles between the Italian and Austro Hungarian armies The town itself was seriously damaged and most of its inhabitants had been evacuated by early 1916 The Italian Army occupied Gorizia during the Sixth Battle of the Isonzo in August 1916 with the front line moving to the eastern outskirts of the town With the Battle of Caporetto in October and November 1917 when the Central Powers pushed the Italians back to the Piave River the town returned to Austro Hungarian control After the Battle of Caporetto Gorizia became the focus of three competing political camps the unified Slovene nationalist parties that demanded a semi independent Yugoslav state under the House of Habsburg the Friulian conservatives and Christian Socialists who demanded a separate and autonomous Eastern Friuli within an Austrian confederation and the underground Italian irredentist movement working for unification with Italy At the end of World War I in late October 1918 the Slovenes unilaterally declared an independent State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs while the Friulians continued to demand an autonomous region under Habsburg rule Gorizia became a contested town In early November 1918 it was occupied by Italian troops again who immediately dissolved the two competing authorities and introduced their own civil administration Kingdom of Italy edit Further information Julian March In the first years of Italian administration Gorizia was included in the Governorate of the Julian March 1918 1919 In 1920 the town and the whole region became officially part of Italy The autonomous County of Gorizia and Gradisca was dissolved in 1922 and in 1924 it was annexed to the Province of Udine then called the Province of Friuli In 1927 Gorizia became a provincial capital within the Julian March administrative region During the fascist regime all Slovene organizations were dissolved and the public use of Slovene was prohibited Underground Slovene organizations with an anti Fascist and often irredentist agenda such as the militant insurrectionist organization TIGR were established as a result Many Slovenes fled to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and to South America especially to Argentina Many of these emigrants became prominent in their new environments Very few Slovene speaking intellectuals and public figures decided to stay in the town and those few who did like the writer France Bevk were subject to persecution The town heavily damaged during World War I was rebuilt in the 1920s according to the plans laid out by the local architect Max Fabiani Several rationalist buildings were built during this period including some fine examples of Fascist architecture The borders of the town were expanded absorbing the suburbs of Salcano Solkan Podgora Lucinico and San Pietro di Gorizia Sempeter pri Gorici as well as the predominantly rural settlements of Vertoiba Vrtojba Boccavizza Bukovica and Sant Andrea Standrez According to the Italian census of 1921 the expanded town had around 47 000 inhabitants among whom 45 5 were native Slovene 33 Italian mostly Venetian and 20 5 Friulian speakers Benito Mussolini visited the town twice in 1938 and in 1942 After the Italian armistice in September 1943 the town was shortly occupied by the Slovene partisan resistance but soon fell under Nazi German administration Between 1943 and 1945 it was incorporated into the Operational Zone Adriatic Littoral The town was briefly occupied by the Yugoslav Army in May and June 1945 With the arrival of the Yugoslav partisans in Gorizia in May 1945 a fierce repression began against the opponents or potential opponents of the regime At least 1 048 Italian civilians and military disappeared 8 According to some historians many of the killings and violence suffered by the Italian ethnic group in Gorizia and the rest of Friuli and Venezia Giulia by the Yugoslav army were perpetrated as part of an ethnic cleansing practiced by Tito Soon the administration was transferred to the Allies who ruled the town for more than two years amidst fierce ethnic and political turmoil Postwar partition and return to Italy edit See also Morgan Line Treaty of Peace with Italy 1947 On September 15 1947 the town was assigned to Italy Several peripheral districts of the municipality of Gorizia Solkan Pristava Rozna Dolina Kromberk Sempeter pri Gorici Vrtojba Stara Gora Ajsevica Volcja Draga Bukovica and Vogrsko were handed over to the Federal People s Republic of Yugoslavia together with the vast majority of the former Province of Gorizia Around a half of the prewar area of the municipality of Gorizia with an approximate 20 of the population were annexed to Yugoslavia The national border was drawn just off the town center putting Gorizia into a peripheral zone Several landmarks of the town such as the Kostanjevica Monastery Convento di Castagnevizza Kromberk Castle Castello Coronini the Sveta Gora Monte Santo pilgrimage site the old Jewish cemetery and the northern railway station remained on the other side of the border In 1948 the authorities of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia with president Josip Broz Tito s special support started building a new town called Nova Gorica New Gorizia on their side of the border From the late 1940s onward Gorizia gave refuge to thousands of Istrian Italians that had fled the regions annexed to Yugoslavia Many of those settled in the town and had a role in shaping its postwar national and political identity Though a border city Gorizia was only in part crossed by the border with Yugoslavia Some important old buildings once belonging to Gorizia were included in the Yugoslav territory these include the old railway station of the Transalpina line that connected Trieste to Villach as well as to the town landmarks Although the situation in Gorizia was often compared with that of Berlin during the Cold War Italy and Yugoslavia had good relations regarding Gorizia These included cultural and sporting events that favoured the spirit of harmonious coexistence that remained in place after Yugoslavia broke up in 1991 With the breakup of Yugoslavia the frontier remained as the division between Italy and Slovenia until the implementation of the Schengen Agreement by Slovenia on December 21 2007 Geography editClimate edit Gorizia has a humid subtropical climate Koppen climate classification Cfa The town is located at the confluence of the Isonzo and Vipava Valleys It lies on a plain overlooked by the Gorizia Hills Sheltered from the north and from the east by a mountain ridge Gorizia is completely protected from the cold bora wind which affects the rest of the neighboring areas The town thus enjoys an exceptionally mild climate throughout the year making it a popular resort town Climate data for Gorizia 1971 2000 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Record high C F 18 4 65 1 23 1 73 6 26 0 78 8 28 9 84 0 33 7 92 7 37 4 99 3 38 5 101 3 38 7 101 7 36 8 98 2 30 1 86 2 25 5 77 9 19 6 67 3 38 7 101 7 Mean daily maximum C F 7 2 45 0 8 6 47 5 12 8 55 0 16 7 62 1 21 8 71 2 25 4 77 7 28 0 82 4 27 9 82 2 23 7 74 7 18 2 64 8 12 5 54 5 8 9 48 0 17 6 63 8 Daily mean C F 3 3 37 9 4 7 40 5 8 3 46 9 12 0 53 6 17 1 62 8 20 5 68 9 23 0 73 4 22 6 72 7 18 9 66 0 13 8 56 8 7 8 46 0 4 0 39 2 13 0 55 4 Mean daily minimum C F 0 1 31 8 0 8 33 4 4 1 39 4 7 8 46 0 12 7 54 9 16 1 61 0 18 3 64 9 17 7 63 9 14 3 57 7 9 6 49 3 4 0 39 2 0 6 33 1 8 8 47 8 Record low C F 14 2 6 4 12 9 8 8 8 1 17 4 4 25 0 9 33 6 5 7 42 3 8 9 48 0 9 2 48 6 5 2 41 4 2 9 26 8 7 8 18 0 15 5 4 1 15 5 4 1 Average precipitation mm inches 49 6 1 95 46 8 1 84 60 1 2 37 76 3 3 00 77 6 3 06 70 5 2 78 69 6 2 74 68 5 2 70 89 2 3 51 101 2 3 98 83 4 3 28 60 2 2 37 853 33 58 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 6 0 5 2 5 7 8 3 8 2 8 6 5 9 6 1 5 9 6 7 5 8 5 9 78 3 Average relative humidity 82 78 75 74 71 72 70 69 74 77 80 81 75 8 Mean monthly sunshine hours 77 8 100 4 144 5 179 7 228 1 249 9 285 7 261 3 210 4 144 0 99 8 62 4 2 044 Source MeteoAM sun and humidity 1961 1990 9 10 Main sights editThe castle built within the medieval walls was once the seat of the administrative and judiciary power of the county It is divided into the Corte dei Lanzi with foundings of a high tower demolished in the 16th century the Palazzetto dei Conti 13th century and the Palazzetto Veneto The Lanzi were the armed guards the term being an Italian form of Landsknecht The palatine chapel entitled to Saint Bartholomew houses canvases of the Venetian school of painting and traces of Renaissance frescoes There is also a Museum of the Goritian Middle Ages The cathedral originally erected in the 14th century like many of the city s buildings was almost entirely destroyed during World War I citation needed It has been rebuilt following the forms of the 1682 edifice a Baroque church with splendid stucco decoration A Gothic chapel of San Acatius is annexed to the nave The church of Gorizia of St Ignatius of Loyola built by the Jesuits in 1680 1725 It has a single nave with precious sculptures at the altars of the side chapels In the presbytery Christoph Tausch painted a Glory of St Ignatius in 1721 The Palazzo Attems Petzenstein 19th century designed by Nicolo Pacassi Saint Roch s Church Palazzo Cobenzl today seat of the archbishops The Counts of Lantieri s house which housed emperors and popes in its history The Palazzo Coronini Cronberg including an art gallery Transalpina railway square divided by an international border The Department of International and Diplomatic Sciences of the University of Trieste hosted in the Seminario Minore is an academic course in foreign affairs Oslavia War Memorial nbsp Victory Square Piazza della Vittoria is the traditional center of the town nbsp Saint Ignatius s Church nbsp Gorizia Castle nbsp Gorizia Castle nbsp Holy Spirit Chapel nbsp The Coronini Mansion nbsp Gorizia DuomoBorder crossings edit nbsp Informal border crossing on Transalpina Square The Italy Slovenia border runs by the edge of Gorizia and Nova Gorica and there are several border crossings between the cities The ease of movement between the two parts of town has depended very much on the politics of both countries ranging from strict controls to total free movement since December 21 2007 when Slovenia joined the Schengen area Designated border crossings are Gorizia Nova Gorica Casa Rossa Rozna Dolina main international crossing checkpoint Via San Gabriele Erjavceva ulica previously only for local traffic with passes nearest crossing to Nova Gorica center Via del Rafut Pristava previously only for local traffic with passes San Pietro Via Vittorio Veneto Sempeter pri Gorici Goriska ulica Transalpina Square open pedestrian square dissected by the border that was once fenced The square was never an official crossing and signboards were erected to prohibit people from crossing the square from one side to the other The major highway crossing at Sant Andrea Vrtojba is located nearby to the south of the city Government editSee also List of mayors of GoriziaHistorical demography editThe chart shows the historical development of the population of Gorizia from the late 18th century to the eve of World War I according to official Austrian censuses The figures show the population of the municipality of Gorizia in the boundaries of the time The criteria for the definition of the ethnical structure were changing over the years in 1789 only the religious affiliation of the population was taken into account in 1869 the ethnic affiliation was also recorded with Jews counted as a separate category in 1880 the category of ethnicity was replaced by the mother tongue and from 1890 to 1910 only the language of everyday communication German Umgangsprache was recorded After 1869 the Jews were only recorded as a religious community under the official category of Israelites The data below refer to the population within the current borders of the city Census 11 12 Ethnic structure Year Population Italians Slovenes Germans Jews 1789 7 639 n a n a n a 3 9 1850 10 581 n a n a n a n a 1857 13 297 n a n a n a n a 1869 16 659 66 6 21 0 10 8 1 8 1880 26 080 59 4 25 7 8 4 1 4 1890 27 521 60 8 26 5 4 8 n a 1910 38 279 45 3 39 6 8 9 0 9 1921 39 829 60 8 37 1 n a n a 1924 45 540 70 6 28 5 n a n a 1936 52 065 68 1 30 0 n a n a Demographic evolution editForeign ethnicities and minorities edit As of December 31 2022 foreigners residents in the municipality were 3 715 i e 11 1 of the population The largest groups are shown below 13 14 Slovenia 627 Kosovo 408 Bosnia Erzegovina 295 Romania 282 Morocco 203 China 171 North Macedonia 165 Pakistan 152 Ucraina 147 Serbia 121Culture and education editAlthough the majority of the population identifies with the Italian culture Gorizia is a center of Friulian and Slovene culture 15 Before 1918 the trilingual Gorizia Grammar School was one of the most important educational institutions in the Slovene Lands and for the Italians in the Austrian Littoral 16 Nowadays Gorizia hosts several important scientific and educational institutions The University of Trieste the University of Udine and the University of Nova Gorica all have part of their campuses and faculties located in Gorizia Gorizia is also the site of a choral competition the C A Seghizzi International Choir Competition which is a member of the European Grand Prix for Choral Singing 17 Religion edit nbsp Gorizia s synagogue The majority of the population of Gorizia is of Roman Catholic denomination The town is the seat of the Archbishop of Gorizia who was one of the three legal descendants of the Patriarchate of Aquileia along with the Patriarchate of Venice and the Archdiocese of Udine Between mid 18th century and 1920 Gorizia was thus the center of a Metropolitan bishopric that comprised the Dioceses of Ljubljana Trieste Porec Pula and Krk Religious figures who lived and worked in Gorizia during this period include Cardinal Jakob Missia Bishop Francisek Borgia Sedej theologians Anton Mahnic and Josip Srebrnic and the Franciscan friar and philologian Stanislav Skrabec There are many important Roman Catholic sacral buildings in the area among them the sanctuaries of Sveta Gora Holy Mountain and the Kostanjevica Monastery both of which are now located in Slovenia Until 1943 Gorizia had a Jewish community most of its members were murdered in the Holocaust 18 A Lutheran community exists in Gorizia Sports editThe city was host of the EuroBasket 1979 People editAuthors edit France Bevk 1890 1970 writer poet and translator Andrej Budal 1889 1972 writer and translator Simon Gregorcic 1844 1906 poet Julius Kugy 1858 1944 writer and mountaineer Paolo Maurensig 1943 2021 novelist Fulvio Melia born 1956 author Lorenzo Da Ponte 1749 1838 poet and librettist Artists and architects edit Federiko Benkovic 1667 1753 painter Franz Caucig 1755 1828 painter Tullio Crali 1910 2000 Futurist artist Max Fabiani 1865 1962 architect Gojmir Anton Kos 1896 1970 painter Antonio Lasciac 1856 1946 architect Rodolfo Lipizer 1895 1974 violinist Nicolo Pacassi 1716 1790 architect Veno Pilon 1896 1970 painter Antonio Rotta 1828 1903 painter Henrika Santel 1874 1940 painter Carlo Tavagnutti born 1929 photographer Jozef Tominc 1790 1866 painter Politicians and public servants edit Engelbert Besednjak 1894 1968 politician Darko Bratina 1942 1997 Slovene Italian politician sociologist and film critic Baron Anton von Doblhoff Dier 1800 1872 Austrian statesman Carlo Favetti 1819 1892 Italian liberal nationalist politician and poet Josip Ferfolja 1880 1958 Slovene Social Democrat politician lawyer and human rights activist Anton Fuster 1808 1881 Austrian revolutionary activist author and pedagogue Karel Lavric 1818 1876 Slovene politician and lawyer Tomaz Marusic 1932 2011 Slovene politician and lawyer Bogumil Vosnjak 1882 1955 Yugoslav liberal politician lawyer and historian Religious figures edit Anton Mahnic 1850 1920 Catholic bishop author and political activist Isaac Samuel Reggio 1784 1855 scholar and rabbi Tobia Lionelli 1647 1714 Franciscan friar and preacher Antonio Zucchelli 1663 1716 missionary in the Kingdom of Kongo Scholars and scientists edit Graziadio Isaia Ascoli 1829 1907 linguist Franco Basaglia 1924 1980 psychiatrist Martin Baucer 1595 1668 historian Vaclav Belohradsky born 1944 philosopher Milko Brezigar 1886 1958 economist Johannes Christian Brunnich 1866 1931 chemist Nello Cristianini born 1968 scientist Jonathan Kaye linguist born 1942 linguist Milko Kos 1892 1972 historian Branko Marusic born 1938 historian Pietro Andrea Mattioli 1501 1577 naturalist Fulvio Melia born 1956 astrophysicist Carlo Michelstaedter 1887 1910 philosopher Avgust Pirjevec 1887 1944 literary historian and librarian Carlo Rubbia born 1934 physicist and Nobel laureate Jozko Savli 1943 2011 historian Vladimir Truhlar 1912 1977 poet and theologian Sportspeople edit Paolo Camossi born 1974 triple jumper Matej Cernic born 1978 volleyball player Barbara Lah born 1972 triple jumper Armen Petrosyan born 1986 kickboxer Giorgio Petrosyan born 1985 kickboxer Gianmarco Pozzecco born 1972 basketball player Edoardo Reja born 1945 football coach and player Sergio Susmel 1923 1978 football player Luca Tomasig born 1983 football player Francesco Vida 1903 1984 military officer and skier Paolo Vidoz born 1970 boxer Elnardo Webster born 1969 American football player Others edit Lojze Bratuz 1902 1937 composer and anti Fascist martyr Lucy Christalnigg 1872 1914 Red Cross worker Charles X of France 1757 1836 last Bourbon king of France Ferdo Delak 1905 1968 Slovene Croatian stage director Nora Gregor 1901 1949 actress Sergej Masera 1912 1941 lieutenant in the Yugoslav Royal Navy and People s Hero of Yugoslavia Arturo Reggio 1863 1917 chess master Edvard Rusjan 1886 1911 aircraft constructor and pilot Karl von Scherzer 1821 1903 explorer and natural scientistInternational relations editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Italy Twin towns sister cities edit Gorizia is twinned with 19 20 nbsp Klagenfurt Austria nbsp Lienz Austria nbsp Grosseto Italy nbsp Sassari Italy nbsp Zalaegerszeg Hungary nbsp Venlo NetherlandsSee also editRoman Catholic Archdiocese of Gorizia Gorizia Castle Gorizia Centrale railway station A S Pro GoriziaReferences edit Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011 Italian National Institute of Statistics Retrieved March 16 2019 Popolazione Residente al 1 Gennaio 2018 Italian National Institute of Statistics Retrieved March 16 2019 Meinhof Ulrike Hanna 2002 Living with Borders Identity Discourses on East West Borders in Europe Aldershot Ashgate p 50 Fidermuc Katarina May 14 2017 Za zeleznico lahko hkrati stojis v dveh Goricah Delo in Slovenian Retrieved December 27 2017 di Francesco Fain May 12 2011 Patto Gorizia Nova Gorica c e la firma Cronaca in Italian Il Piccolo Archived from the original on March 10 2012 Retrieved August 25 2012 Snoj Marko 2009 Etimoloski slovar slovenskih zemljepisnih imen Ljubljana Modrijan p 144 L ultima estate Nello Cristianini 2014 ISBN 978 1495363924 L ELENCO DEI MILLE DEPORATI IN SLOVENIA NEL 1945 PDF digilander libero it in Italian 2006 Retrieved July 10 2023 Application Control Violation Italian Air Force National Meteorological Service Archived from the original on November 23 2018 Retrieved December 5 2013 dead link Tabella CLINO MeteoAM Retrieved June 22 2013 Branko Marusic Pregled politicne zgodovine Slovencev na Goriskem Nova Gorica Goriski muzej 2005 http www sistory si publikacije prenos urn SISTORY ID 836 bare URL PDF ISTAT ed Demographic balance and foreign resident population as at 31 December 2022 by gender and citizenship Retrieved July 31 2023 Cittadini stranieri tuttiitalia it Lo spirito di Gorizia esempio per l Europa avvenire it Secondary School Legislation in Austria 1849 1914 zdjp si 59th SEGHIZZI International Choral singing competition seghizzi it Gorizia jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved December 10 2021 Gemellaggi e collaborazioni comune gorizia it in Italian Gorizia Archived from the original on June 11 2022 Retrieved December 19 2019 A settembre il gemellaggio tra Gorizia e Zalaegerszeg ilpiccolo gelocal it in Italian Il Piccolo July 14 2014 Retrieved December 19 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gorizia nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Gorz Comune di Gorizia Official Homepage Pictures of Gorizia and information in English language Gorizia oggi news from Gorizia Giovanni Maria Cassini 1791 Lo Stato Veneto da terra diviso nelle sue provincie seconda parte che comprede porzioni del Dogado del Trevisano del Friuli e dell Istria Rome Calcografia camerale Map of Gorizia region Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gorizia amp 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