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Istrian Italians

Istrian Italians (Italian: istriani italiani; Slovene: Italijanski Istrani; Croatian: Talijanski Istrani) are an ethnic group from the Adriatic region of Istria in modern northwestern Croatia and southwestern Slovenia. Istrian Italians descend from the original Latinized population of Roman Histria, from the Venetian-speaking settlers who colonized the region during the time of the Republic of Venice, and from the local Croatian people who culturally assimilated.[1]

Istrian Italians
Istriani italiani (Italian)
Italijanski Istrani (Slovene)
Talijanski Istrani (Croatian)
Percentage of Italians in Croatia's and Slovenia's Istria, 1991
Regions with significant populations
Istria, Italy
Languages
Italian, Slovenian, Croatian, Istriot and Venetian
Religion
Roman Catholic
Related ethnic groups
Dalmatian Italians, Slovenes, Croats, Italians

More than 50% of the total population of Istria for centuries,[2] Istrian Italians were 36% in 1910.[3] Today, as a result of the Istrian–Dalmatian exodus (1943–1960), the majority of Istrian Italians live outside of the Istrian peninsula; however, a significant Italian minority still lives in the Croatian County of Istria (5.01%) and in Slovenian Istria (3.3%), where they are granted minority rights. According to the official Slovenian and Croatia censuses conducted in 2001 and 2002 respectively, they number around 22,000.[4][5] The Istrian–Dalmatian exodus, on the other hand, numbers between 230,000 and 350,000 Istrian Italians.[6]

Throughout history Istrian Italians exerted a vast and significant influence on Istria, especially cultural and architectural. The number of people resident in the Croatian part of Istria declaring themselves to be Italian nearly doubled between 1981 and 1991 (i.e. before and after the dissolution of Yugoslavia).[7]

History

Early period

Historian Theodor Mommsen wrote that Istria (the X region of Roman Italia since Augustus) was fully romanized in the 5th century AD.[8]

Between 500 and 700 AD, Slavs settled in Southeastern Europe (Eastern Adriatic), and their number ever increased, and with the Ottoman invasion Slavs were pushed from the south and east.[9] This led to Italic people becoming ever more confined to urban areas, while some areas of the countryside were populated by Slavs, with exceptions in western and southern Istria which remained fully Romance-speaking.[10]

By the 11th centuries, most of the interior mountainous areas of northern and eastern Istria (Liburnia) were inhabited by South Slavs, while the Romance population continued to prevail in the south and west of the peninsula. Linguistically, the Romance inhabitants of Istria were most probably divided into two main linguistic groups: in the north-west, the speakers of a Rhaeto-Romance language similar to Ladin and Friulian prevailed, while in the south, the natives most probably spoke a variant of the Dalmatian language.

One modern claim suggests the original language of the romanized Istrians survived the invasions, this being the Istriot language which spoken by some near Pula.[11] Republic of Venice influenced the neolatins of Istria for many centuries from the Middle Ages until 1797, until conquered by Napoleon: Capodistria and Pola were important centers of art and culture during the Italian Renaissance.[12] Other historians have attributed the ancient language of romanized Istrians as being the Istro-Romanian.

Venetian rule

 
Map of Istria and Dalmatia with the ancient domains of the Republic of Venice (indicated in fuchsia. Dashed diagonally, the territories that belonged occasionally)

In the 14th century, epidemics such as the Black Death decimated in those years the Istrian population, which was still mostly of Romance ethnicity. As a consequence of depopulation, Venice started settling Slavic communities to repopulate the interior areas of the peninsula. These were mostly Čakavian and partially Štokavian speaking South Slavs from Dalmatia and present-day Montenegro (differently from Kajkavian and proto-Slovene speakers that lived in the northern areas of the peninsula).

At the same time, settlers from the Veneto region were used to resettle the towns. This caused a language shift of the local Romance population who replaced the old Romance (either Rhaeto-Romance or Italo-Dalmatian) languages with the Venetian language. Only in the extreme south of the peninsula did the original Istrian Romance language survive: under strong Venetian influences it transformed itself into the modern Istriot language. Until the early 19th century, Dalmatian continued to be spoken on the island of Veglia / Krk, and a dialect of Friulian in the town of Muggia: both became extinct in the mid 19th century, replaced by Venetian.

In 1374 Because of the implementation of a treaty of inheritance, central and eastern Istria fell to the House of Habsburg, while Venice continued to control the northern, western and south-eastern portion of the peninsula, including the major coastal towns of Capodistria / Koper, Parenzo / Poreč, Rovigno / Rovinj, Pola / Pula, Fianona / Plomin, and the interior towns of Albona / Labin and Pinguente / Buzet.[13] This created a dichotomy that characterized Istria until the late 18th century. The Venetian culture and language left a profound impact on Venetian Istria. By the Baroque and Enlightenment periods, Istrian Italians were completely integrated in the wider Italian culture via their belonging to the Republic of Venice. The towns of Venetian Istria became almost exclusively Venetian-speaking, and Venetian Italian was the language of commerce, culture and administration. Nevertheless, significant numbers of South Slavic speakers (mostly Slovene and Čakavian Croatian) continued to dwell in the rural areas of Venetian Istria, especially in the north of the province and on the border with Austrian Istria.

On the other hand, interior and eastern Istria was included into the Central European cultural sphere and were dominated by a feudal culture. By the late 18th century, the vast majority of Austrian Istria were Slavic (Slovene and Croat) speakers.

After the Treaty of Campo Formio (1797) Austria occupied the Venetian part of the peninsula. After a short French interim, Austria reconquered the whole peninsula in 1813, and unified it into a single province. As a result, Istrian Italians became a minority in the new administrative unit, although they maintained their social and part of their political power.

Austrian period

 
1910 census, percentages of the poputalation who used Italian as the main language.

Although the incorporation into the Austrian Empire caused deep changes in the political asset of the region, it did not alter the social balance. Venetian-speaking Istrian Italians continued to dominate the region both culturally and economically. In the first half of the 19th century, the use of Venetian language even extended to some areas of former Austrian Istria, like the town of Pazin / Pisino. The Austrian censuses detected a gradual but constant rise of Italian speakers both in numerical and proportional terms: in 1848, around a third of Istrians were Italian (Venetian or Istriot) speakers.

From the early 19th century onward, the local Croats and Slovenes engaged in a national revival, demanding linguistic and national rights that challenged the supremacy of the Italian language and culture in Istria. The Croatian-Slovene national movement gained force only in the second part of the 19th century, causing a clash with a parallel nationalist movement of the Istrian Italians.[14]

Many Istrian Italians looked with sympathy towards the Risorgimento movement that fought for the unification of Italy. However, after 1866, when the Veneto and Friuli regions were ceded by the Austrians to the newly formed Kingdom Italy, Istria remained part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, together with other Italian-speaking areas on the eastern Adriatic (Trieste, Gorizia and Gradisca, Fiume). This triggered the gradual rise of Italian irredentism among many Italians in Istria, who demanded the unification of the Austrian Littoral, Fiume and Dalmatia with Italy.

Under Austrian rule in the 19th century, it included a large population of Italians, Croats, Slovenes, some Vlachs/Istro-Romanians and even a few Montenegrins. The Italians in Istria supported the Italian Risorgimento: as a consequence, the Austrians saw the Italians as enemies and favored the Slav communities of Istria [15] During the meeting of the Council of Ministers of 12 November 1866, Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria outlined a wide-ranging project aimed at the Germanization or Slavization of the areas of the empire with an Italian presence:[16]

Her Majesty expressed the precise order that action be taken decisively against the influence of the Italian elements still present in some regions of the Crown and, appropriately occupying the posts of public, judicial, masters employees as well as with the influence of the press, work in South Tyrol, Dalmatia and Littoral for the Germanization and Slavization of these territories according to the circumstances, with energy and without any regard. His Majesty calls the central offices to the strong duty to proceed in this way to what has been established.

— Franz Joseph I of Austria, Council of the Crown of 12 November 1866[17][18]

This tension created - by some claims - a "huge" emigration of Italians from Istria before World War I, reducing their percentage inside the peninsula inhabitants (there are some claims Italians made more than 50% of the total population for centuries,[2] but at the end of the 19th century they were reduced to only two fifths according to some estimates).

A limited tension with the Austrian state did not in fact stop the rise of the use of the Italian language, in the second part of the 19th century, when the population of predominantly Italian-speaking towns in Istria rose dramatically: in the part of Istria that eventually became part of Croatia, the first Austrian census from 1846 found 34 thousand Italian speakers, alongside 120 thousand Croatian speakers. Until 1910, the proportion changed: there were 108 thousand Italian speakers and 134 thousand Croatian speakers. [19] Vanni D'Alessio notes (2008), the Austrian surveys of the language of use (in the Austrian censuses, the ethnic composition of the population wasn't surveyed, only the "Umgangsprache") "overestimated the diffusion of the socially dominant languages of the empire... The capacity of assimilation of the Italian language suggests that amongst those who declared themselves Italian speakers in Istria, there were people whose mother tongue was different." D'Alessio notes even the people who imigrated from non-Croatian and non-Italian parts of the Habsburg Empire tended to use Italian, after living in Istrian towns long enough. Contrasting the claims of a "huge emigration" of Italians from Istria, D'Allesio writes about an important influx of immigrants from the Kingdom of Italy to Istria, during the last decades of the Austrian rule.[20]

In the same period, the Istrian Slovenes and Croats, who represented around three fifths of the Istrian population, increased their demands for national and linguistic emancipation. The result was the intensification of the ethnic strife between the two groups, although it was limited to institutional battles and it rarely manifested in violent forms.

Indeed, in 1910, the ethnic and linguistic composition was completely mixed and the Italians were reduced to minority, although still significant. According to the Austrian census results, out of 404,309 inhabitants in the "Margravate of Istria", 168,116 (41.6%) spoke Croatian, 147,416 (36.5%) spoke Italian, 55,365 (13.7%) spoke Slovene, 13,279 (3.3%) spoke German, 882 (0.2%) spoke Romanian, 2,116 (0.5%) spoke other languages and 17,135 (4.2%) were non-citizens, which had not been asked for their language of communication.

Excluding the almost exclusively Croatian-speaking areas that were annexed to Yugoslavia after WWI (Kastav and the island of Krk), Istria had 39% of Italian speakers, 37% of Croatian, and 14.7% Slovene speakers.

Until the end of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, the bourgeois Italian national liberal elites retained much of the political control in Istria.

Under Italy

During World War One, many Istrians fought as volunteers on the Italian side against the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Among them, the most famous was the Nazario Sauro from Koper (Capodistria).[21]

After the end of the war, the whole peninsula was occupied by the Kingdom of Italy, and officially annexed to Italy with the Treaty of Rapallo of 1920. Istria was included in the administrative region known as the Julian March/Venezia Giulia. After the Fascist takeover of Italy in 1922, Italian became the sole language of administration and education. A fierce policy of Italianization was followed which prohibited all use of any language but Italian. Many Slovenes and Croats left the region, which strengthened the Italian positions. However, ethnic tensions grew, and a Slovenian and Croatian anti-Fascist insurgency started to appear in the late 1920s, although it was much less strong than in other parts of the Julian March.

Indeed, before the Treaty of Rapallo, the Italians in Istria accounted for nearly half of the local inhabitants and were mostly an indigenous population, but after the treaty they were bolstered by some new arrivals of the so-called regnicoli (from the Kingdom of Italy), which were never well liked[22] by the indigenous Istrians Italians.

The Austrian 1910 census indicated approximately 182,500 people who listed Italian as their language of communication in what is now the territory of Slovenia and Croatia: 137,131 in Istria and 28,911 in Fiume/Rijeka (1918).[23] Meanwhile, the Italian 1936 census[24] indicated approximately 230,000 people who listed Italian as their language of communication (in what is now the territory of Slovenia and Croatia, then part of the Italian state): nearly 194,000 in today’s Croatia and 36,000 in today’s Slovenia.

World War Two and its consequences

After the Italian armistice of 1943, Istria became a battlefield between the Nazi German army and the partisan (mostly Yugoslav) insurgency. Already in September 1943, several hundreds Istrian Italians were killed by the Yugoslav partisans because of their allegiance to the Italian State. This was the first wave of the Foibe massacres, which continued after the Yugoslav takeover of the region in May 1945.

From 1943 until 1953, according to various data, between 200,000 and 330,000 Italians emigrated from these regions. This emigration of Italians (called Istrian–Dalmatian exodus) reduced the total population of the region and altered its ethnic structure.

 
Changes to the Italian eastern border from 1920 to 1975.
  The Austrian Littoral, later renamed Julian March, which was assigned to Italy in 1920 with the Treaty of Rapallo (with adjustments of its border in 1924 after the Treaty of Rome) and which was then ceded to Yugoslavia in 1947 with the Treaty of Paris
  Areas annexed to Italy in 1920 and remained Italian even after 1947
  Areas annexed to Italy in 1920, passed to the Free Territory of Trieste in 1947 with the Paris treaties and definitively assigned to Italy in 1975 with the Treaty of Osimo
  Areas annexed to Italy in 1920, passed to the Free Territory of Trieste in 1947 with the Paris treaties and definitively assigned to Yugoslavia in 1975 with the Osimo treaty

After the Yugoslav Communist troops occupied Istria in May 1945, many Italians started leaving Istria under the pressure of the new authorities who demanded the annexation of Istria to Yugoslavia. With an agreement between the Allied forces and Tito's Yugoslav government, a line of demarcation known as the Morgan Line was set in June 1945: most of Istria remained under Yugoslav occupation, while the towns of Pula and Muggia were transferred to Allied administration.

With the peace treaty of 1947, most of Istria (including Pula) was assigned to Yugoslavia. This triggered the Istrian–Dalmatian exodus, the departure of the large majority of Istrian Italians. Only the north-western portion was assigned to the zone B of the short-lived Free Territory of Trieste, but de facto remained under Yugoslav administration.

Part of Yugoslavia

In 1953 according to the official census only 36,000 Italians lived in Yugoslavia, 16% of the Italian population before World War II,[25] and another 35,000 lived in the zone B of the Free Territory of Trieste (FTT). After the dissolution of the FTT in 1954, and the definitive hand-over of the zone B to Yugoslavia, almost the totality of Istria became officially part of Yugoslavia. This triggered the last wave of the Istrian–Dalmatian exodus, with most of the Istrian Italians[26][27] leaving the zone B for elsewhere (mainly to Italy) because intimidated or preferring not to live in communist Yugoslavia. Yugoslav Istria was divided between Croatia and Slovenia, so that the Istrian Italians became subject to two different administrations.

In 1961 25,651 Italians remained in Yugoslavia (this number included some small minorities in Dalmatia), around 10-12% of the Italian population before World War II. Italians continued to emigrate in later decades (most of them to Australia, Canada, South America or the USA). Therefore, their population declined in each subsequent census to 15,132 inhabitants in 1981.

It has to be emphasized that the data of the Yugoslav censuses are unreliable in relation to the real number of Italians, since many members of the Italian minority, for various reasons, chose to be nationally undeclared or preferred to use their regional identity and declared themselves as Istrians. Not surprisingly in 2001 (i.e. after the dissolution of Yugoslavia), the Croatian and Slovenian censuses reported a total Italian population of 21,894 (with the figure in Croatia nearly doubling).

In its 1996 report on 'Local self-government, territorial integrity and protection of minorities' the Council of Europe's European Commission for Democracy through Law (the Venice Commission) put it that "a great majority of the local Italians, some thousands of Slovenes and of nationally undefined bilingual 'Istrians', used their legal right from the peace treaty to 'opt out' of the Yugoslav controlled part of Istria". In several waves they moved to Italy and elsewhere (also overseas, mainly in the Americas) and claimed Italian or other citizenship.

Current situation

 
Muggia, one of the two Italian towns of contemporary Istria

Today Istrian Italians are mostly a national minority in Croatia. Croatian municipalities with a significant Italian population include Grisignana / Grožnjan (36%), Verteneglio / Brtonigla (32%), and Buie / Buje (24%).[28]

The last census (2001) showed that there are nearly 50,000 Istrian Italians in Istria as a whole (between Croatia, Slovenia and Italy), more than half of them living in Italy:[29]

Municipality Italian name Country Inhabitants Mother tongue Italian Mother tongue Croatian and Slovenian
Labin, city Albona   Croatia 10,424 1.69% 90.19%
Buje, city Buie   Croatia 4,441 28.57% 65.96%
Novigrad, city Cittanova   Croatia 3,889 9.95% 83.52%
Vodnjan, city Dignano   Croatia 5,838 13.53% 74.51%
Poreč, city Parenzo   Croatia 16,607 2.40% 89.71%
Buzet, city Pinguente   Croatia 5,999 0.60% 93.35%
Pazin, city Pisino   Croatia 8,279 0.75% 96.67%
Pula, city Pola   Croatia 52,220 3.26% 87.75%
Rovinj, city Rovigno   Croatia 12,968 8.14% 83.11%
Umag, city Umago   Croatia 12,699 13.61% 79.38%
Bale Valle   Croatia 1,170 14.27% 81.37%
Barban Barbana d'Istria   Croatia 2,491 0.60% 97.07%
Brtonigla Verteneglio   Croatia 1,523 35.72% 60.15%
Cerovlje Cerreto   Croatia 1,453 0.48% 98.69%
Fažana Fasana   Croatia 3,463 2.77% 92.72%
Gračišće Gallignana   Croatia 1,312 0.08% 98.86%
Grožnjan Grisignana   Croatia 656 44.51% 51.83%
Kanfanar Canfanaro   Croatia 1,498 1.00% 95.06%
Karojba Caroiba del Subiente   Croatia 1,404 0.36% 98.65%
Kaštelir-Labinci Castellier-Santa Domenica   Croatia 1,439 1.94% 75.89%
Kršan Chersano   Croatia 2,829 0.35% 94.84%
Lanišće Lanischie   Croatia 268 - 98.50%
Ližnjan Lisignano   Croatia 4,087 4.04% 90.05%
Lupoglav Lupogliano   Croatia 836 0.36% 97.97%
Marčana Marzana   Croatia 4,250 0.75% 95.81%
Medulin Medolino   Croatia 6,552 2.64% 86.88%
Motovun Montona   Croatia 912 7.13% 89.80%
Oprtalj Portole   Croatia 748 11.76% 80.75%
Pićan Pedena   Croatia 1,722 0.17% 98.90%
Raša Arsia   Croatia 2,809 0.78% 90.21%
Sveta Nedelja Santa Domenica d'Albona   Croatia 2,898 0.62% 92.20%
Sveti Lovreč San Lorenzo del Pasenatico   Croatia 960 1.15% 90.84%
Sveti Petar u Šumi San Pietro in Selve   Croatia 1,051 0.38% 98.39%
Svetvinčenat Sanvincenti   Croatia 2,179 1.33% 95.82%
Tar-Vabriga Torre-Abrega   Croatia 2,148 10.01% 84.27%
Tinjan Antignana   Croatia 1,729 0.81% 96.93%
Višnjan Visignano   Croatia 2,096 3.53% 92.89%
Vižinada Visinada   Croatia 1,142 5.17% 92.91%
Vrsar Orsera   Croatia 1,923 2.03% 91.89%
Žminj Gimino   Croatia 3,360 0.77% 97.95%
Milje Muggia   Italy 13,208 94.80% 04.80%
Dolina San Dorligo della Valle   Italy 6,025 29.20% 70.50%
Koper, city Capodistria   Slovenia 49,206 2.22% 74.14%
Izola Isola   Slovenia 14,549 4.26% 69.13%
Piran Pirano   Slovenia 16,758 7.00% 66.69%
Lovran Laurana   Croatia 3,527 1.16% 94.10%
Opatija, city Abbazia   Croatia 12,719 1.37% 93.95%
Mošćenička Draga Draga di Moschiena   Croatia 1,288 0.62% 96.59%

Source: Croatian Census - 2021.[28] Slovenian Census - 2002.[30] Italian Census - 1970/2001[31][32]

Bilingual Municipalities in Istria

Education and Italian language

Croatia

Beside Croat language schools, in the Croatian County of Istria there are also kindergartens in Buje/Buie, Brtonigla/Verteneglio, Novigrad/Cittanova, Umag/Umago, Poreč/Parenzo, Vrsar/Orsera, Rovinj/Rovigno, Bale/Valle, Vodnjan/Dignano, Pula/Pola and Labin/Albona, as well as primary schools in Buje/Buie, Brtonigla/Verteneglio, Novigrad/Cittanova, Umag/Umago, Poreč/Parenzo, Vodnjan/Dignano, Rovinj/Rovigno, Bale/Valle and Pula/Pola, as well as lower secondary schools and upper secondary schools in Buje/Buie, Rovinj/Rovigno and Pula/Pola, all with Italian as the language of instruction.

Slovenia

Beside Slovene language schools, in Slovenian Istria there are also kindergartens, primary schools, lower secondary schools and upper secondary schools with Italian as the language of instruction in Koper/Capodistria, Izola/Isola and Piran/Pirano. At the state-owned University of Primorska, however, which is also established in the bilingual area, Slovene is the only language of instruction (although the official name of the university includes the Italian version, too).

Citizenship

As per the Paris Peace Treaties, 1947, those people who lived in the territories of the Kingdom of Italy ceded to Yugoslavia between 1940 and 1947 would lose their Italian citizenship, but could keep it should they decide to move to Italy in a ten year period following the treaty.

As such, the local Italian residents who opted to remain in Istria, Rijeka, Lastovo and other territories lost their Italian citizenship.

On 8 March 2006, the Italian government approved law n. 124, which would provide a possibility to regain the Italian citizenship to "those Italians and their descendants residing in Istria, Fiume, and Dalmatia between 1940 and 1947, when they relinquished it upon these territories being ceded to Yugoslavia. To access this initiative, the following documents are required:

  • Birth certificate, preferably with an international format;
  • Certificate proving the possession of a relevant foreign citizenship (Croatian or Slovene)
  • Certificate of residency in these territories.
  • Proof of residence in these territories between 1940 and 1947.
  • Certificate released by local Italian entities of the Unione Italiana, including but not limited to the subscription to such entity and proven knowledge of the Italian language.
  • Other documents proving the language of the applicant (such as diplomas released from schools where Italian is the language of instruction, grade reports...)[33]

Culture

Istrian culture has been deeply influenced by Venetian culture, especially from an architectural point of view.[34] Istrian cities are characterized by architectural forms with a Venetian imprint, an influence that extends to urban planning, particularly in the grid formed by streets and squares.[34] This influence is still visible today, both in cities and in smaller population centers.[34] Noteworthy is the Venetian architecture of Poreč.[34]

Italian cultural influence has resulted in the resemblance of many Istrian dances to those of Northern Italy. This applies to dances done by the modern day Croatian population and by the Italian national minority found today in the larger towns and some villages in the western part of Istria. Dances done by both the Croatian and the Italian communities include Molferina or Mafrina and Kvadrilja. Dances specific to the Istrian Italians include La Veneziana, Bersagliera, Denci, Sette Passi and the very similar dances Vilota and Furlana.[35]

The Croatian cuisine of Istria was influenced by Italian cuisine, given the historical presence of Istrian Italians, influence that has eased after the Istrian-Dalmatian exodus.[36][37] For example, the influence of Italian cuisine on Croatian dishes is seen in the pršut (similar to Italian prosciutto) and in the preparation of homemade pasta.[38] Italian cuisine has particularly influenced the cuisine of Slovenian Istria, given the historical presence of Istrian Italians, influence that has eased after the Istrian-Dalmatian exodus.[37][39] Slovenian dishes of Italian origin are njoki (similar to Italian gnocchi), rizota (the Slovenian version of risotto) and zilkrofi (similar to Italian ravioli).[40]

Istrian stew or Jota (Croatian: Istarska jota; Slovene: Jota, Italian: Jota) is a soup made of beans, sauerkraut or sour turnip, potatoes, bacon, spare ribs, known in the northern Adriatic region.[41] It is especially popular in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Istria and some other parts of northwestern Croatia. Under the name jota, it is also typical of the whole Slovenian Littoral and territories in northeastern Italy, especially in the provinces of Trieste (where it is considered to be the prime example of Triestine food) and Gorizia, and in some peripheral areas of northeastern Friuli (the Torre river valley, and the mountain borderlands of Carnia and Slavia Veneta). The stew originated in Friuli before spreading east and south. According to the most accredited thesis, "Jota" derives from the Latin jutta (meaning broth)[42] and has parallels in the ancient friulan language and in modern emilian-romagnol.

Notable Istrian Italians

List of notable Istrian Italians across the centuries.

Science

Music and arts

Literature and writing

Religion

Politics

Cinema

Sport

War

Others

See also

Notes and references

Notes

References

  1. ^ History of Istria: Slavs and Latins (in Italian)
  2. ^ a b "Istrian Spring". Retrieved 24 October 2022.
  3. ^ "Esodo italiano dall'Istria" (in Italian). Retrieved 6 March 2023.
  4. ^ "Državni Zavod za Statistiku" (in Croatian). Retrieved 10 June 2017.
  5. ^ "Popis 2002". Retrieved 10 June 2017.
  6. ^ Tobagi, Benedetta. "La Repubblica italiana | Treccani, il portale del sapere". Treccani.it. Retrieved 28 January 2015.
  7. ^ The political, ethnic and linguistic borders of the upper Adriatic after the dissolution of Yugoslavia, J.E. Jahn, Heidelberg Germany 1999 2013-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Theodore Mommsen. The Provinces of the Roman Empire.Chapter I.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 June 2010.
  10. ^ Jaka Bartolj. . Transdiffusion. Archived from the original on 18 September 2010. While most of the population in the towns, especially those on or near the coast, was Italian, Istria's interior was overwhelmingly Slavic – mostly Croatian, but with a sizeable Slovenian area as well.
  11. ^ Istrioto, the autochthonous language of southern Istria (in Italian)
  12. ^ Prominent Istrians
  13. ^ Antolini, Nicola. Slavi e Latini in Istria tra cinquecento e novecento: origini storiche e problemi del contesto multietnico istriano.First section
  14. ^ Benussi, Bernardo. L' Istria nei suoi due millenni di storia. p. 63
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 October 2014. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  16. ^ Die Protokolle des Österreichischen Ministerrates 1848/1867. V Abteilung: Die Ministerien Rainer und Mensdorff. VI Abteilung: Das Ministerium Belcredi, Wien, Österreichischer Bundesverlag für Unterricht, Wissenschaft und Kunst 1971, vol. 2, p. 297. Citazione completa della fonte e traduzione in Luciano Monzali, Italiani di Dalmazia. Dal Risorgimento alla Grande Guerra, Le Lettere, Firenze 2004, p. 69.)
  17. ^ Die Protokolle des Österreichischen Ministerrates 1848/1867. V Abteilung: Die Ministerien Rainer und Mensdorff. VI Abteilung: Das Ministerium Belcredi, Wien, Österreichischer Bundesverlag für Unterricht, Wissenschaft und Kunst 1971
  18. ^ Jürgen Baurmann, Hartmut Gunther and Ulrich Knoop (1993). Homo scribens : Perspektiven der Schriftlichkeitsforschung (in German). p. 279. ISBN 3484311347.
  19. ^ Žerjavić, Vladimir (2008). "DOSELJAVANJA I ISELJAVANJA S PODRUČJA ISTRE, RIJEKE I ZADRA U RAZDOBLJU 1910-1971". Journal of Modern Italian Studies. 13 (2): 237–258.
  20. ^ D'Alessio, Vanni (2008). "From Central Europe to the northern Adriatic: Habsburg citizens between Italians and Croats in Istria". Journal of Modern Italian Studies. 13 (2): 237–258. doi:10.1080/13545710802010990. S2CID 145797119.
  21. ^ Biography of Nazario Sauro
  22. ^ Angelo Visintin (2006). "L'assalto a "Il Piccolo" / Napad na "Il Piccolo"". In Sergio Zucca (ed.). [A journey through the violence of the twentieth century in the Province of Trieste] (PDF) (in Italian and Slovenian). p. 24. ISBN 88-95170-02-4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 February 2008.
  23. ^ O.Mileta Mattiuz, Popolazioni dell'Istria, Fiume, Zara e Dalmazia (1850-2002). Ipotesi di quantificazione demografica, ADES 2005, pp. 57, 128, 159, 169
  24. ^ VIII. Censimento della popolazione 21. aprile 1936. Vol II, Fasc. 24: Provincia del Friuli; Fasc. 31: Provincia del Carnero; Fasc. 32: Provincia di Gorizia, Fasc. 22: Provincia dell’Istria, Fasc. 34: Provincia di Trieste; Fasc. 35: Provincia di Zara, Rome 1936. Cited at Citizenship in historical perspective, edited by Steven G. Ellis, Guðmundur Hálfdanarson and Ann Katherine Isaacs 2011-07-24 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ Matjaž Klemenčič, The Effects of the Dissolution of Yugoslavia on Minority Rights: the Italian Minority in Post-Yugoslav Slovenia and Croatia 2011-07-24 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Arrigo Petacco, The exodus. The story of the Italian population of Istria, Dalmatia, and Venezia Giulia, Mondadori, Milan, 1999. English translation.
  27. ^ US Intelligence Review on Istria / Venezia Giulia after WWII
  28. ^ a b [Census 2021]. Državni zavod za statistiku (in Croatian). 22 September 2022. Archived from the original on 15 January 2022. Retrieved 26 September 2022.
  29. ^ Pradelli, A. Il silenzio di una minoranza: gli italiani in Istria dall'esodo al post-comunismo 1945–2004. p. 38
  30. ^ Slovenian Census - 2002
  31. ^ ISTAT, 14° censimento generale della popolazione e delle abitazioni 2001. Popolazione residente e abitazioni nelle province italiane - fascicolo provinciale Trieste, Roma, 2005 - (this is the official book from the Italian Istituto Centrale di Statistica (Central/National Institute of Statistics) about the census)
  32. ^ Statistical and ethnographic study about the Slovene in the Provincia di Trieste. Scroll down for the data table 2012-11-20 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ "Legge 8 marzo 2006, n. 124".
  34. ^ a b c d "Il patrimonio edile istriano dell'epoca veneziana" (in Italian). Retrieved 14 March 2023.
  35. ^ Ivančan, Ivan (1963). Istarski Narodni Plesovi. Zagreb: Institut za Narodnu Umjetnost. pp. 283–304, 319–320.
  36. ^ "Cucina Croata. I piatti della cucina della Croazia" (in Italian). Retrieved 26 November 2021.
  37. ^ a b "I sopravvissuti: i 10 gioielli della cucina istriana" (in Italian). Retrieved 26 November 2021.
  38. ^ "Assaporate il cibo dell'Istria: il paradiso gastronomico della Croazia" (in Italian). Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  39. ^ "Selezione culinaria dell' Istria Slovena" (in Italian). Retrieved 26 November 2021.
  40. ^ "La cucina slovena" (in Italian). Retrieved 26 November 2021.
  41. ^ . 9 December 2014. Archived from the original on 9 December 2014. Retrieved 8 June 2022.
  42. ^ Tiso, Eleonora (3 May 2019). "Jota: storia del piatto tipico friulano e dove potete mangiarlo". agrodolce.it. Retrieved 9 February 2023.

Bibliography

  • Antolini, Nicola. Slavi e Latini in Istria tra cinquecento e novecento: origini storiche e problemi del contesto multietnico istriano. Magazine "Storicamente". n. 2, 2006[ISBN missing]
  • Bartoli, Matteo. Le parlate italiane della Venezia Giulia e della Dalmazia. Tipografia italo-orientale. Grottaferrata 1919.[ISBN missing]
  • Benussi, Bernardo. L' Istria nei suoi due millenni di storia. Treves-Zanichelli. Trieste 1924.[ISBN missing]
  • Monzali, Luciano (2016). "A Difficult and Silent Return: Italian Exiles from Dalmatia and Yugoslav Zadar/Zara after the Second World War". Balcanica (47): 317–328. doi:10.2298/BALC1647317M.
  • Mommsen Theodore. The Provinces of the Roman Empire. Barnes & Noble Books. New York, 1996 ISBN 0-7607-0145-8
  • Perselli, Guerrino. I censimenti della popolazione dell'Istria, con Fiume e Trieste, e di alcune città della Dalmazia tra il 1850 e il 1936. Centro di ricerche storiche - Rovigno, Trieste - Rovigno 1993.[ISBN missing]
  • Pirjevec, Jože; Kacin-Wohinz, Milica. Storia degli sloveni in Italia, 1866-1998. Marsilio, Venezia 1998.[ISBN missing]
  • Petacco, Arrigo. L'esodo, la tragedia negata degli italiani d'Istria, Dalmazia e Venezia Giulia. Mondadori, Milano, 1999.[ISBN missing]
  • Pradelli, A. Il silenzio di una minoranza: gli italiani in Istria dall'esodo al post-comunismo 1945–2004. Lo Scarabeo Editoriale. Bologna, 2004.[ISBN missing]
  • Seton-Watson, Italy from Liberalism to Fascism, 1870-1925. John Murray Publishers, Londra 1967.[ISBN missing]
  • Vignoli, Giulio. I territori italofoni non appartenenti alla Repubblica Italiana. Giuffrè, Milano, 1995.[ISBN missing]
  • Tomaz, Luigi. Il confine d'Italia in Istria e Dalmazia. Duemila anni di storia. Think ADV, Conselve 2007.[ISBN missing]
  • Ezio e Luciano Giuricin (2015) Mezzo secolo di collaborazione (1964-2014) Lineamenti per la storia delle relazioni tra la Comunità italiana in Istria, Fiume e Dalmazia e la Nazione madre

External links

  • Slavs and Latins in Istria (in Italian)
  • Arrigo Petacco: "The exodus. The story of the Italian population of Istria (1943-1956)" (English translation).
  • Official website of bilingual Groznan/Grisignana (in Croatian and Italian)
  • Official website of Italians (Istrian–Dalmatian exodus) from Piemonte d'Istria-Grisignana (in Italian)
  • Official Website of the Italian community in Croatia and Slovenia (in Italian)
  • Centro Ricerche Storiche di Rovigno: "Istria nel Tempo on line" (in Italian)

istrian, italians, italian, istriani, italiani, slovene, italijanski, istrani, croatian, talijanski, istrani, ethnic, group, from, adriatic, region, istria, modern, northwestern, croatia, southwestern, slovenia, descend, from, original, latinized, population, . Istrian Italians Italian istriani italiani Slovene Italijanski Istrani Croatian Talijanski Istrani are an ethnic group from the Adriatic region of Istria in modern northwestern Croatia and southwestern Slovenia Istrian Italians descend from the original Latinized population of Roman Histria from the Venetian speaking settlers who colonized the region during the time of the Republic of Venice and from the local Croatian people who culturally assimilated 1 Istrian ItaliansIstriani italiani Italian Italijanski Istrani Slovene Talijanski Istrani Croatian Percentage of Italians in Croatia s and Slovenia s Istria 1991Regions with significant populationsIstria ItalyLanguagesItalian Slovenian Croatian Istriot and VenetianReligionRoman CatholicRelated ethnic groupsDalmatian Italians Slovenes Croats ItaliansMore than 50 of the total population of Istria for centuries 2 Istrian Italians were 36 in 1910 3 Today as a result of the Istrian Dalmatian exodus 1943 1960 the majority of Istrian Italians live outside of the Istrian peninsula however a significant Italian minority still lives in the Croatian County of Istria 5 01 and in Slovenian Istria 3 3 where they are granted minority rights According to the official Slovenian and Croatia censuses conducted in 2001 and 2002 respectively they number around 22 000 4 5 The Istrian Dalmatian exodus on the other hand numbers between 230 000 and 350 000 Istrian Italians 6 Throughout history Istrian Italians exerted a vast and significant influence on Istria especially cultural and architectural The number of people resident in the Croatian part of Istria declaring themselves to be Italian nearly doubled between 1981 and 1991 i e before and after the dissolution of Yugoslavia 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early period 1 2 Venetian rule 1 3 Austrian period 1 4 Under Italy 1 5 World War Two and its consequences 1 6 Part of Yugoslavia 2 Current situation 3 Bilingual Municipalities in Istria 4 Education and Italian language 4 1 Croatia 4 2 Slovenia 5 Citizenship 6 Culture 7 Notable Istrian Italians 7 1 Science 7 2 Music and arts 7 3 Literature and writing 7 4 Religion 7 5 Politics 7 6 Cinema 7 7 Sport 7 8 War 7 9 Others 8 See also 9 Notes and references 9 1 Notes 9 2 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksHistory EditEarly period Edit Historian Theodor Mommsen wrote that Istria the X region of Roman Italia since Augustus was fully romanized in the 5th century AD 8 Between 500 and 700 AD Slavs settled in Southeastern Europe Eastern Adriatic and their number ever increased and with the Ottoman invasion Slavs were pushed from the south and east 9 This led to Italic people becoming ever more confined to urban areas while some areas of the countryside were populated by Slavs with exceptions in western and southern Istria which remained fully Romance speaking 10 By the 11th centuries most of the interior mountainous areas of northern and eastern Istria Liburnia were inhabited by South Slavs while the Romance population continued to prevail in the south and west of the peninsula Linguistically the Romance inhabitants of Istria were most probably divided into two main linguistic groups in the north west the speakers of a Rhaeto Romance language similar to Ladin and Friulian prevailed while in the south the natives most probably spoke a variant of the Dalmatian language One modern claim suggests the original language of the romanized Istrians survived the invasions this being the Istriot language which spoken by some near Pula 11 Republic of Venice influenced the neolatins of Istria for many centuries from the Middle Ages until 1797 until conquered by Napoleon Capodistria and Pola were important centers of art and culture during the Italian Renaissance 12 Other historians have attributed the ancient language of romanized Istrians as being the Istro Romanian Venetian rule Edit Map of Istria and Dalmatia with the ancient domains of the Republic of Venice indicated in fuchsia Dashed diagonally the territories that belonged occasionally In the 14th century epidemics such as the Black Death decimated in those years the Istrian population which was still mostly of Romance ethnicity As a consequence of depopulation Venice started settling Slavic communities to repopulate the interior areas of the peninsula These were mostly Cakavian and partially Stokavian speaking South Slavs from Dalmatia and present day Montenegro differently from Kajkavian and proto Slovene speakers that lived in the northern areas of the peninsula At the same time settlers from the Veneto region were used to resettle the towns This caused a language shift of the local Romance population who replaced the old Romance either Rhaeto Romance or Italo Dalmatian languages with the Venetian language Only in the extreme south of the peninsula did the original Istrian Romance language survive under strong Venetian influences it transformed itself into the modern Istriot language Until the early 19th century Dalmatian continued to be spoken on the island of Veglia Krk and a dialect of Friulian in the town of Muggia both became extinct in the mid 19th century replaced by Venetian In 1374 Because of the implementation of a treaty of inheritance central and eastern Istria fell to the House of Habsburg while Venice continued to control the northern western and south eastern portion of the peninsula including the major coastal towns of Capodistria Koper Parenzo Porec Rovigno Rovinj Pola Pula Fianona Plomin and the interior towns of Albona Labin and Pinguente Buzet 13 This created a dichotomy that characterized Istria until the late 18th century The Venetian culture and language left a profound impact on Venetian Istria By the Baroque and Enlightenment periods Istrian Italians were completely integrated in the wider Italian culture via their belonging to the Republic of Venice The towns of Venetian Istria became almost exclusively Venetian speaking and Venetian Italian was the language of commerce culture and administration Nevertheless significant numbers of South Slavic speakers mostly Slovene and Cakavian Croatian continued to dwell in the rural areas of Venetian Istria especially in the north of the province and on the border with Austrian Istria On the other hand interior and eastern Istria was included into the Central European cultural sphere and were dominated by a feudal culture By the late 18th century the vast majority of Austrian Istria were Slavic Slovene and Croat speakers After the Treaty of Campo Formio 1797 Austria occupied the Venetian part of the peninsula After a short French interim Austria reconquered the whole peninsula in 1813 and unified it into a single province As a result Istrian Italians became a minority in the new administrative unit although they maintained their social and part of their political power Austrian period Edit 1910 census percentages of the poputalation who used Italian as the main language Although the incorporation into the Austrian Empire caused deep changes in the political asset of the region it did not alter the social balance Venetian speaking Istrian Italians continued to dominate the region both culturally and economically In the first half of the 19th century the use of Venetian language even extended to some areas of former Austrian Istria like the town of Pazin Pisino The Austrian censuses detected a gradual but constant rise of Italian speakers both in numerical and proportional terms in 1848 around a third of Istrians were Italian Venetian or Istriot speakers From the early 19th century onward the local Croats and Slovenes engaged in a national revival demanding linguistic and national rights that challenged the supremacy of the Italian language and culture in Istria The Croatian Slovene national movement gained force only in the second part of the 19th century causing a clash with a parallel nationalist movement of the Istrian Italians 14 Many Istrian Italians looked with sympathy towards the Risorgimento movement that fought for the unification of Italy However after 1866 when the Veneto and Friuli regions were ceded by the Austrians to the newly formed Kingdom Italy Istria remained part of the Austro Hungarian Empire together with other Italian speaking areas on the eastern Adriatic Trieste Gorizia and Gradisca Fiume This triggered the gradual rise of Italian irredentism among many Italians in Istria who demanded the unification of the Austrian Littoral Fiume and Dalmatia with Italy Under Austrian rule in the 19th century it included a large population of Italians Croats Slovenes some Vlachs Istro Romanians and even a few Montenegrins The Italians in Istria supported the Italian Risorgimento as a consequence the Austrians saw the Italians as enemies and favored the Slav communities of Istria 15 During the meeting of the Council of Ministers of 12 November 1866 Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria outlined a wide ranging project aimed at the Germanization or Slavization of the areas of the empire with an Italian presence 16 Her Majesty expressed the precise order that action be taken decisively against the influence of the Italian elements still present in some regions of the Crown and appropriately occupying the posts of public judicial masters employees as well as with the influence of the press work in South Tyrol Dalmatia and Littoral for the Germanization and Slavization of these territories according to the circumstances with energy and without any regard His Majesty calls the central offices to the strong duty to proceed in this way to what has been established Franz Joseph I of Austria Council of the Crown of 12 November 1866 17 18 This tension created by some claims a huge emigration of Italians from Istria before World War I reducing their percentage inside the peninsula inhabitants there are some claims Italians made more than 50 of the total population for centuries 2 but at the end of the 19th century they were reduced to only two fifths according to some estimates A limited tension with the Austrian state did not in fact stop the rise of the use of the Italian language in the second part of the 19th century when the population of predominantly Italian speaking towns in Istria rose dramatically in the part of Istria that eventually became part of Croatia the first Austrian census from 1846 found 34 thousand Italian speakers alongside 120 thousand Croatian speakers Until 1910 the proportion changed there were 108 thousand Italian speakers and 134 thousand Croatian speakers 19 Vanni D Alessio notes 2008 the Austrian surveys of the language of use in the Austrian censuses the ethnic composition of the population wasn t surveyed only the Umgangsprache overestimated the diffusion of the socially dominant languages of the empire The capacity of assimilation of the Italian language suggests that amongst those who declared themselves Italian speakers in Istria there were people whose mother tongue was different D Alessio notes even the people who imigrated from non Croatian and non Italian parts of the Habsburg Empire tended to use Italian after living in Istrian towns long enough Contrasting the claims of a huge emigration of Italians from Istria D Allesio writes about an important influx of immigrants from the Kingdom of Italy to Istria during the last decades of the Austrian rule 20 In the same period the Istrian Slovenes and Croats who represented around three fifths of the Istrian population increased their demands for national and linguistic emancipation The result was the intensification of the ethnic strife between the two groups although it was limited to institutional battles and it rarely manifested in violent forms Indeed in 1910 the ethnic and linguistic composition was completely mixed and the Italians were reduced to minority although still significant According to the Austrian census results out of 404 309 inhabitants in the Margravate of Istria 168 116 41 6 spoke Croatian 147 416 36 5 spoke Italian 55 365 13 7 spoke Slovene 13 279 3 3 spoke German 882 0 2 spoke Romanian 2 116 0 5 spoke other languages and 17 135 4 2 were non citizens which had not been asked for their language of communication Excluding the almost exclusively Croatian speaking areas that were annexed to Yugoslavia after WWI Kastav and the island of Krk Istria had 39 of Italian speakers 37 of Croatian and 14 7 Slovene speakers Until the end of the Austro Hungarian Monarchy the bourgeois Italian national liberal elites retained much of the political control in Istria Under Italy Edit See also Julian March During World War One many Istrians fought as volunteers on the Italian side against the Austro Hungarian Empire Among them the most famous was the Nazario Sauro from Koper Capodistria 21 After the end of the war the whole peninsula was occupied by the Kingdom of Italy and officially annexed to Italy with the Treaty of Rapallo of 1920 Istria was included in the administrative region known as the Julian March Venezia Giulia After the Fascist takeover of Italy in 1922 Italian became the sole language of administration and education A fierce policy of Italianization was followed which prohibited all use of any language but Italian Many Slovenes and Croats left the region which strengthened the Italian positions However ethnic tensions grew and a Slovenian and Croatian anti Fascist insurgency started to appear in the late 1920s although it was much less strong than in other parts of the Julian March Indeed before the Treaty of Rapallo the Italians in Istria accounted for nearly half of the local inhabitants and were mostly an indigenous population but after the treaty they were bolstered by some new arrivals of the so called regnicoli from the Kingdom of Italy which were never well liked 22 by the indigenous Istrians Italians The Austrian 1910 census indicated approximately 182 500 people who listed Italian as their language of communication in what is now the territory of Slovenia and Croatia 137 131 in Istria and 28 911 in Fiume Rijeka 1918 23 Meanwhile the Italian 1936 census 24 indicated approximately 230 000 people who listed Italian as their language of communication in what is now the territory of Slovenia and Croatia then part of the Italian state nearly 194 000 in today s Croatia and 36 000 in today s Slovenia World War Two and its consequences Edit See also Foibe massacres Istrian Dalmatian exodus and Free Territory of Trieste After the Italian armistice of 1943 Istria became a battlefield between the Nazi German army and the partisan mostly Yugoslav insurgency Already in September 1943 several hundreds Istrian Italians were killed by the Yugoslav partisans because of their allegiance to the Italian State This was the first wave of the Foibe massacres which continued after the Yugoslav takeover of the region in May 1945 From 1943 until 1953 according to various data between 200 000 and 330 000 Italians emigrated from these regions This emigration of Italians called Istrian Dalmatian exodus reduced the total population of the region and altered its ethnic structure Changes to the Italian eastern border from 1920 to 1975 The Austrian Littoral later renamed Julian March which was assigned to Italy in 1920 with the Treaty of Rapallo with adjustments of its border in 1924 after the Treaty of Rome and which was then ceded to Yugoslavia in 1947 with the Treaty of Paris Areas annexed to Italy in 1920 and remained Italian even after 1947 Areas annexed to Italy in 1920 passed to the Free Territory of Trieste in 1947 with the Paris treaties and definitively assigned to Italy in 1975 with the Treaty of Osimo Areas annexed to Italy in 1920 passed to the Free Territory of Trieste in 1947 with the Paris treaties and definitively assigned to Yugoslavia in 1975 with the Osimo treaty After the Yugoslav Communist troops occupied Istria in May 1945 many Italians started leaving Istria under the pressure of the new authorities who demanded the annexation of Istria to Yugoslavia With an agreement between the Allied forces and Tito s Yugoslav government a line of demarcation known as the Morgan Line was set in June 1945 most of Istria remained under Yugoslav occupation while the towns of Pula and Muggia were transferred to Allied administration With the peace treaty of 1947 most of Istria including Pula was assigned to Yugoslavia This triggered the Istrian Dalmatian exodus the departure of the large majority of Istrian Italians Only the north western portion was assigned to the zone B of the short lived Free Territory of Trieste but de facto remained under Yugoslav administration Part of Yugoslavia Edit In 1953 according to the official census only 36 000 Italians lived in Yugoslavia 16 of the Italian population before World War II 25 and another 35 000 lived in the zone B of the Free Territory of Trieste FTT After the dissolution of the FTT in 1954 and the definitive hand over of the zone B to Yugoslavia almost the totality of Istria became officially part of Yugoslavia This triggered the last wave of the Istrian Dalmatian exodus with most of the Istrian Italians 26 27 leaving the zone B for elsewhere mainly to Italy because intimidated or preferring not to live in communist Yugoslavia Yugoslav Istria was divided between Croatia and Slovenia so that the Istrian Italians became subject to two different administrations In 1961 25 651 Italians remained in Yugoslavia this number included some small minorities in Dalmatia around 10 12 of the Italian population before World War II Italians continued to emigrate in later decades most of them to Australia Canada South America or the USA Therefore their population declined in each subsequent census to 15 132 inhabitants in 1981 It has to be emphasized that the data of the Yugoslav censuses are unreliable in relation to the real number of Italians since many members of the Italian minority for various reasons chose to be nationally undeclared or preferred to use their regional identity and declared themselves as Istrians Not surprisingly in 2001 i e after the dissolution of Yugoslavia the Croatian and Slovenian censuses reported a total Italian population of 21 894 with the figure in Croatia nearly doubling In its 1996 report on Local self government territorial integrity and protection of minorities the Council of Europe s European Commission for Democracy through Law the Venice Commission put it that a great majority of the local Italians some thousands of Slovenes and of nationally undefined bilingual Istrians used their legal right from the peace treaty to opt out of the Yugoslav controlled part of Istria In several waves they moved to Italy and elsewhere also overseas mainly in the Americas and claimed Italian or other citizenship Current situation Edit Muggia one of the two Italian towns of contemporary Istria Today Istrian Italians are mostly a national minority in Croatia Croatian municipalities with a significant Italian population include Grisignana Groznjan 36 Verteneglio Brtonigla 32 and Buie Buje 24 28 The last census 2001 showed that there are nearly 50 000 Istrian Italians in Istria as a whole between Croatia Slovenia and Italy more than half of them living in Italy 29 Municipality Italian name Country Inhabitants Mother tongue Italian Mother tongue Croatian and SlovenianLabin city Albona Croatia 10 424 1 69 90 19 Buje city Buie Croatia 4 441 28 57 65 96 Novigrad city Cittanova Croatia 3 889 9 95 83 52 Vodnjan city Dignano Croatia 5 838 13 53 74 51 Porec city Parenzo Croatia 16 607 2 40 89 71 Buzet city Pinguente Croatia 5 999 0 60 93 35 Pazin city Pisino Croatia 8 279 0 75 96 67 Pula city Pola Croatia 52 220 3 26 87 75 Rovinj city Rovigno Croatia 12 968 8 14 83 11 Umag city Umago Croatia 12 699 13 61 79 38 Bale Valle Croatia 1 170 14 27 81 37 Barban Barbana d Istria Croatia 2 491 0 60 97 07 Brtonigla Verteneglio Croatia 1 523 35 72 60 15 Cerovlje Cerreto Croatia 1 453 0 48 98 69 Fazana Fasana Croatia 3 463 2 77 92 72 Gracisce Gallignana Croatia 1 312 0 08 98 86 Groznjan Grisignana Croatia 656 44 51 51 83 Kanfanar Canfanaro Croatia 1 498 1 00 95 06 Karojba Caroiba del Subiente Croatia 1 404 0 36 98 65 Kastelir Labinci Castellier Santa Domenica Croatia 1 439 1 94 75 89 Krsan Chersano Croatia 2 829 0 35 94 84 Lanisce Lanischie Croatia 268 98 50 Liznjan Lisignano Croatia 4 087 4 04 90 05 Lupoglav Lupogliano Croatia 836 0 36 97 97 Marcana Marzana Croatia 4 250 0 75 95 81 Medulin Medolino Croatia 6 552 2 64 86 88 Motovun Montona Croatia 912 7 13 89 80 Oprtalj Portole Croatia 748 11 76 80 75 Pican Pedena Croatia 1 722 0 17 98 90 Rasa Arsia Croatia 2 809 0 78 90 21 Sveta Nedelja Santa Domenica d Albona Croatia 2 898 0 62 92 20 Sveti Lovrec San Lorenzo del Pasenatico Croatia 960 1 15 90 84 Sveti Petar u Sumi San Pietro in Selve Croatia 1 051 0 38 98 39 Svetvincenat Sanvincenti Croatia 2 179 1 33 95 82 Tar Vabriga Torre Abrega Croatia 2 148 10 01 84 27 Tinjan Antignana Croatia 1 729 0 81 96 93 Visnjan Visignano Croatia 2 096 3 53 92 89 Vizinada Visinada Croatia 1 142 5 17 92 91 Vrsar Orsera Croatia 1 923 2 03 91 89 Zminj Gimino Croatia 3 360 0 77 97 95 Milje Muggia Italy 13 208 94 80 04 80 Dolina San Dorligo della Valle Italy 6 025 29 20 70 50 Koper city Capodistria Slovenia 49 206 2 22 74 14 Izola Isola Slovenia 14 549 4 26 69 13 Piran Pirano Slovenia 16 758 7 00 66 69 Lovran Laurana Croatia 3 527 1 16 94 10 Opatija city Abbazia Croatia 12 719 1 37 93 95 Moscenicka Draga Draga di Moschiena Croatia 1 288 0 62 96 59 Source Croatian Census 2021 28 Slovenian Census 2002 30 Italian Census 1970 2001 31 32 Bilingual Municipalities in Istria EditBuje Buie Novigrad Cittanova d Istria Vodnjan Dignano d Istria Porec Parenzo Pula Pola Rovinj Rovigno d Istria Umag Umago Kastelir Labinci Castellier Santa Domenica Fazana Fasana Funtana Fontane Groznjan Grisignana Liznjan Lisignano Motovun Montona Oprtalj Portole Vrsar Orsera Tar Vabriga Torre Abrega Bale Valle d Istria Brtonigla Verteneglio Visnjan Visignano Vizinada VisinadaEducation and Italian language EditCroatia Edit Beside Croat language schools in the Croatian County of Istria there are also kindergartens in Buje Buie Brtonigla Verteneglio Novigrad Cittanova Umag Umago Porec Parenzo Vrsar Orsera Rovinj Rovigno Bale Valle Vodnjan Dignano Pula Pola and Labin Albona as well as primary schools in Buje Buie Brtonigla Verteneglio Novigrad Cittanova Umag Umago Porec Parenzo Vodnjan Dignano Rovinj Rovigno Bale Valle and Pula Pola as well as lower secondary schools and upper secondary schools in Buje Buie Rovinj Rovigno and Pula Pola all with Italian as the language of instruction Slovenia Edit Beside Slovene language schools in Slovenian Istria there are also kindergartens primary schools lower secondary schools and upper secondary schools with Italian as the language of instruction in Koper Capodistria Izola Isola and Piran Pirano At the state owned University of Primorska however which is also established in the bilingual area Slovene is the only language of instruction although the official name of the university includes the Italian version too Citizenship EditAs per the Paris Peace Treaties 1947 those people who lived in the territories of the Kingdom of Italy ceded to Yugoslavia between 1940 and 1947 would lose their Italian citizenship but could keep it should they decide to move to Italy in a ten year period following the treaty As such the local Italian residents who opted to remain in Istria Rijeka Lastovo and other territories lost their Italian citizenship On 8 March 2006 the Italian government approved law n 124 which would provide a possibility to regain the Italian citizenship to those Italians and their descendants residing in Istria Fiume and Dalmatia between 1940 and 1947 when they relinquished it upon these territories being ceded to Yugoslavia To access this initiative the following documents are required Birth certificate preferably with an international format Certificate proving the possession of a relevant foreign citizenship Croatian or Slovene Certificate of residency in these territories Proof of residence in these territories between 1940 and 1947 Certificate released by local Italian entities of the Unione Italiana including but not limited to the subscription to such entity and proven knowledge of the Italian language Other documents proving the language of the applicant such as diplomas released from schools where Italian is the language of instruction grade reports 33 Culture EditSee also Italian folk dance and Italian cuisine Istrian stew Istrian culture has been deeply influenced by Venetian culture especially from an architectural point of view 34 Istrian cities are characterized by architectural forms with a Venetian imprint an influence that extends to urban planning particularly in the grid formed by streets and squares 34 This influence is still visible today both in cities and in smaller population centers 34 Noteworthy is the Venetian architecture of Porec 34 Italian cultural influence has resulted in the resemblance of many Istrian dances to those of Northern Italy This applies to dances done by the modern day Croatian population and by the Italian national minority found today in the larger towns and some villages in the western part of Istria Dances done by both the Croatian and the Italian communities include Molferina or Mafrina and Kvadrilja Dances specific to the Istrian Italians include La Veneziana Bersagliera Denci Sette Passi and the very similar dances Vilota and Furlana 35 The Croatian cuisine of Istria was influenced by Italian cuisine given the historical presence of Istrian Italians influence that has eased after the Istrian Dalmatian exodus 36 37 For example the influence of Italian cuisine on Croatian dishes is seen in the prsut similar to Italian prosciutto and in the preparation of homemade pasta 38 Italian cuisine has particularly influenced the cuisine of Slovenian Istria given the historical presence of Istrian Italians influence that has eased after the Istrian Dalmatian exodus 37 39 Slovenian dishes of Italian origin are njoki similar to Italian gnocchi rizota the Slovenian version of risotto and zilkrofi similar to Italian ravioli 40 Istrian stew or Jota Croatian Istarska jota Slovene Jota Italian Jota is a soup made of beans sauerkraut or sour turnip potatoes bacon spare ribs known in the northern Adriatic region 41 It is especially popular in Friuli Venezia Giulia Istria and some other parts of northwestern Croatia Under the name jota it is also typical of the whole Slovenian Littoral and territories in northeastern Italy especially in the provinces of Trieste where it is considered to be the prime example of Triestine food and Gorizia and in some peripheral areas of northeastern Friuli the Torre river valley and the mountain borderlands of Carnia and Slavia Veneta The stew originated in Friuli before spreading east and south According to the most accredited thesis Jota derives from the Latin jutta meaning broth 42 and has parallels in the ancient friulan language and in modern emilian romagnol Notable Istrian Italians Edit Mario Andretti Antonio Grossich Nino Benvenuti Alida Valli Sergio Endrigo Laura Antonelli Fulvio Tomizza Dino Ciani Luciano Fonda List of notable Istrian Italians across the centuries Science Edit Santorio Santorio Koper inventor of clinical thermometer and physician Antonio Grossich Draguc surgeon Attilio Colacevich Rijeka astronomer Umberto D Ancona Rijeka biologist Domenico Lovisato Izola geologist Bartolomeo Biasoletto Vodnjan pharmacist Luciano Fonda Pula theoretical physicist Giuseppe Furlani Pula archaeologistMusic and arts Edit Bernardo Parentino Porec painter Francesco Trevisani Koper Rococo painter Andrea Antico Motovun music editor and composer of the Renaissance Antonio Smareglia Pula opera composer Giuseppe Tartini Piran music composer and violinist Giorgio Surian Rijeka opera singer Leonora Surian Rijeka actress Sergio Endrigo Pula singer songwriter Giulio Clovio Grizane painter Dino Ciani Rijeka pianist Enrico Fonda Rijeka painter Romolo Venucci Rijeka painter Domenico da Capodistria Koper architect Cesare Dell Acqua Piran painter Giuseppe Pagano Porec architect Luigi Dallapiccola Pazin composer Gino De Finetti Pazin painter Renato Dionisi Rovinj composer Attilio Micheluzzi Umag comics artist Ottavio Scotti Umag art director Erma Bossi Pula painter Roberto Soffici Pula songwriterLiterature and writing Edit Pier Paolo Vergerio Koper Reformer and Humanist Fulvio Tomizza Umag international writer Giovanni Arpino Pula writer and journalist Lidia Bastianich Pula chef author and restaurateur Leo Valiani Rijeka historian Gian Rinaldo Carli Koper economist Pier Paolo Vergerio the Elder Koper humanist Matteo Bartoli Labin linguist Lina Galli Porec writer Pier Antonio Quarantotti Gambini Pazin writer Nelida Milani Pula writer Anna Maria Mori Pula journalist Sergio Noja Noseda Pula professor of Arabic languageReligion Edit Nicolo Cortese Cres priest Matteo Barbabianca Koper prelate Antonio Elio Koper prelate Francesco Bonifacio Piran martyr priest beatified Antonio Santin Rovinj bishop Egidio Bullesi Pula member from the Secular Franciscan Order Eugenio Ravignani Pula bishopPolitics Edit Vittorio Vidali Muggia politician Aurelio Juri Pula politician Member of European Parliament Pietro Polani Pula Doge of Venice Rossana Rossanda Pula politician Mario Blasich Rijeka politician Giovanni de Ciotta Rijeka politician Riccardo Zanella Rijeka politician Marino Baldini Porec politician Luciano Delbianco Rovinj politician Furio Radin Pula politician Ivan Pauletta Premantura politician and writer Vera Squarcialupi Pula politicianCinema Edit Laura Antonelli Pula international film actress Alida Valli Pula international film actress Femi Benussi Rovinj national film actress Massimo Dobrovic Pula international film actor Oretta Fiume Rijeka film actress Aldo Lado Rijeka film director Romano Scavolini Rijeka film director Antonio Gandusio Rovinj film actor Lilia Dale Pula film actressSport Edit Nino Benvenuti Izola professional boxing champion Olympic gold medal in 1960 Giovanni Cernogoraz Koper shooter Olympic gold medal in 2012 Mario Andretti Motovun international automobile racing driver Aldo Andretti Motovun racing driver Elvis Scoria Pula football manager Fausto Budicin Pula football player Mitja Gasparini Izola Slovenian volleyball player Eva Mori Kanal ob Soci Slovenian volleyball player Samanta Fabris Pula Croatian volleyball player Paolo Marinelli Rijeka Basketball player Rodolfo Tommasi Opatija Footballer player Nicolo Rode Mali Losinj sailor Agostino Straulino Mali Losinj sailor Giovanni Cucelli Rijeka tennis player Ezio Loik Rijeka footballer player Paolo Marinelli Rijeka basketball player Ulderico Sergo Rijeka boxer Orlando Sirola Rijeka tennis player Rodolfo Volk Rijeka football player Riccardo Divora Koper rower Valentino Pellarini Koper basketball player Bruno Zago Koper football player Giliante D Este Izola rower Giovanni Delise Izola rower Aredio Gimona Izola football player Giuseppe Perentin Izola swimmer Valerio Perentin Izola rower Nicolo Vittori Izola rower Renato Petronio Piran rower Ernesto Vidal Buje football player Francesco Carpenetti Vrsar football player Antonio Quarantotto Vrsar swimmer Albano Albanese Porec hurdler Silvano Abba Rovinj pentathlete Luigi De Manincor Rovinj sailor Luigi Busidoni Pula football player Mario Novelli Pula basketball player Rodolfo Ostromann Pula football player Orlando Sain Pula football player Vittorio Zucca Pula sprinterWar Edit Nazario Sauro Koper Italian patriot and irredentist Fabio Filzi Pazin Italian patriot and irredentist Spartaco Schergat Koper Frogman and hero of WWII Antonio Marceglia Piran Frogman and hero of WWII Lucrezio Gravisi Koper freelance soldier Mario Visintini Porec aircraft pilot Licio Visintini Pula naval officerOthers Edit Joe Bastianich Pula chef Romano Alquati Klana sociologist Giuseppina Martinuzzi Labin pedagogueSee also EditIstria Istrian Dalmatian exodus Free Territory of Trieste Dalmatian Italians Istriot language Istro Romanians ItalianizationNotes and references EditNotes Edit References Edit History of Istria Slavs and Latins in Italian a b Istrian Spring Retrieved 24 October 2022 Esodo italiano dall Istria in Italian Retrieved 6 March 2023 Drzavni Zavod za Statistiku in Croatian Retrieved 10 June 2017 Popis 2002 Retrieved 10 June 2017 Tobagi Benedetta La Repubblica italiana Treccani il portale del sapere Treccani it Retrieved 28 January 2015 The political ethnic and linguistic borders of the upper Adriatic after the dissolution of Yugoslavia J E Jahn Heidelberg Germany 1999 Archived 2013 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Theodore Mommsen The Provinces of the Roman Empire Chapter I Demography and the Origins of the Yugoslav Civil War Archived from the original on 9 June 2010 Jaka Bartolj The Olive Grove Revolution Transdiffusion Archived from the original on 18 September 2010 While most of the population in the towns especially those on or near the coast was Italian Istria s interior was overwhelmingly Slavic mostly Croatian but with a sizeable Slovenian area as well Istrioto the autochthonous language of southern Istria in Italian Prominent Istrians Antolini Nicola Slavi e Latini in Istria tra cinquecento e novecento origini storiche e problemi del contesto multietnico istriano First section Benussi Bernardo L Istria nei suoi due millenni di storia p 63 Paolo Radivo Italian Irredentism in Istria in Italian Archived from the original on 24 October 2014 Retrieved 25 April 2010 Die Protokolle des Osterreichischen Ministerrates 1848 1867 V Abteilung Die Ministerien Rainer und Mensdorff VI Abteilung Das Ministerium Belcredi Wien Osterreichischer Bundesverlag fur Unterricht Wissenschaft und Kunst 1971 vol 2 p 297 Citazione completa della fonte e traduzione in Luciano Monzali Italiani di Dalmazia Dal Risorgimento alla Grande Guerra Le Lettere Firenze 2004 p 69 Die Protokolle des Osterreichischen Ministerrates 1848 1867 V Abteilung Die Ministerien Rainer und Mensdorff VI Abteilung Das Ministerium Belcredi Wien Osterreichischer Bundesverlag fur Unterricht Wissenschaft und Kunst 1971 Jurgen Baurmann Hartmut Gunther and Ulrich Knoop 1993 Homo scribens Perspektiven der Schriftlichkeitsforschung in German p 279 ISBN 3484311347 Zerjavic Vladimir 2008 DOSELJAVANJA I ISELJAVANJA S PODRUCJA ISTRE RIJEKE I ZADRA U RAZDOBLJU 1910 1971 Journal of Modern Italian Studies 13 2 237 258 D Alessio Vanni 2008 From Central Europe to the northern Adriatic Habsburg citizens between Italians and Croats in Istria Journal of Modern Italian Studies 13 2 237 258 doi 10 1080 13545710802010990 S2CID 145797119 Biography of Nazario Sauro Angelo Visintin 2006 L assalto a Il Piccolo Napad na Il Piccolo In Sergio Zucca ed Un percorso tra le Violenze del Novecento nella Provincia di Trieste Po Poteh Nailja v 20 Stoletju v Trzaski Pokrajini A journey through the violence of the twentieth century in the Province of Trieste PDF in Italian and Slovenian p 24 ISBN 88 95170 02 4 Archived from the original PDF on 29 February 2008 O Mileta Mattiuz Popolazioni dell Istria Fiume Zara e Dalmazia 1850 2002 Ipotesi di quantificazione demografica ADES 2005 pp 57 128 159 169 VIII Censimento della popolazione 21 aprile 1936 Vol II Fasc 24 Provincia del Friuli Fasc 31 Provincia del Carnero Fasc 32 Provincia di Gorizia Fasc 22 Provincia dell Istria Fasc 34 Provincia di Trieste Fasc 35 Provincia di Zara Rome 1936 Cited at Citizenship in historical perspective edited by Steven G Ellis Gudmundur Halfdanarson and Ann Katherine Isaacs Archived 2011 07 24 at the Wayback Machine Matjaz Klemencic The Effects of the Dissolution of Yugoslavia on Minority Rights the Italian Minority in Post Yugoslav Slovenia and Croatia Archived 2011 07 24 at the Wayback Machine Arrigo Petacco The exodus The story of the Italian population of Istria Dalmatia and Venezia Giulia Mondadori Milan 1999 English translation US Intelligence Review on Istria Venezia Giulia after WWII a b Popis 2021 Census 2021 Drzavni zavod za statistiku in Croatian 22 September 2022 Archived from the original on 15 January 2022 Retrieved 26 September 2022 Pradelli A Il silenzio di una minoranza gli italiani in Istria dall esodo al post comunismo 1945 2004 p 38 Slovenian Census 2002 ISTAT 14 censimento generale della popolazione e delle abitazioni 2001 Popolazione residente e abitazioni nelle province italiane fascicolo provinciale Trieste Roma 2005 this is the official book from the Italian Istituto Centrale di Statistica Central National Institute of Statistics about the census Statistical and ethnographic study about the Slovene in the Provincia di Trieste Scroll down for the data table Archived 2012 11 20 at the Wayback Machine Legge 8 marzo 2006 n 124 a b c d Il patrimonio edile istriano dell epoca veneziana in Italian Retrieved 14 March 2023 Ivancan Ivan 1963 Istarski Narodni Plesovi Zagreb Institut za Narodnu Umjetnost pp 283 304 319 320 Cucina Croata I piatti della cucina della Croazia in Italian Retrieved 26 November 2021 a b I sopravvissuti i 10 gioielli della cucina istriana in Italian Retrieved 26 November 2021 Assaporate il cibo dell Istria il paradiso gastronomico della Croazia in Italian Retrieved 2 December 2021 Selezione culinaria dell Istria Slovena in Italian Retrieved 26 November 2021 La cucina slovena in Italian Retrieved 26 November 2021 Manestre Eintopf Molo Grande Travel 9 December 2014 Archived from the original on 9 December 2014 Retrieved 8 June 2022 Tiso Eleonora 3 May 2019 Jota storia del piatto tipico friulano e dove potete mangiarlo agrodolce it Retrieved 9 February 2023 Bibliography EditAntolini Nicola Slavi e Latini in Istria tra cinquecento e novecento origini storiche e problemi del contesto multietnico istriano Magazine Storicamente n 2 2006 ISBN missing Bartoli Matteo Le parlate italiane della Venezia Giulia e della Dalmazia Tipografia italo orientale Grottaferrata 1919 ISBN missing Benussi Bernardo L Istria nei suoi due millenni di storia Treves Zanichelli Trieste 1924 ISBN missing Monzali Luciano 2016 A Difficult and Silent Return Italian Exiles from Dalmatia and Yugoslav Zadar Zara after the Second World War Balcanica 47 317 328 doi 10 2298 BALC1647317M Mommsen Theodore The Provinces of the Roman Empire Barnes amp Noble Books New York 1996 ISBN 0 7607 0145 8 Perselli Guerrino I censimenti della popolazione dell Istria con Fiume e Trieste e di alcune citta della Dalmazia tra il 1850 e il 1936 Centro di ricerche storiche Rovigno Trieste Rovigno 1993 ISBN missing Pirjevec Joze Kacin Wohinz Milica Storia degli sloveni in Italia 1866 1998 Marsilio Venezia 1998 ISBN missing Petacco Arrigo L esodo la tragedia negata degli italiani d Istria Dalmazia e Venezia Giulia Mondadori Milano 1999 ISBN missing Pradelli A Il silenzio di una minoranza gli italiani in Istria dall esodo al post comunismo 1945 2004 Lo Scarabeo Editoriale Bologna 2004 ISBN missing Seton Watson Italy from Liberalism to Fascism 1870 1925 John Murray Publishers Londra 1967 ISBN missing Vignoli Giulio I territori italofoni non appartenenti alla Repubblica Italiana Giuffre Milano 1995 ISBN missing Tomaz Luigi Il confine d Italia in Istria e Dalmazia Duemila anni di storia Think ADV Conselve 2007 ISBN missing Ezio e Luciano Giuricin 2015 Mezzo secolo di collaborazione 1964 2014 Lineamenti per la storia delle relazioni tra la Comunita italiana in Istria Fiume e Dalmazia e la Nazione madreExternal links EditSlavs and Latins in Istria in Italian Arrigo Petacco The exodus The story of the Italian population of Istria 1943 1956 English translation Official website of bilingual Groznan Grisignana in Croatian and Italian Official website of Italians Istrian Dalmatian exodus from Piemonte d Istria Grisignana in Italian Official Website of the Italian community in Croatia and Slovenia in Italian Centro Ricerche Storiche di Rovigno Istria nel Tempo on line in Italian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Istrian Italians amp oldid 1148860903, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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