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Italian Argentines

Italian Argentines (Italian: italo-argentini; Spanish: ítalo-argentinos, or tanos in Rioplatense Spanish) are Argentine-born citizens who are fully or partially of Italian descent, whose ancestors were Italians who emigrated to Argentina during the Italian diaspora, or Italian-born people in Argentina.

Italian Argentines
Italo-argentini (Italian)
Ítalo-argentinos (Spanish)
Italian Argentines during the opening parade of the XXXIV Immigrant's Festival in Oberá, Misiones
Total population
c. 690,000 (by birth)[1]
c. 25,000,000 (by ancestry, about 62.5% of the total Argentine population)[2]
Regions with significant populations
Throughout Argentina
(Plurality in the Pampas)
Languages
Argentine Spanish, Rioplatense Spanish, Italian, Piedmontese, Venetian, Neapolitan, Sicilian, and other languages of ItalyCocoliche pidgin (also Lunfardo slang).
Religion
Catholic Church (Latin Church)[3] (with a small minority of Eastern Catholics of the Byzantine Rite)[4]
Related ethnic groups
Italians, Italian Americans, Italian Bolivians, Italian Brazilians, Italian Canadians, Italian Chileans, Italian Colombians, Italian Costa Ricans, Italian Cubans, Italian Dominicans, Italian Ecuadorians, Italian Guatemalans, Italian Haitians, Italian Hondurans, Italian Mexicans, Italian Panamanians, Italian Paraguayans, Italian Peruvians, Italian Puerto Ricans, Italian Salvadorans, Italian Uruguayans, Italian Venezuelans

Between 1880 and 1930, Italian immigration to Argentina was the largest migratory movement, with around two million Italian immigrants.[5] It was estimated that at least 25 million Argentines (62.5% of the country's population) have some degree of Italian ancestry.[2] Argentina has the second-largest community of Italians outside of Italy, after Brazil. Contingents of Italian immigrants arrived in Argentina from all regions of Italy, mainly from Northern Italy in the 19th century and mostly from Southern Italy in the 20th century.[6]

Italian community in Argentina, along with Spanish, formed the backbone of modern Argentine society. Argentine culture has significant connections to Italian culture in terms of language, customs, and traditions. Argentina is also a strongly Italophilic country as cuisine, fashion and lifestyle has been sharply influenced by Italian immigration.[7][8]

History edit

 
Percent of Italian Argentines in each Argentine Region in 2022

During the Spanish conquest of what would be present-day Argentine territory, an Italian Leonardo Gribeo, from the region of Sardinia, accompanied Pedro de Mendoza to the place where Buenos Aires would be founded. From Cagliari to Spain, to Río de la Plata, then to Buenos Aires, he brought an image of Saint Mary of Good Air, to which the "miracle" of having reached a good place was attributed, giving the founded city its name in Spanish: Buenos Aires (lit. "good airs").[9]

The presence of Italians in the Río de la Plata Basin predates the birth of Argentina. Small groups of Italians began to emigrate to the present-day Argentine territory already in the second half of the 17th century.[10]

There were already Italians in Buenos Aires during the May Revolution, which started the Argentine War of Independence. In particular, Manuel Belgrano, Manuel Alberti and Juan José Castelli, all three of Italian descent, were part of the May Revolution and the Primera Junta.[11] The Italian community had already grown to such an extent that in 1836 the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia sent an ambassador, Baron Picolet d'Hermilion.[9]

However, the stream of Italian immigration to Argentina became a mass phenomenon only from 1880 to 1920, during the Great European immigration wave to Argentina. Over that time period, about two million Italians settled in Argentina, with one million coming from 1900 to 1914.[12] A small number of Italo-Albanians also emigrated to Argentina from Southern Italy.[13]

In 1887, Italians accounted for 60.4% of all immigration to Argentina, then there was a decrease as the percentage of Spanish immigration increased.[14] The effect of Italian immigration to Argentina was important for the constitution of Argentine society. In Argentina there are influences of Italian culture that are still evident in modern times.[10] Outside of Italy, Argentina is the country with the highest percentage of Italians, and the one with the greatest examples of Italian culture.[15][16]

 
Italian immigrants aboard a cart at the Hotel de Inmigrantes in Buenos Aires
 
A sculpture symbolizing first Italian immigrants' arrival to Resistencia, Chaco
 
House of the Italian Argentines of Oberá, Misiones

In 1914, Buenos Aires alone had more than 300,000 Italian-born inhabitants, representing 25% of the total population.[12] The Italian immigrants were primarily male, aged between 14 and 50 and more than 50% literate; in terms of occupations, 78.7% in the active population were agricultural workers or unskilled laborers, 10.7% artisans, and only 3.7% worked in commerce or as professionals.[12]

The outbreak of World War I and the rise of fascism in Italy caused a rapid fall in immigration to Argentina, with a slight revival in 1923 to 1927 but eventually stopped during the Great Depression and World War II.[17]

After the end of the war, from 1946 to 1957, another massive wave of Italians moved to Argentina, this time numbering about 380,000.[18] A small number of Istrian Italians and Dalmatian Italians emigrated to Argentina during the Istrian-Dalmatian exodus, leaving their homelands, which were lost to Italy and annexed to Yugoslavia after the Treaty of Peace with Italy, 1947.[19]

In the late 1960s, the Italian economy experienced a period of growth and recovery, removing one of the primary incentives for emigration. As of 2016, 527,570 Italian citizens still lived in Argentina.[20]

In 2011, it was estimated that at least 25 million Argentines (62.5% of the country's population) have some degree of Italian ancestry.[2] Argentina has the second-largest community of Italians outside of Italy, after Brazil. Jorge Luis Borges stated that "the Argentine is an Italian who speaks Spanish",[21] while the Spanish philosopher Julián Marías stated that Argentina could be "the only Italian-Spanish republic on the planet".[11] The Italian economist Marcello De Cecco said: "Italians, as we know, are a people of emigrants. For many centuries they have spread to the four corners of the world. However, they constitute the majority of the population in only two countries: Italy and Argentina."[15]

There are second and third generation Italian Argentines who hold dual citizenship, recognized by both countries.[9][22] This is because Argentina uses the ius soli principle, which grants nationality to those born in the country, while Italy uses the ius sanguinis principle, which grants citizenship to the children of Italians.[23]

Italians abroad have elected[24] deputies and senators in the Italian Parliament since 2006, when, after a constitutional reform, 12 seats in Chamber of Deputies and six seats in the Senate were assigned to the Italian diaspora.[25] Argentina belongs to the constituency of South America, which corresponds to three deputies and two senators.[26]

Reasons for Italian immigration to Argentina edit

 
Italian immigrants in a conventillo in Buenos Aires

Between the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century, emigration from Italy was largely due to conditions of widespread poverty, high demographic pressure and heavy taxation,[8] while Argentina was a country with a strong need for immigrants. The welcoming commitment, enshrined in the constitution of 1853, found its reasons in a de facto underpopulated country. The Argentine population, a country whose land area is nine times larger than that of Italy, was only 1.1 million in 1850[27]) and was eager to populate the large regions conquered in the recent War of the Triple Alliance and with the so-called Conquest of the Desert (Patagonia).

Furthermore, a law passed by the Argentine government in 1876 offered the possibility of free land assignments or those payable in installments at very low prices, while in 1882 the government decided to grant 25 hectares of land free of charge to all families.[28] In particular, article 25 of the current Argentine constitution states that:[29]

The federal government will encourage European immigration; will not be able to restrict, limit or impose any tax on the entry into Argentine territory of foreigners whose purpose is to cultivate the land, improve industries, introduce and teach the sciences and the arts

— Article 25 of the Argentine constitution

Characteristics of Italian immigration to Argentina edit

Overview edit

 
Percentage of Italian-born immigrants in the 1914 Argentine census by provinces and territories
Italian immigrants to Argentina, 1861–1920 (by decade)[12]
Period Total Italian Proportion
1861–1870 159,570 113,554 71%
1871–1880 260,885 152,061 58%
1881–1890 841,122 493,885 59%
1891–1900 648,326 425,693 57%
1901–1910 1,764,103 796,190 45%
1911–1920 1,204,919 347,388 29%
1861–1920 3,798,925 2,270,525 59%
Italian citizens residing in Argentina[30][31]
Census Population of foreigners Population of Italian citizens % of Italians compared to foreigners % of Italians compared to the total population
1869 210,330 71,403 33.8 4.9
1895 1,006,838 492,636 48.9 12.5
1914 2,391,171 942,209 39.4 11.9
1947 2,435,927 786,207 32.3 4.9
1960 2,604,447 878,298 33.7 4.4
1970 2,210,400 637,050 29.8 2.7

Areas of origin edit

 
Italian association of Italian-Argentines originally from the Campania region in Mar del Plata
 
Allegory of the Italian Argentines of Molise region origin in Mar del Plata
 
Monument to Luigi Pirandello, a gift of the Italian city of Agrigento (Sicily) to the Argentine city of Buenos Aires and tribute to the Sicilian community in Argentina
 
Women of the Calabrian community of Buenos Aires

Italian immigrants arrived in Argentina from all regions of Italy, mainly from Northern Italy in the 19th century, and mostly from Southern Italy in the 20th century.[6] Most of the Italians who initially moved to Argentina were farmers from the north, originating from regions such as Piedmont, Liguria, Veneto, Friuli Venezia Giulia and Lombardy.[32][33] Due to the nascent industrialization of Northern Italy in the 20th century, immigration patterns shifted to rural Southern Italy, especially Campania, Calabria and Sicily.[34] Immigrants from northern Italy settled mainly in rural areas, while those from the south preferred large cities.[16]

Of the 2,386,181 Italians who arrived in Argentina between 1876 and 1930, 47% (1,116,369) came from Southern Italy, 41% (988,235) from Northern Italy and 12% from Central Italy (281,577).[35] The Italian regions from which most of the immigrants came were Piedmont (in the north) and Calabria (in the south). Calabrian immigrants have always arrived in large numbers and their migration has not changed much over time. Immigrants from Sicily began to arrive in large numbers from 1895 to the early 1900s, and by 1914, one in six immigrants were Sicilian.[36]

In the 1950s, more than 65% of Italian immigrants came from the south, with 30% from Calabria, 15% from Campania and 12% from Sicily. Of the remaining 35%, 21% came from central-southern regions, in particular Abruzzo and Molise (in this case 14%), while 13% came from the north, mainly from Veneto and Friuli-Venezia Giulia.[37]

Of the immigrants who arrived between 1876 and 1915, 16.9% were from Piedmont, 13.2% from Calabria, 11.1% from Sicily, 10.4% from Lombardy, 8.2% from Marche, 7.5% from Campania, 7.2% from Veneto and 3.2% from Abruzzo and Molise, which then constituted a single region.[12] Tuscany, Umbria, Lazio and Emilia-Romagna, in central Italy, were the regions that contributed the least to immigration to Argentina.[36]

In Argentine slang, tano (from Napulitano, "Neapolitan") is still used for all people of Italian descent although it originally meant inhabitants of the former independent state the Kingdom of Naples. The assumption that emigration from cities was negligible has an important exception. Naples went from being the capital of its own kingdom in 1860 to being just another large city in Italy. The loss of bureaucratic jobs and the subsequently declining financial situation led to high unemployment. This caused a massive departure from Naples and southern Italy to Argentina.[38][39]

According to a 1990 study, the high proportion of returnees can show a positive or negative correlation between regions of origin and of destination. Southern Italians indicate a more permanent settlement. Argentine society's Italian component is the result of Southern rather than Northern influences.[40][41]

Italian immigrants arriving in Argentina and regional distribution[42]
Period Northwest
Italy
Northeastern
and central Italy
Southern
and insular Italy
Total
1880–1884 59.8% 16.8% 23.4% 106,953
1885–1889 45.3% 24.4% 30.3% 259,858
1890–1894 44.2% 20.7% 35.1% 151,249
1895–1899 32.3% 23.1% 44.6% 211,878
1900–1904 29.2% 19.6% 51.2% 232,746
1905–1909 26.9% 20.1% 53.0% 437,526
1910–1914 27.4% 18.2% 54.4% 355,913
1915–1919 32.3% 23.1% 44.6% 26,880
1920–1924 19.7% 27.4% 52.9% 306,928
1925–1929 14.4% 33.1% 52.5% 235,065

Religion edit

Italian Argentines are predominantly Catholics of the Latin Church.[3] A group of Italian-Albanians, belonging to the Italo-Albanian Catholic Church and worshipping according to the Byzantine Rite, are present in Luis Guillón, in the Esteban Echeverría Partido in the Buenos Aires Province.[4]

Settlement areas edit

 
Buenos Aires district of La Boca, settlement of the Genoese
 
Space dedicated to the Italian Argentines of Tierra del Fuego in the Maritime Museum of Ushuaia

Most of the Italian immigrant community settled in the Buenos Aires Province, especially in the city of Buenos Aires, as well as in the provinces of Santa Fe, Entre Ríos, Córdoba, La Pampa, Tucumán, Santiago del Estero and Corrientes.[43]

For example, in Rosario, Santa Fe, the descendants of Italians are almost 65% of the total of the city.[44] Italian immigration to Argentina was markedly urban, with the exception of the province of Santa Fe, where agricultural colonies predominated.[36]

In 1895, 181,361 of the 663,864 inhabitants of the city of Buenos Aires were Italians. The main settlement was the La Boca district of Buenos Aires, where Italians represented 80% of the merchants and 70% of the employees. At the same time there were 13 Italian-language newspapers.[45]

In 1914, Buenos Aires had more than 300,000 inhabitants born in Italy, which represented 25% of the total population of the capital[12] and 60% of the Italian immigration in all of Argentina.[9] There, the Italian community was integrated into Buenos Aires society through institutions, schools, churches, newspapers and political groups.[9]

In La Plata at the end of the 19th century there were almost 4,600 Italian emigrants in a city of just 10,000 inhabitants.[46] Immigrants from northern Italy settled in highly populated regions of the country such as the provinces of Santa Fe, Córdoba and Mendoza, where they found better job opportunities.

The capital of Chaco Province, Resistencia, was the destination of many Italians after 1878.[33] Patagonia was a minor destination.[10] However, the city of Ushuaia, capital of the Tierra del Fuego Province, received a substantial influx of Italians between 1948 and 1949.[47]

Subsidized immigration edit

Subsidized immigration has never been relevant, although agricultural colonies have been established in central and northeastern Argentina.[36] The first was in the Corrientes Province in 1853, establishing the way for companies to advance the travel expenses of immigrants and the expenses necessary to start the business in the allotted lots. According to the 1895 census, out of a total of 407,503 subsistence peasants, more than a quarter were of foreign nationality, and of these 62,975 were Italians, of which the largest community was from Calabria.[48]

Italian-born in Argentina in 2010 edit

 
Percentage of Italian-born in Argentina by province according to the 2010 census

The 2010 Argentine census recorded 147,499 people born in Italy. According to the 2010 Argentine census, out of a total of 147,499 people born in Italy, 65,021 were men and 82,478 were women. Out of the total number of men, 966 were between 0 and 14 years old, 20,226 between 15 and 64 years old and 43,829 were over 65 years old. Of the total number of women, 1,011 were between 0 and 14 years of age, 21,597 between 15 and 64 years of age and 59,870 were over 65 years of age.[49] The following table shows the distribution in the 23 provinces and in the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires:[50]

Rank Province Born in Italy %
1   Buenos Aires Province 102,037 69.17%
2   Buenos Aires (CABA) 22,168 15.00%
3   Santa Fe 7,875 5.34%
4   Córdoba 4,894 3.31%
5   Mendoza 3,786 2.50%
6   Río Negro (Argentina) 1,573 1.07%
7   Chubut 601 0.40%
8   Neuquén 546 0.37%
9   Entre Ríos 507 0.34%
10   Tucumán 504 0.34%
11   Salta 424 0.29%
12   San Juan 419 0.28%
13   San Luis 375 0.25%
14   Santa Cruz 223 0.15%
15   Misiones 219 0.15%
16   Corrientes 208 0.14%
17   Santiago del Estero 199 0.13%
18   Chaco 191 0.13%
19   La Pampa 180 0.12%
20   Jujuy 145 0.10%
21   Tierra del Fuego 136 0.09%
22   Catamarca 109 0.07%
  La Rioja (Argentina) 109 0.07%
24   Formosa 71 0.05%
Total   Argentina 147,499 100%

Discrimination edit

 
Severino Di Giovanni in court

Compared to the experience of Italians in other parts of the world, such as in the United States, Italian Argentines did not suffer from anti-Catholic or racist sentiments. Catholic societies in Argentina welcomed new settlers of the same faith, who could help shape the country. Italian Argentines have integrated better into the general society than German Argentines also due to the Latin affinity.[9]

Despite this, there were extreme cases in which Italian Argentines suffered xenophobia, such as in the 1931 trial against anarchist Severino Di Giovanni. Di Giovanni's trial aroused some anti-Italian sentiments, motivated above all by the fear of attacks on the Argentine state by Italian anarchists.[51] Between the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, the bourgeoisie of Spanish origin initially looked at the large number of Italians with an evil eye, fearing for the social ascent of the following generations, thus asking for the intervention of Argentine national culture. The main concern was aimed at anarchists and socialists, for whom repressive laws were passed in 1902 and 1910.[45]

Culture edit

 
Monument to Manuel Belgrano in Trelew, Chubut Province, with a plaque commemorating the "Italian Immigrant Day". Manuel Belgrano was the politician and military leader who created the Flag of Argentina. His father was Italian.
 
Italian festival in Oberá
 
Monument to Giuseppe Garibaldi, located on Plaza Italia, a landmark in the Palermo neighbourhood of Buenos Aires
 
Italian Society in Adrogué

Argentine culture, in its Italian component, is the result of influences from southern Italy rather than from the north.[52] According to the anthropologist Stefania Pedrini of the University of Rome La Sapienza, this cultural influence is due to the fact that "at the end of the 19th century Argentina was a new nation, which did not have a defined identity, and in which the grandeur European immigration has influenced the construction of a national being, through a policy of very strong cultural syncretism." At the same time there are Italian traditions still maintained in Argentina but forgotten or little remembered in Italy.[23] Many of these Italians who brought their culture came from the lower middle classes.[16]

Language edit

According to Ethnologue, Argentina has more than 1,500,000 Italian speakers, making it the third most spoken language in the nation (after Spanish and English).[53] In spite of the large Italian immigration, the Italian language never truly took hold in Argentina, partly because at the time of mass immigration, almost all Italians spoke their native regional languages rather than what is now standard Italian, precluding the expansion of the use of Italian as a primary language in Argentina. The similarity between Spanish and many of those languages also enabled the immigrants to acquire communicative competence in Spanish with relative ease, and thus to assimilate linguistically without much difficulty.

By 1840, Italian-language newspapers were already published in Buenos Aires, increasing in 1900.[11] The main one was La Patria degli Italiani ("The homeland of the Italians"), which in turn was the third most important in Argentina, with a circulation of 14,000 copies.[45][54] On 22 February 1917, the government of Hipólito Yrigoyen, with Decree n. 6925, made the teaching of the Italian language compulsory in the 4th and 5th grades of secondary school in national schools.[54]

Italian immigration from the second half of the 19th century to the beginning of the 20th century made a lasting and significant impact on the intonation of Argentina's vernacular Spanish. Preliminary research has shown that Rioplatense Spanish, particularly the speech of the city of Buenos Aires, has intonation patterns that resemble those of Italian dialects (especially the ones whose substratum is the Neapolitan language) and differ markedly from the patterns of other forms of Spanish.[55] That correlates well with immigration patterns in Argentina, particularly Buenos Aires, which had huge numbers of Italian settlers since the 19th century. According to a study conducted by the National Scientific and Technical Research Council of Argentina, and published in Bilingualism: Language and Cognition (ISSN 1366–7289),[56] the researchers note that this is a relatively recent phenomenon, starting in the early 20th century with the main wave of Southern Italian immigration. Until then, the porteño accent was more similar to that of Spain, particularly Andalusia.[57]

Lunfardo is a slang born and developed in the city of Buenos Aires and its suburbs, which has spread to other nearby cities such as Rosario (in the Santa Fe Province) and Montevideo, Uruguay.[58][59] The word comes from Lombard, a language spoken mainly in Lombardy (a region located in northern Italy).[60] The sounds of the lunfardo feeds mainly from the languages of Italy, especially the northern ones, because in Buenos Aires the Italian colony is very extensive and has left onomasiology and terminology a vast lexical heritage. Additionally, lunfardo has taken its own words, expressions, or ways of speaking (borrowings) from various languages such as French, Portuguese, English; other words arrived from the pampa by means of the gauchos; and a few came from Argentina's native population. Lunfardo words are inserted in the normal flow of Rioplatense Spanish sentences. Thus, a Spanish-speaking Mexican reading tango lyrics needs only the translation of a discrete set of words, not a grammar guide. Most tango lyrics use lunfardo sparsely, but some songs (such as El Ciruja, or most lyrics by Celedonio Flores) employ lunfardo heavily. Here are some examples:

  • Parlar – To speak (cfr. Italian parlare, Neapolitan parlà – to speak)
  • Manyar – To know / to eat (cfr. Italian mangiare, Sicilian manciari – to eat)
  • Mina – Female (cfr. Italian femmina ("female"), Sicilian fimmina ("woman"))
  • Laburar – To work (cfr. Italian lavorare, Venetian laorar – to work)
  • Fiaca – laziness (cfr. Italian fiacco, Piedmontese fiach – exhausted)
  • Chapar – To kiss / to grab (cfr. Piedmontese ciapé, Venetian ciapar – to grab)
  • Buonyorno – Good morning (cfr. Italian buongiorno – good morning)
  • Pibe – Boy (cfr. old Italian pivo – boy, apprentice)
  • Birra – Beer (cfr. Italian, Neapolitan birra – beer)
  • Mufa – Unlucky person (cfr. Italian muffa, Piedmontese mofa – mold)

Between about 1880 and 1900, Argentina received a large number of peasants from the South of Italy, who arrived with little or no schooling in Spanish. As the immigrants strove to communicate with the local criollos, they produced a variable mixture of Spanish with Italian languages and dialects, specially Neapolitan. The pidgin language was given the derogatory name cocoliche by the locals. Since the children of the immigrants grew up speaking Spanish at school, work, and military service, Cocoliche remained confined mostly to the first generation immigrants and slowly fell out of use. The pidgin has been depicted humorously in literary works and in the Argentine sainete theater, such as by Dario Vittori.

Cuisine edit

 
Pasta is a feature of the Argentine cuisine
 
"Milanesa a la napolitana" with French fries
 
Argentine "Sorrentinos"
 
Argentine "Pizza over Fainá"
 
Argentine "Reggianito"
 
Argentine "Sardo"
 
Argentine "Pasta frola"
 
Different brands of Fernet

Argentine cuisine has been strongly influenced by Italian cuisine; the typical Argentine diet is a variation of the Mediterranean diet.

Italian staple dishes like pizza and pasta are common. Pasta is extremely common, either simple unadorned pasta with butter or oil or accompanied by a tomato or bechamel based sauce. Other similarities are found in the presence of the bañacauda (bagna càuda).

Pizza (locally pronounced pisa or pitsa), for example, has been wholly subsumed and, in its Argentine form, more closely resembles Italian pizza al taglio but round instead of rectangular. Pizza is shared between two or more people, not the usual Italian personal pizza. Typical or exclusively Argentine pizzas include pizza canchera, pizza rellena (stuffed pizza), pizza por metro (pizza by the meter), and pizza a la parrilla (grilled pizza). While Argentine pizza derives from Neapolitan cuisine, the Argentine fugaza/fugazza comes from the focaccia xeneise (from Genoa), but its preparation is different from its Italian counterpart, and the addition of cheese to make the dish (fugaza con queso or fugazzeta) started in Argentina.[61]

Fainá is a type of thin bread made with chickpea flour (adopted from northern Italy). The name comes from the Ligurian word for the Italian farinata. Pizzerias in Buenos Aires often offer fainá, which is eaten with pizza, a wedge of fainá on top of a wedge of pizza.

Pastas (pasta, always in the plural) still surpass pizzas in consumption levels. Among them are tallarines (fettuccine), ravioles (ravioli), ñoquis (gnocchi), lasañas (lasagna), and canelones (cannelloni). In Argentina there are also Italian restaurants specializing in pasta.[62] In Argentina, pasta is generally cooked, served and eaten in the local way, called all'uso-nostro ("for our use" or "our way"), a phrase of Italian origin.[63]

For example, pasta is often eaten with white bread ("French bread"). That can be explained by the low cost of bread and the fact that Argentine pastas tend to come with a large amount of tuco sauce (Italian sugo) and accompanied by estofado (Italian stufato). Less commonly, pastas are eaten with a dressing of pesto, a green sauce made with basil, or salsa blanca (béchamel sauce).

Sorrentinos are also a local dish with a misleading name (they do not come from Sorrento but were invented in the Rio de La Plata region).[64] It is believed that sorrentinos are a local derivation of the Italian ravioli capresi,[65] whose dough is instead elaborated with flour, water and olive oil, while the filling is made with caciotta cheese, flavoured with oregano.[66] Most sources point to an Italian immigrant from Sorrento, Rosalía Persico or his son Cayetano Persico, who created this pasta while working in a famous trattoria of Mar del Plata,[64][67][68] while other sources state that they originated in another restaurant in Mar del Plata called Sorrento.[67][69][70] They look like big round ravioles stuffed with mozzarella, cottage cheese and basil in tomato sauce.

Polenta comes from Northern Italy and is very common throughout Argentina. Similar to polenta concia in Italy, it is eaten as a main dish, with sauce and melted cheese, or it may accompany a stew. Since a tonic property has been attributed to it, the expression tener polenta ("having polenta") is used colloquially as a synonym for having strength.[71] At the beginning of the 20th century, both in Italy and in Argentina, the popular classes ate polenta accompanied by bird meat.[72] Buseca, a Lombard dish made with tripe, beans, tomato puree, carrots and celery, is also popular in Argentina.[73]

Milanesas are one of the most popular dishes in Argentina and have been described as "one of the quintessential Río de la Plata dishes".[74] A common dish of this variety is the milanesa a la napolitana, an Argentine innovation despite its name, which comes from former Buenos Aires restaurant "Nápoli." They are the legacy of Italian immigrants, who introduced cotoletta alla milanese, a dish from Milan, in the late 19th century and early 20th century.[75] During that time, Argentina experienced a huge European immigration wave, with most immigrants coming from Italy. Milanesas are so ubiquitous to Argentine culture that the country even has a "Day of the Milanesa", celebrated on 3 May.[75][76][77]

Among the foods that Italian immigrants have reproduced in Argentina are also some cheeses. The reggianito was one of the first reproductions of Parmigiano Reggiano, the sardo, which unlike the Pecorino sardo is made with cow's milk, the romano, a reinterpretation of the Pecorino Romano and the provolone. Cremoso cheese derives instead from Italian cheeses with similar characteristics as Crescenza and is the most consumed cheese in Argentina.[78]

Pasta frola is a typical Argentine recipe heavily influenced by Southern Italian cuisine, known as pasta frolla in Italy. Pasta frola consists of a buttery pastry base with a filling made of quince jam, sweet-potato jam or milk caramel (dulce de leche) and topped with thin strips of the same pastry, forming a squared pattern. It is an Argentine tradition to eat pastafrola with mate in the afternoon. The dish is also very popular in Paraguay and Uruguay. The traditional Italian recipe was not prepared with latticework, unlike in Argentina, but with a lid pierced with molds in the form of hearts or flowers.

Among the desserts is the pandulce, originating from the Genoese pandolce, which is popular for Christmas and New Year's holidays. The cantuccini, desserts of Tuscan gastronomy, are also made and eaten in Argentina.[79] Other Italian desserts are also consumed in Argentina such as tiramisu, of Venetian origin, zabaione, crostata (known in Argentina as ricotta cake) and panna cotta.[80]

Ice cream (Spanish: Helado, Italian: gelato) is a particularly popular Argentine dessert. Its creamy texture is caused by the large proportion of cream,[81] and many flavors are available. Ice cream was again a legacy of the Italian diaspora. Among the liqueurs are chitronchelo (limoncello) and grapa (grappa). Italian alcoholic beverages such as gancia and fernet are widely consumed in Argentina.[80]

The noquis del 29 ("gnocchi of 29") defines the widespread custom in some South American countries of eating a plate of gnocchi on the 29th of each month. The custom is widespread especially in the states of the Southern Cone such as Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay;[82][83][84] these countries being recipients of a considerable Italian immigration between the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century. There is a ritual that accompanies lunch with gnocchi, namely putting money under the plate which symbolizes the desire for new gifts. It is also customary to leave a banknote or coin under the plate to attract luck and prosperity to the dinner.[85]

The tradition of serving gnocchi on the 29th of each month stems from a legend based on the story of Saint Pantaleon, a young doctor from Nicomedia who, after converting to Christianity, made a pilgrimage through northern Italy. There Pantaleon practiced miraculous cures for which he was canonized. According to legend, on one occasion when he asked Venetian peasants for bread, they invited him to share their poor table.[86] In gratitude, Pantaleon announced a year of excellent fishing and excellent harvests. That episode occurred on 29 July, and for this reason that day is remembered with a simple meal represented by gnocchi.[85]

Italian Immigrant Day edit

The Argentine national law n. 24,561 established that Italian Immigrant Day be celebrated each year on 3 June as recognition of Italian immigrants and their contribution to Argentina. This date was chosen because it is the day of the birth of Manuel Belgrano, of Genoese origin.[87] Belgrano was the politician and military leader who created the flag of Argentina. His father was Italian.

Architecture edit

 
The Arts Powerhouse (Usina del Arte), inaugurated on 23 May 2012, in a former Italian-Argentine Electric Company (CIAE) facility originally built in 1916 in La Boca, Buenos Aires

The Italian architect Giovanni Chiogna, who emigrated to Argentina from Trento, was hired by the Italian-Argentine Electric Company (CIAE) to build more than 200 structures for power plants, substations and substations in various parts of Buenos Aires. Currently some buildings maintain their function, while others have been transformed. These buildings are characterized by having a Florentine neo-Renaissance style originating in northern Italy, where Chiogna came from, with buildings that are characterized by the presence of stone and exposed brick bases, round arched windows, medieval turrets and other decorative elements.[88][89]

Popular culture edit

From the Apennines to the Andes is a short fictional story included by Edmondo de Amicis in his novel Heart, published in 1886. It tells the story of the long and complicated journey of a 13-year-old boy, Marco, from Genoa, Italy to Argentina, in search of his mother, who had immigrated there two years earlier.[90]

Il Gaucho is a film made in 1965 by the Italian director Dino Risi. It was co-produced by Clemente Lococo, an Argentine production company, and in Argentina it was released as Un italiano en la Argentina ("An Italian in Argentina").[91] It was shot in Argentina.[92]

The songs of Ivano Fossati Italiani d'Argentina ("Italians from Argentina"), contained in the album Discanto, and Argentina by Francesco Guccini, present in the Guccini album, are dedicated to the feeling of distance of the emigrants from Italy.

Music edit

The Italian contribution to the music of Argentina has been extremely important for tango. Among the first and most important tangueros were immigrants and descendants of Italians. There are also numerous tango lyrics inspired by Italian immigrants and their lives.[93]

Institutions edit

 
Italian Association of Junín, province of Buenos Aires

The typology of Italian associations in Argentina is varied and includes, among others, cultural institutions, sports centers, social organizations and war veteran organizations.[9] The Italian Association of Mutuality and Education "Unione y Benevolenza" was created by 53 Italians on 18 July 1858, becoming the first Italian institution in South America.[94] Already in 1866 Italian language lessons were held there.[9] The Confederation of Italian Federations in Argentina dates back to 1912 and brings together all the federations of Italian-Argentine associations.[95] The Dante Alighieri Society is the most important Italian institution for the formation of the Italian language and culture. It has 126 offices in Argentina,[96] with Buenos Aires being its main office outside Italy.[9]

There are also the Committees for Italians Abroad, bodies of the Italian state created by law with functions in every consular jurisdiction, and there are several in Argentina. They represent the Italian community before the Italian consular authorities and the Argentine authorities.[97]

Education edit

 
Scuola Italiana Cristoforo Colombo in Buenos Aires

Italian international schools in Argentina include:[98]

  • Scuola Italiana Cristoforo Colombo (Buenos Aires)
  • Istituto Scolastico "Scuola Edmondo De Amicis" (Buenos Aires, Rosario)
  • Scuola "Dante Alighieri" (Córdoba, Rosario)
  • Istituto di Cultura Italica (La Plata)
  • Associazione Scuole Italiane "XXI Aprile" (Mendoza)
  • Centro Culturale Italiano Scuole Alessandro Manzoni (Olivos and Villa Adelina)

Italian press in Argentina edit

The Italian-language press in Argentina essentially consists of two publications:

  • L'Eco d'Italia ("The Echo of Italy"), Italian-language Argentine weekly magazine aimed at the Italian community in South America.[99]
  • L'Italiano ("The Italian"), Italian-language Argentine daily newspaper.[100]

Argentine oriundi edit

 
The Italy national football team lined up in midfield before the 1934 FIFA World Cup final, then won. The team fielded two Italian Argentines, Luis Monti and Raimundo Orsi.

In football, Italian Argentine "oriundi" Luis Monti and Raimundo Orsi were finalists of the FIFA World Cup with Argentina national football team in the 1930 FIFA World Cup and then champions with Italy national football team in the 1934 FIFA World Cup.

Other examples of Italian Argentine oriundi in football are Omar Sívori, Humberto Maschio and Antonio Valentín Angelillo, the three stars of the Argentina national football team that won the 1957 South American Championship, who took Italian citizenship, which allowed them to later play for the Italy national football team.[101]

In recent years, the most famous Italian Argentine oriundo in football has been Mauro Camoranesi, who acquired Italian citizenship through a great-grandfather who in 1873 emigrated from Potenza Picena, in the Marche region, to Argentina. This allowed him to be part of Italy national football team that won the 2006 FIFA World Cup.[102]

Notable people edit

Anarchists edit

Architects edit

  • César Pelli, designed some of the world's tallest buildings and other major urban landmarks

Artists edit

 
Astor Piazzolla
 
Luis Alberto Spinetta
 
Gustavo Cerati

Business edit

 
Horacio Pagani

Criminals edit

Entertainers edit

 
Lucas Demare
 
Tita Merello
 
Valeria Mazza

Inventors edit

 
Domingo Liotta

Jurists edit

Law enforcement figures edit

Journalism edit

Military edit

Painters and sculptors edit

 
Lucio Fontana

Politicians edit

 
Juan Perón
 
Mauricio Macri

Prelates edit

 
Pope Francis

Scientists edit

Sports edit

 
Diego Maradona
 
Lionel Messi
 
Alfredo Di Stéfano
 
Luis Monti
 
Raimundo Orsi
 
Mauro Camoranesi
 
Gabriela Sabatini
 
Manu Ginóbili
 
Luis Ángel Firpo
 
Nicolino Locche
 
Juan Manuel Fangio
 
Belén Succi
 
Federico Molinari
 
Adolfo Cambiaso
 
Roberto De Vicenzo

Writers edit

 
Susana Calandrelli

See also edit

Further reading edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • "Immigrants Being Transported on Horse-Drawn Wagon, Buenos Aires, Argentina" is a photograph by Frank G. Carpenter. He talks about Italian Argentines in the site caption.

italian, argentines, italian, italo, argentini, spanish, ítalo, argentinos, tanos, rioplatense, spanish, argentine, born, citizens, fully, partially, italian, descent, whose, ancestors, were, italians, emigrated, argentina, during, italian, diaspora, italian, . Italian Argentines Italian italo argentini Spanish italo argentinos or tanos in Rioplatense Spanish are Argentine born citizens who are fully or partially of Italian descent whose ancestors were Italians who emigrated to Argentina during the Italian diaspora or Italian born people in Argentina Italian ArgentinesItalo argentini Italian Italo argentinos Spanish Italian Argentines during the opening parade of the XXXIV Immigrant s Festival in Obera MisionesTotal populationc 690 000 by birth 1 c 25 000 000 by ancestry about 62 5 of the total Argentine population 2 Regions with significant populationsThroughout Argentina Plurality in the Pampas LanguagesArgentine Spanish Rioplatense Spanish Italian Piedmontese Venetian Neapolitan Sicilian and other languages of Italy Cocoliche pidgin also Lunfardo slang ReligionCatholic Church Latin Church 3 with a small minority of Eastern Catholics of the Byzantine Rite 4 Related ethnic groupsItalians Italian Americans Italian Bolivians Italian Brazilians Italian Canadians Italian Chileans Italian Colombians Italian Costa Ricans Italian Cubans Italian Dominicans Italian Ecuadorians Italian Guatemalans Italian Haitians Italian Hondurans Italian Mexicans Italian Panamanians Italian Paraguayans Italian Peruvians Italian Puerto Ricans Italian Salvadorans Italian Uruguayans Italian VenezuelansBetween 1880 and 1930 Italian immigration to Argentina was the largest migratory movement with around two million Italian immigrants 5 It was estimated that at least 25 million Argentines 62 5 of the country s population have some degree of Italian ancestry 2 Argentina has the second largest community of Italians outside of Italy after Brazil Contingents of Italian immigrants arrived in Argentina from all regions of Italy mainly from Northern Italy in the 19th century and mostly from Southern Italy in the 20th century 6 Italian community in Argentina along with Spanish formed the backbone of modern Argentine society Argentine culture has significant connections to Italian culture in terms of language customs and traditions Argentina is also a strongly Italophilic country as cuisine fashion and lifestyle has been sharply influenced by Italian immigration 7 8 Contents 1 History 2 Reasons for Italian immigration to Argentina 3 Characteristics of Italian immigration to Argentina 3 1 Overview 3 2 Areas of origin 3 3 Religion 3 4 Settlement areas 3 5 Subsidized immigration 3 6 Italian born in Argentina in 2010 4 Discrimination 5 Culture 5 1 Language 5 2 Cuisine 5 3 Italian Immigrant Day 5 4 Architecture 5 5 Popular culture 5 6 Music 6 Institutions 7 Education 8 Italian press in Argentina 9 Argentine oriundi 10 Notable people 10 1 Anarchists 10 2 Architects 10 3 Artists 10 4 Business 10 5 Criminals 10 6 Entertainers 10 7 Inventors 10 8 Jurists 10 9 Law enforcement figures 10 10 Journalism 10 11 Military 10 12 Painters and sculptors 10 13 Politicians 10 14 Prelates 10 15 Scientists 10 16 Sports 10 17 Writers 11 See also 12 Further reading 13 References 14 External linksHistory editMain article Italian diaspora nbsp Percent of Italian Argentines in each Argentine Region in 2022During the Spanish conquest of what would be present day Argentine territory an Italian Leonardo Gribeo from the region of Sardinia accompanied Pedro de Mendoza to the place where Buenos Aires would be founded From Cagliari to Spain to Rio de la Plata then to Buenos Aires he brought an image of Saint Mary of Good Air to which the miracle of having reached a good place was attributed giving the founded city its name in Spanish Buenos Aires lit good airs 9 The presence of Italians in the Rio de la Plata Basin predates the birth of Argentina Small groups of Italians began to emigrate to the present day Argentine territory already in the second half of the 17th century 10 There were already Italians in Buenos Aires during the May Revolution which started the Argentine War of Independence In particular Manuel Belgrano Manuel Alberti and Juan Jose Castelli all three of Italian descent were part of the May Revolution and the Primera Junta 11 The Italian community had already grown to such an extent that in 1836 the Kingdom of Piedmont Sardinia sent an ambassador Baron Picolet d Hermilion 9 However the stream of Italian immigration to Argentina became a mass phenomenon only from 1880 to 1920 during the Great European immigration wave to Argentina Over that time period about two million Italians settled in Argentina with one million coming from 1900 to 1914 12 A small number of Italo Albanians also emigrated to Argentina from Southern Italy 13 In 1887 Italians accounted for 60 4 of all immigration to Argentina then there was a decrease as the percentage of Spanish immigration increased 14 The effect of Italian immigration to Argentina was important for the constitution of Argentine society In Argentina there are influences of Italian culture that are still evident in modern times 10 Outside of Italy Argentina is the country with the highest percentage of Italians and the one with the greatest examples of Italian culture 15 16 nbsp Italian immigrants aboard a cart at the Hotel de Inmigrantes in Buenos Aires nbsp A sculpture symbolizing first Italian immigrants arrival to Resistencia Chaco nbsp House of the Italian Argentines of Obera MisionesIn 1914 Buenos Aires alone had more than 300 000 Italian born inhabitants representing 25 of the total population 12 The Italian immigrants were primarily male aged between 14 and 50 and more than 50 literate in terms of occupations 78 7 in the active population were agricultural workers or unskilled laborers 10 7 artisans and only 3 7 worked in commerce or as professionals 12 The outbreak of World War I and the rise of fascism in Italy caused a rapid fall in immigration to Argentina with a slight revival in 1923 to 1927 but eventually stopped during the Great Depression and World War II 17 After the end of the war from 1946 to 1957 another massive wave of Italians moved to Argentina this time numbering about 380 000 18 A small number of Istrian Italians and Dalmatian Italians emigrated to Argentina during the Istrian Dalmatian exodus leaving their homelands which were lost to Italy and annexed to Yugoslavia after the Treaty of Peace with Italy 1947 19 In the late 1960s the Italian economy experienced a period of growth and recovery removing one of the primary incentives for emigration As of 2016 527 570 Italian citizens still lived in Argentina 20 In 2011 it was estimated that at least 25 million Argentines 62 5 of the country s population have some degree of Italian ancestry 2 Argentina has the second largest community of Italians outside of Italy after Brazil Jorge Luis Borges stated that the Argentine is an Italian who speaks Spanish 21 while the Spanish philosopher Julian Marias stated that Argentina could be the only Italian Spanish republic on the planet 11 The Italian economist Marcello De Cecco said Italians as we know are a people of emigrants For many centuries they have spread to the four corners of the world However they constitute the majority of the population in only two countries Italy and Argentina 15 There are second and third generation Italian Argentines who hold dual citizenship recognized by both countries 9 22 This is because Argentina uses the ius soli principle which grants nationality to those born in the country while Italy uses the ius sanguinis principle which grants citizenship to the children of Italians 23 Italians abroad have elected 24 deputies and senators in the Italian Parliament since 2006 when after a constitutional reform 12 seats in Chamber of Deputies and six seats in the Senate were assigned to the Italian diaspora 25 Argentina belongs to the constituency of South America which corresponds to three deputies and two senators 26 Reasons for Italian immigration to Argentina edit nbsp Italian immigrants in a conventillo in Buenos AiresBetween the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century emigration from Italy was largely due to conditions of widespread poverty high demographic pressure and heavy taxation 8 while Argentina was a country with a strong need for immigrants The welcoming commitment enshrined in the constitution of 1853 found its reasons in a de facto underpopulated country The Argentine population a country whose land area is nine times larger than that of Italy was only 1 1 million in 1850 27 and was eager to populate the large regions conquered in the recent War of the Triple Alliance and with the so called Conquest of the Desert Patagonia Furthermore a law passed by the Argentine government in 1876 offered the possibility of free land assignments or those payable in installments at very low prices while in 1882 the government decided to grant 25 hectares of land free of charge to all families 28 In particular article 25 of the current Argentine constitution states that 29 The federal government will encourage European immigration will not be able to restrict limit or impose any tax on the entry into Argentine territory of foreigners whose purpose is to cultivate the land improve industries introduce and teach the sciences and the arts Article 25 of the Argentine constitutionCharacteristics of Italian immigration to Argentina editOverview edit nbsp Percentage of Italian born immigrants in the 1914 Argentine census by provinces and territoriesItalian immigrants to Argentina 1861 1920 by decade 12 Period Total Italian Proportion1861 1870 159 570 113 554 71 1871 1880 260 885 152 061 58 1881 1890 841 122 493 885 59 1891 1900 648 326 425 693 57 1901 1910 1 764 103 796 190 45 1911 1920 1 204 919 347 388 29 1861 1920 3 798 925 2 270 525 59 Italian citizens residing in Argentina 30 31 Census Population of foreigners Population of Italian citizens of Italians compared to foreigners of Italians compared to the total population1869 210 330 71 403 33 8 4 91895 1 006 838 492 636 48 9 12 51914 2 391 171 942 209 39 4 11 91947 2 435 927 786 207 32 3 4 91960 2 604 447 878 298 33 7 4 41970 2 210 400 637 050 29 8 2 7Areas of origin edit nbsp Italian association of Italian Argentines originally from the Campania region in Mar del Plata nbsp Allegory of the Italian Argentines of Molise region origin in Mar del Plata nbsp Monument to Luigi Pirandello a gift of the Italian city of Agrigento Sicily to the Argentine city of Buenos Aires and tribute to the Sicilian community in Argentina nbsp Women of the Calabrian community of Buenos AiresItalian immigrants arrived in Argentina from all regions of Italy mainly from Northern Italy in the 19th century and mostly from Southern Italy in the 20th century 6 Most of the Italians who initially moved to Argentina were farmers from the north originating from regions such as Piedmont Liguria Veneto Friuli Venezia Giulia and Lombardy 32 33 Due to the nascent industrialization of Northern Italy in the 20th century immigration patterns shifted to rural Southern Italy especially Campania Calabria and Sicily 34 Immigrants from northern Italy settled mainly in rural areas while those from the south preferred large cities 16 Of the 2 386 181 Italians who arrived in Argentina between 1876 and 1930 47 1 116 369 came from Southern Italy 41 988 235 from Northern Italy and 12 from Central Italy 281 577 35 The Italian regions from which most of the immigrants came were Piedmont in the north and Calabria in the south Calabrian immigrants have always arrived in large numbers and their migration has not changed much over time Immigrants from Sicily began to arrive in large numbers from 1895 to the early 1900s and by 1914 one in six immigrants were Sicilian 36 In the 1950s more than 65 of Italian immigrants came from the south with 30 from Calabria 15 from Campania and 12 from Sicily Of the remaining 35 21 came from central southern regions in particular Abruzzo and Molise in this case 14 while 13 came from the north mainly from Veneto and Friuli Venezia Giulia 37 Of the immigrants who arrived between 1876 and 1915 16 9 were from Piedmont 13 2 from Calabria 11 1 from Sicily 10 4 from Lombardy 8 2 from Marche 7 5 from Campania 7 2 from Veneto and 3 2 from Abruzzo and Molise which then constituted a single region 12 Tuscany Umbria Lazio and Emilia Romagna in central Italy were the regions that contributed the least to immigration to Argentina 36 In Argentine slang tano from Napulitano Neapolitan is still used for all people of Italian descent although it originally meant inhabitants of the former independent state the Kingdom of Naples The assumption that emigration from cities was negligible has an important exception Naples went from being the capital of its own kingdom in 1860 to being just another large city in Italy The loss of bureaucratic jobs and the subsequently declining financial situation led to high unemployment This caused a massive departure from Naples and southern Italy to Argentina 38 39 According to a 1990 study the high proportion of returnees can show a positive or negative correlation between regions of origin and of destination Southern Italians indicate a more permanent settlement Argentine society s Italian component is the result of Southern rather than Northern influences 40 41 Italian immigrants arriving in Argentina and regional distribution 42 Period Northwest Italy Northeastern and central Italy Southernand insular Italy Total1880 1884 59 8 16 8 23 4 106 9531885 1889 45 3 24 4 30 3 259 8581890 1894 44 2 20 7 35 1 151 2491895 1899 32 3 23 1 44 6 211 8781900 1904 29 2 19 6 51 2 232 7461905 1909 26 9 20 1 53 0 437 5261910 1914 27 4 18 2 54 4 355 9131915 1919 32 3 23 1 44 6 26 8801920 1924 19 7 27 4 52 9 306 9281925 1929 14 4 33 1 52 5 235 065Religion edit Italian Argentines are predominantly Catholics of the Latin Church 3 A group of Italian Albanians belonging to the Italo Albanian Catholic Church and worshipping according to the Byzantine Rite are present in Luis Guillon in the Esteban Echeverria Partido in the Buenos Aires Province 4 Settlement areas edit nbsp Buenos Aires district of La Boca settlement of the Genoese nbsp Space dedicated to the Italian Argentines of Tierra del Fuego in the Maritime Museum of UshuaiaMost of the Italian immigrant community settled in the Buenos Aires Province especially in the city of Buenos Aires as well as in the provinces of Santa Fe Entre Rios Cordoba La Pampa Tucuman Santiago del Estero and Corrientes 43 For example in Rosario Santa Fe the descendants of Italians are almost 65 of the total of the city 44 Italian immigration to Argentina was markedly urban with the exception of the province of Santa Fe where agricultural colonies predominated 36 In 1895 181 361 of the 663 864 inhabitants of the city of Buenos Aires were Italians The main settlement was the La Boca district of Buenos Aires where Italians represented 80 of the merchants and 70 of the employees At the same time there were 13 Italian language newspapers 45 In 1914 Buenos Aires had more than 300 000 inhabitants born in Italy which represented 25 of the total population of the capital 12 and 60 of the Italian immigration in all of Argentina 9 There the Italian community was integrated into Buenos Aires society through institutions schools churches newspapers and political groups 9 In La Plata at the end of the 19th century there were almost 4 600 Italian emigrants in a city of just 10 000 inhabitants 46 Immigrants from northern Italy settled in highly populated regions of the country such as the provinces of Santa Fe Cordoba and Mendoza where they found better job opportunities The capital of Chaco Province Resistencia was the destination of many Italians after 1878 33 Patagonia was a minor destination 10 However the city of Ushuaia capital of the Tierra del Fuego Province received a substantial influx of Italians between 1948 and 1949 47 Subsidized immigration edit Subsidized immigration has never been relevant although agricultural colonies have been established in central and northeastern Argentina 36 The first was in the Corrientes Province in 1853 establishing the way for companies to advance the travel expenses of immigrants and the expenses necessary to start the business in the allotted lots According to the 1895 census out of a total of 407 503 subsistence peasants more than a quarter were of foreign nationality and of these 62 975 were Italians of which the largest community was from Calabria 48 Italian born in Argentina in 2010 edit nbsp Percentage of Italian born in Argentina by province according to the 2010 censusThe 2010 Argentine census recorded 147 499 people born in Italy According to the 2010 Argentine census out of a total of 147 499 people born in Italy 65 021 were men and 82 478 were women Out of the total number of men 966 were between 0 and 14 years old 20 226 between 15 and 64 years old and 43 829 were over 65 years old Of the total number of women 1 011 were between 0 and 14 years of age 21 597 between 15 and 64 years of age and 59 870 were over 65 years of age 49 The following table shows the distribution in the 23 provinces and in the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires 50 Rank Province Born in Italy 1 nbsp Buenos Aires Province 102 037 69 17 2 nbsp Buenos Aires CABA 22 168 15 00 3 nbsp Santa Fe 7 875 5 34 4 nbsp Cordoba 4 894 3 31 5 nbsp Mendoza 3 786 2 50 6 nbsp Rio Negro Argentina 1 573 1 07 7 nbsp Chubut 601 0 40 8 nbsp Neuquen 546 0 37 9 nbsp Entre Rios 507 0 34 10 nbsp Tucuman 504 0 34 11 nbsp Salta 424 0 29 12 nbsp San Juan 419 0 28 13 nbsp San Luis 375 0 25 14 nbsp Santa Cruz 223 0 15 15 nbsp Misiones 219 0 15 16 nbsp Corrientes 208 0 14 17 nbsp Santiago del Estero 199 0 13 18 nbsp Chaco 191 0 13 19 nbsp La Pampa 180 0 12 20 nbsp Jujuy 145 0 10 21 nbsp Tierra del Fuego 136 0 09 22 nbsp Catamarca 109 0 07 nbsp La Rioja Argentina 109 0 07 24 nbsp Formosa 71 0 05 Total nbsp Argentina 147 499 100 Discrimination edit nbsp Severino Di Giovanni in courtCompared to the experience of Italians in other parts of the world such as in the United States Italian Argentines did not suffer from anti Catholic or racist sentiments Catholic societies in Argentina welcomed new settlers of the same faith who could help shape the country Italian Argentines have integrated better into the general society than German Argentines also due to the Latin affinity 9 Despite this there were extreme cases in which Italian Argentines suffered xenophobia such as in the 1931 trial against anarchist Severino Di Giovanni Di Giovanni s trial aroused some anti Italian sentiments motivated above all by the fear of attacks on the Argentine state by Italian anarchists 51 Between the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century the bourgeoisie of Spanish origin initially looked at the large number of Italians with an evil eye fearing for the social ascent of the following generations thus asking for the intervention of Argentine national culture The main concern was aimed at anarchists and socialists for whom repressive laws were passed in 1902 and 1910 45 Culture edit nbsp Monument to Manuel Belgrano in Trelew Chubut Province with a plaque commemorating the Italian Immigrant Day Manuel Belgrano was the politician and military leader who created the Flag of Argentina His father was Italian nbsp Italian festival in Obera nbsp Monument to Giuseppe Garibaldi located on Plaza Italia a landmark in the Palermo neighbourhood of Buenos Aires nbsp Italian Society in AdrogueArgentine culture in its Italian component is the result of influences from southern Italy rather than from the north 52 According to the anthropologist Stefania Pedrini of the University of Rome La Sapienza this cultural influence is due to the fact that at the end of the 19th century Argentina was a new nation which did not have a defined identity and in which the grandeur European immigration has influenced the construction of a national being through a policy of very strong cultural syncretism At the same time there are Italian traditions still maintained in Argentina but forgotten or little remembered in Italy 23 Many of these Italians who brought their culture came from the lower middle classes 16 Language edit See also Rioplatense Spanish Lunfardo and Cocoliche According to Ethnologue Argentina has more than 1 500 000 Italian speakers making it the third most spoken language in the nation after Spanish and English 53 In spite of the large Italian immigration the Italian language never truly took hold in Argentina partly because at the time of mass immigration almost all Italians spoke their native regional languages rather than what is now standard Italian precluding the expansion of the use of Italian as a primary language in Argentina The similarity between Spanish and many of those languages also enabled the immigrants to acquire communicative competence in Spanish with relative ease and thus to assimilate linguistically without much difficulty By 1840 Italian language newspapers were already published in Buenos Aires increasing in 1900 11 The main one was La Patria degli Italiani The homeland of the Italians which in turn was the third most important in Argentina with a circulation of 14 000 copies 45 54 On 22 February 1917 the government of Hipolito Yrigoyen with Decree n 6925 made the teaching of the Italian language compulsory in the 4th and 5th grades of secondary school in national schools 54 Italian immigration from the second half of the 19th century to the beginning of the 20th century made a lasting and significant impact on the intonation of Argentina s vernacular Spanish Preliminary research has shown that Rioplatense Spanish particularly the speech of the city of Buenos Aires has intonation patterns that resemble those of Italian dialects especially the ones whose substratum is the Neapolitan language and differ markedly from the patterns of other forms of Spanish 55 That correlates well with immigration patterns in Argentina particularly Buenos Aires which had huge numbers of Italian settlers since the 19th century According to a study conducted by the National Scientific and Technical Research Council of Argentina and published in Bilingualism Language and Cognition ISSN 1366 7289 56 the researchers note that this is a relatively recent phenomenon starting in the early 20th century with the main wave of Southern Italian immigration Until then the porteno accent was more similar to that of Spain particularly Andalusia 57 Lunfardo is a slang born and developed in the city of Buenos Aires and its suburbs which has spread to other nearby cities such as Rosario in the Santa Fe Province and Montevideo Uruguay 58 59 The word comes from Lombard a language spoken mainly in Lombardy a region located in northern Italy 60 The sounds of the lunfardo feeds mainly from the languages of Italy especially the northern ones because in Buenos Aires the Italian colony is very extensive and has left onomasiology and terminology a vast lexical heritage Additionally lunfardo has taken its own words expressions or ways of speaking borrowings from various languages such as French Portuguese English other words arrived from the pampa by means of the gauchos and a few came from Argentina s native population Lunfardo words are inserted in the normal flow of Rioplatense Spanish sentences Thus a Spanish speaking Mexican reading tango lyrics needs only the translation of a discrete set of words not a grammar guide Most tango lyrics use lunfardo sparsely but some songs such as El Ciruja or most lyrics by Celedonio Flores employ lunfardo heavily Here are some examples Parlar To speak cfr Italian parlare Neapolitan parla to speak Manyar To know to eat cfr Italian mangiare Sicilian manciari to eat Mina Female cfr Italian femmina female Sicilian fimmina woman Laburar To work cfr Italian lavorare Venetian laorar to work Fiaca laziness cfr Italian fiacco Piedmontese fiach exhausted Chapar To kiss to grab cfr Piedmontese ciape Venetian ciapar to grab Buonyorno Good morning cfr Italian buongiorno good morning Pibe Boy cfr old Italian pivo boy apprentice Birra Beer cfr Italian Neapolitan birra beer Mufa Unlucky person cfr Italian muffa Piedmontese mofa mold Between about 1880 and 1900 Argentina received a large number of peasants from the South of Italy who arrived with little or no schooling in Spanish As the immigrants strove to communicate with the local criollos they produced a variable mixture of Spanish with Italian languages and dialects specially Neapolitan The pidgin language was given the derogatory name cocoliche by the locals Since the children of the immigrants grew up speaking Spanish at school work and military service Cocoliche remained confined mostly to the first generation immigrants and slowly fell out of use The pidgin has been depicted humorously in literary works and in the Argentine sainete theater such as by Dario Vittori Cuisine edit Main article Cuisine of Argentina nbsp Pasta is a feature of the Argentine cuisine nbsp Milanesa a la napolitana with French fries nbsp Argentine Sorrentinos nbsp Argentine Pizza over Faina nbsp Argentine Reggianito nbsp Argentine Sardo nbsp Argentine Pasta frola nbsp Different brands of FernetArgentine cuisine has been strongly influenced by Italian cuisine the typical Argentine diet is a variation of the Mediterranean diet Italian staple dishes like pizza and pasta are common Pasta is extremely common either simple unadorned pasta with butter or oil or accompanied by a tomato or bechamel based sauce Other similarities are found in the presence of the banacauda bagna cauda Pizza locally pronounced pisa or pitsa for example has been wholly subsumed and in its Argentine form more closely resembles Italian pizza al taglio but round instead of rectangular Pizza is shared between two or more people not the usual Italian personal pizza Typical or exclusively Argentine pizzas include pizza canchera pizza rellena stuffed pizza pizza por metro pizza by the meter and pizza a la parrilla grilled pizza While Argentine pizza derives from Neapolitan cuisine the Argentine fugaza fugazza comes from the focaccia xeneise from Genoa but its preparation is different from its Italian counterpart and the addition of cheese to make the dish fugaza con queso or fugazzeta started in Argentina 61 Faina is a type of thin bread made with chickpea flour adopted from northern Italy The name comes from the Ligurian word for the Italian farinata Pizzerias in Buenos Aires often offer faina which is eaten with pizza a wedge of faina on top of a wedge of pizza Pastas pasta always in the plural still surpass pizzas in consumption levels Among them are tallarines fettuccine ravioles ravioli noquis gnocchi lasanas lasagna and canelones cannelloni In Argentina there are also Italian restaurants specializing in pasta 62 In Argentina pasta is generally cooked served and eaten in the local way called all uso nostro for our use or our way a phrase of Italian origin 63 For example pasta is often eaten with white bread French bread That can be explained by the low cost of bread and the fact that Argentine pastas tend to come with a large amount of tuco sauce Italian sugo and accompanied by estofado Italian stufato Less commonly pastas are eaten with a dressing of pesto a green sauce made with basil or salsa blanca bechamel sauce Sorrentinos are also a local dish with a misleading name they do not come from Sorrento but were invented in the Rio de La Plata region 64 It is believed that sorrentinos are a local derivation of the Italian ravioli capresi 65 whose dough is instead elaborated with flour water and olive oil while the filling is made with caciotta cheese flavoured with oregano 66 Most sources point to an Italian immigrant from Sorrento Rosalia Persico or his son Cayetano Persico who created this pasta while working in a famous trattoria of Mar del Plata 64 67 68 while other sources state that they originated in another restaurant in Mar del Plata called Sorrento 67 69 70 They look like big round ravioles stuffed with mozzarella cottage cheese and basil in tomato sauce Polenta comes from Northern Italy and is very common throughout Argentina Similar to polenta concia in Italy it is eaten as a main dish with sauce and melted cheese or it may accompany a stew Since a tonic property has been attributed to it the expression tener polenta having polenta is used colloquially as a synonym for having strength 71 At the beginning of the 20th century both in Italy and in Argentina the popular classes ate polenta accompanied by bird meat 72 Buseca a Lombard dish made with tripe beans tomato puree carrots and celery is also popular in Argentina 73 Milanesas are one of the most popular dishes in Argentina and have been described as one of the quintessential Rio de la Plata dishes 74 A common dish of this variety is the milanesa a la napolitana an Argentine innovation despite its name which comes from former Buenos Aires restaurant Napoli They are the legacy of Italian immigrants who introduced cotoletta alla milanese a dish from Milan in the late 19th century and early 20th century 75 During that time Argentina experienced a huge European immigration wave with most immigrants coming from Italy Milanesas are so ubiquitous to Argentine culture that the country even has a Day of the Milanesa celebrated on 3 May 75 76 77 Among the foods that Italian immigrants have reproduced in Argentina are also some cheeses The reggianito was one of the first reproductions of Parmigiano Reggiano the sardo which unlike the Pecorino sardo is made with cow s milk the romano a reinterpretation of the Pecorino Romano and the provolone Cremoso cheese derives instead from Italian cheeses with similar characteristics as Crescenza and is the most consumed cheese in Argentina 78 Pasta frola is a typical Argentine recipe heavily influenced by Southern Italian cuisine known as pasta frolla in Italy Pasta frola consists of a buttery pastry base with a filling made of quince jam sweet potato jam or milk caramel dulce de leche and topped with thin strips of the same pastry forming a squared pattern It is an Argentine tradition to eat pastafrola with mate in the afternoon The dish is also very popular in Paraguay and Uruguay The traditional Italian recipe was not prepared with latticework unlike in Argentina but with a lid pierced with molds in the form of hearts or flowers Among the desserts is the pandulce originating from the Genoese pandolce which is popular for Christmas and New Year s holidays The cantuccini desserts of Tuscan gastronomy are also made and eaten in Argentina 79 Other Italian desserts are also consumed in Argentina such as tiramisu of Venetian origin zabaione crostata known in Argentina as ricotta cake and panna cotta 80 Ice cream Spanish Helado Italian gelato is a particularly popular Argentine dessert Its creamy texture is caused by the large proportion of cream 81 and many flavors are available Ice cream was again a legacy of the Italian diaspora Among the liqueurs are chitronchelo limoncello and grapa grappa Italian alcoholic beverages such as gancia and fernet are widely consumed in Argentina 80 The noquis del 29 gnocchi of 29 defines the widespread custom in some South American countries of eating a plate of gnocchi on the 29th of each month The custom is widespread especially in the states of the Southern Cone such as Brazil Argentina Paraguay Uruguay 82 83 84 these countries being recipients of a considerable Italian immigration between the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century There is a ritual that accompanies lunch with gnocchi namely putting money under the plate which symbolizes the desire for new gifts It is also customary to leave a banknote or coin under the plate to attract luck and prosperity to the dinner 85 The tradition of serving gnocchi on the 29th of each month stems from a legend based on the story of Saint Pantaleon a young doctor from Nicomedia who after converting to Christianity made a pilgrimage through northern Italy There Pantaleon practiced miraculous cures for which he was canonized According to legend on one occasion when he asked Venetian peasants for bread they invited him to share their poor table 86 In gratitude Pantaleon announced a year of excellent fishing and excellent harvests That episode occurred on 29 July and for this reason that day is remembered with a simple meal represented by gnocchi 85 Italian Immigrant Day edit The Argentine national law n 24 561 established that Italian Immigrant Day be celebrated each year on 3 June as recognition of Italian immigrants and their contribution to Argentina This date was chosen because it is the day of the birth of Manuel Belgrano of Genoese origin 87 Belgrano was the politician and military leader who created the flag of Argentina His father was Italian Architecture edit nbsp The Arts Powerhouse Usina del Arte inaugurated on 23 May 2012 in a former Italian Argentine Electric Company CIAE facility originally built in 1916 in La Boca Buenos AiresThe Italian architect Giovanni Chiogna who emigrated to Argentina from Trento was hired by the Italian Argentine Electric Company CIAE to build more than 200 structures for power plants substations and substations in various parts of Buenos Aires Currently some buildings maintain their function while others have been transformed These buildings are characterized by having a Florentine neo Renaissance style originating in northern Italy where Chiogna came from with buildings that are characterized by the presence of stone and exposed brick bases round arched windows medieval turrets and other decorative elements 88 89 Popular culture edit From the Apennines to the Andes is a short fictional story included by Edmondo de Amicis in his novel Heart published in 1886 It tells the story of the long and complicated journey of a 13 year old boy Marco from Genoa Italy to Argentina in search of his mother who had immigrated there two years earlier 90 Il Gaucho is a film made in 1965 by the Italian director Dino Risi It was co produced by Clemente Lococo an Argentine production company and in Argentina it was released as Un italiano en la Argentina An Italian in Argentina 91 It was shot in Argentina 92 The songs of Ivano Fossati Italiani d Argentina Italians from Argentina contained in the album Discanto and Argentina by Francesco Guccini present in the Guccini album are dedicated to the feeling of distance of the emigrants from Italy Music edit The Italian contribution to the music of Argentina has been extremely important for tango Among the first and most important tangueros were immigrants and descendants of Italians There are also numerous tango lyrics inspired by Italian immigrants and their lives 93 Institutions edit nbsp Italian Association of Junin province of Buenos AiresThe typology of Italian associations in Argentina is varied and includes among others cultural institutions sports centers social organizations and war veteran organizations 9 The Italian Association of Mutuality and Education Unione y Benevolenza was created by 53 Italians on 18 July 1858 becoming the first Italian institution in South America 94 Already in 1866 Italian language lessons were held there 9 The Confederation of Italian Federations in Argentina dates back to 1912 and brings together all the federations of Italian Argentine associations 95 The Dante Alighieri Society is the most important Italian institution for the formation of the Italian language and culture It has 126 offices in Argentina 96 with Buenos Aires being its main office outside Italy 9 There are also the Committees for Italians Abroad bodies of the Italian state created by law with functions in every consular jurisdiction and there are several in Argentina They represent the Italian community before the Italian consular authorities and the Argentine authorities 97 Education edit nbsp Scuola Italiana Cristoforo Colombo in Buenos AiresItalian international schools in Argentina include 98 Scuola Italiana Cristoforo Colombo Buenos Aires Istituto Scolastico Scuola Edmondo De Amicis Buenos Aires Rosario Scuola Dante Alighieri Cordoba Rosario Istituto di Cultura Italica La Plata Associazione Scuole Italiane XXI Aprile Mendoza Centro Culturale Italiano Scuole Alessandro Manzoni Olivos and Villa Adelina Italian press in Argentina editThe Italian language press in Argentina essentially consists of two publications L Eco d Italia The Echo of Italy Italian language Argentine weekly magazine aimed at the Italian community in South America 99 L Italiano The Italian Italian language Argentine daily newspaper 100 Argentine oriundi editSee also Oriundo nbsp The Italy national football team lined up in midfield before the 1934 FIFA World Cup final then won The team fielded two Italian Argentines Luis Monti and Raimundo Orsi In football Italian Argentine oriundi Luis Monti and Raimundo Orsi were finalists of the FIFA World Cup with Argentina national football team in the 1930 FIFA World Cup and then champions with Italy national football team in the 1934 FIFA World Cup Other examples of Italian Argentine oriundi in football are Omar Sivori Humberto Maschio and Antonio Valentin Angelillo the three stars of the Argentina national football team that won the 1957 South American Championship who took Italian citizenship which allowed them to later play for the Italy national football team 101 In recent years the most famous Italian Argentine oriundo in football has been Mauro Camoranesi who acquired Italian citizenship through a great grandfather who in 1873 emigrated from Potenza Picena in the Marche region to Argentina This allowed him to be part of Italy national football team that won the 2006 FIFA World Cup 102 Notable people editAnarchists edit Severino Di Giovanni antifascistArchitects edit Cesar Pelli designed some of the world s tallest buildings and other major urban landmarksArtists edit nbsp Astor Piazzolla nbsp Luis Alberto Spinetta nbsp Gustavo CeratiDaniela Anahi Bessia singer Antonio Agri violinist Charly Alberti musician Tito Alberti drummer Juan d Arienzo tango musician Alba Arnova dancer Juan Carlos Baglietto musician Gato Barbieri musician Adrian Barilari musician Marilina Bertoldi musician Rodolfo Biagi musician Raul di Blasio musician Zeta Bosio musician Jose Antonio Bottiroli classical musician Jose Bragato composer Enrique Cadicamo tango lyricist Carmen Risso de Cancellieri dancer Alberto Caracciolo tango musician Julio de Caro tango composer Eleonora Cassano dancer Cacho Castagna singer Cazzu rapper Gustavo Cerati singer songwriter Enrique Santos Discepolo tango composer Duki rapper Lali Esposito singer songwriter actress dancer model and director Walter Giardino guitarist and songwriter Leon Gieco singer Paulo Londra singer Luisana Lopilato actress singer and model Agustin Magaldi tango and milonga singer Homero Manzi tango lyricist Daniel Melingo musician Litto Nebbia singer songwriter Nicki Nicole rapper Pappo guitarist singer and composer Soledad Pastorutti folk singer Nathy Peluso singer Astor Piazzolla tango composer and bandoneon player Luis Alberto Spinetta singer guitarist composer and poet Anibal Troilo tango musician Trueno rapper Lito Vitale musician Wos rapperBusiness edit nbsp Horacio PaganiDaniel Angelici president of Boca Juniors Poppy Bermudez Pippa entrepreneur Diego Bossio economist Alejandro Bulgheroni entrepreneur Carlos Bulgheroni entrepreneur Alejandro Burzaco entrepreneur Eduardo Costantini real estate developer Enrique Mosconi military engineer Horacio Pagani car designer Torcuato di Tella industrialist and philanthropistCriminals edit Cayetano Santos Godino serial killerEntertainers edit nbsp Lucas Demare nbsp Tita Merello nbsp Valeria MazzaDaniela Anahi Bessia celebrity TV presenter and actress model influencer producer Quirino Cristiani director who created the world s first animated film Paola Carosella celebrity chef TV presenter and one of the judges of Masterchef Brasil currently based on Sao Paulo Brazil Gimena Accardi actress Graciela Alfano actress and vedette Alejandro Agresti film producer currently based on the Netherlands Ernesto Alterio actor currently based between his home country Argentina and Spain Hector Alterio actor currently based between his home country Argentina and Spain Malena Alterio actress currently based in Spain Luis Cesar Amadori film director Mike Amigorena actor Mariana Anghileri actress Norberto Aroldi actor Catalina Artusi actress Christian Bach Bottino actress Angeles Balbiani actress Mario Baroffio actor Valentina Bassi actress Florencia Bertotti actress Valeria Bertuccelli actress Thelma Biral actress Jose Bodalo Zuffoli actor Patricio Borghetti actor Luis Brandoni actor Alicia Bruzzo actress Hector Calcagno actor Juan Jose Campanella film director Charlotte Caniggia model and media personality Diego Capusotto TV presenter Hugo del Carril actor Antonio Carrizo TV and radio presenter Evangelina Carrozzo model Moria Casanova actress Catrano Catrani film director Agustina Cherri actress Juan Chioran actor Tulia Ciampoli actress Ricardo Darin actor Lucas Demare film director screenwriter and film producer Alejandro Fantino TV host Dolores Fonzi TV theatre and film actress Tomas Fonzi actor Guillermo Francella actor Nicolas Francella actor Renata Fronzi actress Carlos Galettini film director film producer and screenwriter Carlos Gandolfo stage actor and director Dario Grandinetti actor Juan Pedro Lanzani actor and singer Valeria Mazza supermodel and businesswoman Tita Merello actress Andres Muschietti film director Florencio Parravicini actor Diego Peretti actor Oriana Sabatini model actress and singer Julian Serrano YouTuber actor singer and television presenter Leonardo Sbaraglia actor Marcelo Tinelli TV host media producer and businessman Valentina Zenere actress model and singerInventors edit nbsp Domingo LiottaSinforoso Amoedo Canaveri doctor Domingo Liotta inventor of first successful artificial heartJurists edit Juan de Canaveris notaryLaw enforcement figures edit Carlos Alfredo D Amico lawyer Jose Maria Campagnoli prosecutor Sebastian Casanello judge Susana Ruiz Cerutti lawyer and former ChancellorJournalism edit Jose Amalfitani sports journalist Eduardo P Archetti anthropologist Eric Calcagno sociologistMilitary edit Joseph Gregorio Belgrano colonel Manuel Belgrano member of Primera Junta regarded as the father of the Flag of Argentina Manuel Canaveris lieutenant Angel Canavery lieutenant colonel Leopoldo Galtieri general and president of Argentina during the Falklands War Orlando Ramon Agosti member of the military junta led by Jorge Rafael Videla that ruled Argentina between 1976 and 1981 Reynaldo Bignone dictatorial president of Argentina between 1982 and 1983 Antonio Domingo Bussi general Osvaldo Cacciatore brigadier who served as Mayor of Buenos Aires in the National Reorganization ProcessPainters and sculptors edit nbsp Lucio FontanaAntonio Alice Aquiles Badi Antonio Berni Erminio Blotta Emilio Caraffa Ricardo Carpani Juan Carlos Castagnino Tito Cittadini Pio Collivadino Lucio FontanaPoliticians edit nbsp Juan Peron nbsp Mauricio MacriMario Barletta Radical Civic Union politician Manuel Belgrano member of the Primera Junta Fabio Biancalani Justicialist Party politician Delia Bisutti Solidarity and Equality politician Antonio Bonfatti Socialist Party politician Angel Borlenghi Peronist politician Juan Atilio Bramuglia Peronist politician Teodoro Bronzini Socialist Party politician Jorge Busti Justicialist Party politician Juan Manuel Cafferata National Autonomist Party politician Antonio Cafiero Justicialist Party politician Hector Jose Campora President of Argentina Hector Canaveri National Autonomist Party politician Pedro Canaveri Radical Civic Union and former President of Argentine Football Association Dante Caputo President of the United Nations General Assembly Ramon J Carcano National Autonomist Party Juan Jose Castelli member of the Primera Junta Domingo Cavallo Justicialist Party Renato Carlos Sersale di Cerisano Argentine Ambassador to United Kingdom Alfredo Chiaradia former Ambassador to the United States Hugo Coccaro Justicialist Party Arturo Colombi Radical Civic Union Ricardo Colombi Radical Civic Union Lucia Corpacci Justicialist Party Alberto Fernandez President of Argentina Arturo Frondizi President of Argentina Arturo Umberto Illia President of Argentina Raul Alberto Lastiri President of Argentina Eduardo Lonardi President of Argentina Mauricio Macri President of Argentina Gabriela Michetti Vice President of Argentina Javier Milei Current President of Argentina Carlos Pellegrini President of Argentina Juan Peron President of Argentina Daniel Scioli former governor of Buenos Aires Province Guido di Tella businessman academic and diplomat Roberto Eduardo Viola President of ArgentinaPrelates edit nbsp Pope FrancisManuel Alberti priest and member of the Primera Junta in 1810 Enrique Angelelli bishop Carlos Azpiroz Costa friar Pope Francis born as Jorge Mario Bergoglio to Italian immigrants from Piedmont Romulo Antonio Braschi bishop Carlos Armando Bustos Crostelli member of the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin Antonio Caggiano Cardinal and Archbishop of Buenos Aires Tomas Canavery priest Leonardo Castellani priest Santiago Copello Cardinal and Archbishop of Buenos Aires Antonio Quarracino Cardinal and Archbishop of Buenos AiresScientists edit Juan Bautista Ambrosetti archaeologist Florentino Ameghino paleontologist Jose Bonaparte paleontologist Zulma Brandoni de Gasparini paleontologist Constanza Ceruti archaeologist Primarosa Chieri physician Mario Crocco neurobiologist Rene Favaloro cardiac surgeon Jose Ingenieros physician pharmacist philosopher and essayistSports edit nbsp Diego Maradona nbsp Lionel Messi nbsp Alfredo Di Stefano nbsp Luis Monti nbsp Raimundo Orsi nbsp Mauro Camoranesi 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Universidad Nacional de La Matanza 14 November 2011 Historias de inmigrantes italianos en Argentina in Spanish infouniversidades siu edu ar Archived from the original on 15 July 2015 Se estima que en la actualidad el 90 de la poblacion argentina tiene alguna ascendencia europea y que al menos 25 millones estan relacionados con algun inmigrante de Italia a b Argentina Language and religion Britannica Retrieved 17 February 2023 a b Appunti sul viaggio in Argentina in Italian Retrieved 11 February 2023 Elaboraron un ranking con los apellidos mas comunes de Argentina in Spanish Archived from the original on 28 October 2016 Retrieved 28 October 2016 a b Immigrati italiani in Argentina per regione 1880 1929 in Italian 2007 Retrieved 15 February 2022 O N I Department of Education of Argentina in Spanish Archived from the original on 15 September 2008 Retrieved 16 February 2023 a b Olimpiadas Nacionales de Contenidos Educativos en Internet Instituto Nacional de Educacion Tecnologica in Spanish Archived from the original on 12 June 2014 Retrieved 13 November 2008 a b c d e f g h i Observatorio de colectividades Italiana in Spanish Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 3 February 2023 a b c Colectividad Italiana in Spanish Archived from the original on 12 June 2014 Retrieved 19 September 2011 a b c Ruscica Dante 14 April 2008 El aporte de la inmigracion italiana en Argentina in Spanish Retrieved 14 August 2008 a b c d e f Baily Samuel L 1999 Immigrants in the Lands of Promise Italians in Buenos Aires and New York City 1870 to 1914 United States Cornell University Press p 54 ISBN 0801488826 Arberesh Comunita Albanesi d Italia in Italian Retrieved 11 February 2023 Buenos Aires in Italian Retrieved 6 February 2023 a b La Argentina y los europeos sin Europa in Spanish Archived from the original on 26 June 2017 Retrieved 18 June 2014 a b c Monica Quijada Carmen Bernand Arnd Schneider 2000 Homogeneidad y nacion con un estudio de caso Argentina siglos XIX y XX in Spanish Editorial CSIC CSIC Press pp 154 158 165 167 ISBN 9788400079017 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Devoto Fernando J 2006 Historias de los Italianos en Argentina in Spanish Buenos Aires Editorial Biblos pp 329 330 ISBN 978 950 786 551 0 Mignone Mario B 2008 Italy today facing the challenges of the new millennium New York Peter Lang Publishing p 213 ISBN 978 1 4331 0187 8 Il Giorno del Ricordo in Italian Retrieved 16 October 2021 Ministero dell Interno Infoaire interno it in Italian 25 November 2016 Retrieved 14 January 2018 Buenos Aires Rayuela de Cortazar in Spanish 15 March 2009 Retrieved 15 March 2009 Graciela Bramuglia y Mario Santillo Un retorno postergado los descendientes de italianos en Argentina buscan el camino de regreso a Europa in Spanish Retrieved 3 February 2023 a b Historias de inmigrantes italianos en Argentina in Spanish Retrieved 14 November 2011 Mas de 600 000 italoargentinos comienzan a votar en crucial referendo para Renzi in Italian Retrieved 8 February 2023 La Argentina exportara legisladores a Italia in Italian 28 January 2006 Retrieved 8 February 2023 Decreto ministeriale 26 gennaio 2016 n Ripartizione del numero dei cittadini italiani residenti nelle ripartizioni della circoscrizione Estero alla data del 31 dicembre 2015 in Italian Retrieved 8 February 2023 Del Pozo Jose 2002 Historia de America Latina y del Caribe 1825 2001 in Spanish LOM Ediciones p 20 Emigrazione calabrese ed italiana in Argentina in Italian Retrieved 11 February 2023 Constitucion Nacional Nacional Articulo 25 in Spanish Retrieved 11 February 2023 Censos digitalizados ver por ano in Spanish Retrieved 7 February 2023 Poblacion extranjera e italiana en nuestro pais segun los resultados censales in Spanish Archived from the original on 1 April 2017 Retrieved 7 February 2023 Historia de la inmigracion italiana en America del sur in Spanish 5 May 2020 Archived from the original on 4 June 2020 Retrieved 6 May 2020 a b Foerster Robert Franz 1924 The Italian Emigration of Our Times pp 223 278 ISBN 9780405005220 Federaciones Regionales in Spanish Feditalia org ar Archived from the original on 2 May 2016 Retrieved 25 April 2010 Herbert S Klein October 1989 A integracao dos imigrantes italianos no Brasil na Argentina e nos Estados Unidos PDF in Portuguese Novos Estudos Archived from the original PDF on 29 July 2013 Retrieved 30 December 2016 a b c d Boris Fausto 1999 Fazer a America a imigracao em massa para a America Latina in Portuguese EdUSP ISBN 9788531404849 Maria Rosa Cozzani de Palmada 2004 Rupturas y continuidades en la experiencia migratoria inmigrantes italianos de la segunda posguerra en Mendoza in Spanish Amerique latine Histoire et Memoire Les Cahiers ALHIM Retrieved 7 February 2023 Nacionalismo gauchesco ante el inmigrado italiano el anti italianismo del gaucho Martin Fierro Causas socioculturales y modalidades estilisticas in Spanish Retrieved 8 February 2023 Los tanos laburantes in Spanish Retrieved 8 February 2023 Immigrazione Italiana nell America del Sud Argentina Uruguay e Brasile PDF in Italian Archived from the original PDF on 21 February 2011 Retrieved 16 February 2023 Cacopardo MC Moreno JL 1990 Migration from Southern Italy to Argentina Calabrians and Sicilians 1880 1930 Studi Emigr 27 98 231 53 PMID 12342955 Emigrantes italianos hacia la Argentina por grandes regiones in Spanish Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 13 June 2015 Distribucion de los italianos en Argentina en 1980 in Spanish Retrieved 27 September 2014 Italianos en Rosario in Spanish Retrieved 8 February 2023 a b c Alberto Sarra Inmigracion italiana en Argentina Compilado de libros y documentos historicos in Spanish Retrieved 9 February 2023 Italianos en La Plata in Spanish Retrieved 8 February 2023 Italiani alla fine del mondo Ushuaia in Italian 2013 Archived from the original on 7 December 2016 Retrieved 31 December 2016 L emigrazione Italiana in Argentina in Italian Retrieved 9 February 2023 Cuadro P6 Total del pais Poblacion total nacida en el extranjero por lugar de nacimiento segun sexo y grupos de edad in Spanish 2010 Archived from the original on 19 December 2015 Retrieved 26 December 2016 Censo 2010 Poblacion total nacida en el extranjero por lugar de nacimiento segun sexo y grupo de edad ver por provincias in Spanish 2010 Archived from the original on 19 December 2015 Retrieved 26 December 2016 Los Mitos de la Historia Argentina Felipe Pigna Ed Planeta 2006 p 106 cap IV Expropiando al Capital In Spanish Cacopardo MC Moreno JL Migration from Southern Italy to Argentina Calabrians and Sicilians 1880 1930 Cacopardo et al 1990 Vol 27 Studi Emigr pp 231 53 PMID 12342955 Argentina Ethnologue Retrieved 24 March 2015 a b Las relaciones entre la Argentina e Italia in Spanish Retrieved 15 February 2023 Colantoni Laura Gurlekian Jorge August 2004 Cambridge Journals Online Bilingualism Language and Cognition Abstract Convergence and intonation historical evidence from Buenos Aires Spanish Bilingualism Language and Cognition 7 2 107 119 doi 10 1017 S1366728904001488 hdl 11336 118441 S2CID 56111230 Retrieved 24 March 2015 Colantoni Laura Gurlekian Jorge Convergence and intonation historical evidence from Buenos Aires Spanish Bilingualism Language and Cognition Retrieved 17 February 2023 Napolitanos y portenos unidos por el acento in Spanish Archived from the original on 15 September 2008 Retrieved 16 February 2023 Historia del Lunfardo con resenas en periodicos del siglo XIX in Spanish Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 13 October 2014 Lunfardo in Spanish Retrieved 13 October 2014 El portenisimo lunfardo se renueva con palabras del rock y la cumbia article by Nora Sanchez Clarin Sunday 21 August 2011 p 56 In Spanish Se a Genova c e la fugassa a Buenos Aires c e la fugazzeta in Italian Retrieved 28 January 2023 Napoles en Boedo el rincon donde las pastas se cocinan desde hace 90 anos in Spanish Retrieved 13 February 2023 Al uso nostro in Spanish Retrieved 13 February 2023 a b Bueno Renata 30 September 2021 Los Sorrentinos y sus posibles origenes Renata Bueno in Spanish Retrieved 22 January 2023 Raviolis Capresi crujientes a la salsa Pomodoro Receta de josevillalta Cookpad in Spanish Retrieved 22 January 2023 Magazine Ristorazione Italiana Redazione 29 May 2018 La ricetta dei Ravioli Capresi come assaggiare la bellezza dell isola con il palato Ristorazione Italiana Magazine in Italian Retrieved 23 January 2023 a b Sorrentinos de Jamon y Queso Round Ravioli Stuffed with Ham and Cheese in Spanish 23 February 2012 Retrieved 31 March 2018 Monacchi Juliana 11 June 2019 Sorrentinos la historia detras del origen marplatense itMarDelPlata in Spanish Retrieved 22 January 2023 Aregentinian Pasta Recipes Restauratnts and Wine Pairings 14 October 2011 Retrieved 14 October 2011 Dan Perlman 2013 Don t Fry for Me Argentina Lulu com p 75 ISBN 9781300733096 Que es polenta en argentina in Spanish Retrieved 16 February 2023 Un plato polenta para afrontar el frio in Spanish 3 July 2015 Retrieved 16 February 2023 Una cultura que se fusiono con las costumbres argentinas in Spanish Retrieved 13 February 2023 Dia de la Milanesa los secretos detras del imprescindible plato de la cocina portena Milanesa Day the secrets behind the essential dish of Buenos Aires cuisine in Spanish Infobae 3 May 2018 Retrieved 14 March 2019 a b Dia de la milanesa como se creo uno de los platos favoritos de los argentinos Milanesa Day how one of the favorite dishes of Argentines was created Clarin in Spanish 3 May 2015 Retrieved 14 March 2019 Los argentinos festejan el Dia de la Milanesa Argentines celebrate Milanesa Day La Nacion in Spanish 3 May 2017 Retrieved 1 November 2020 Hoy es el Dia de la Milanesa uno de los platos mas tipicos y populares de Argentina Today is the Day of the Milanesa one of the most typical and popular dishes in Argentina El Tribuno in Spanish 3 May 2020 Retrieved 1 November 2020 Donnelly Catherine W 2016 The Oxford Companion to Cheese Oxford University Press p 37 ISBN 978 0 19 933088 1 Tradicionales sabores toscanos pero amasados en la Argentina in Spanish 3 August 2009 Retrieved 14 February 2023 a b La cocina italiana en Argentina in Spanish Archived from the original on 31 December 2016 Retrieved 30 December 2016 Alfonsin Gabriel Helado Artesanal Asesoramiento y Cursos de fabricacion helado artesanal Franquicias Heladoartesanal com in Spanish Archived from the original on 27 March 2015 Retrieved 24 March 2015 Por que los argentinos comen noquis el 29 de cada mes y que tiene que ver eso con los empleados publicos in Spanish Retrieved 19 July 2021 Noquis el 29 in Spanish 3 May 2012 Retrieved 19 July 2021 El noquis de cada 29 in Spanish 29 November 2015 Retrieved 18 July 2021 a b Petryk Norberto Los noquis del 29 in Spanish Retrieved 14 February 2023 Noquis del 29 origen de una tradicion milenaria in Spanish 29 July 2004 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Por que se celebra hoy el Dia del Inmigrante Italiano in Spanish Archived from the original on 24 June 2015 Retrieved 3 February 2023 La otra Usina la que si da luz in Spanish Retrieved 1 September 2014 Hector Angel Benedetti Edificios de la Italo in Spanish Retrieved 4 February 2023 Texto integro del relato original de Edmundo de Amicis in Spanish Archived from the original on 10 October 2014 Gonzalo Moises Aguilar Ricardo Manetti Cine argentino modernidad y vanguardias 1957 1983 in Spanish Fondo Nacional de las Artes 2005 Manrupe Raul Portela Maria Alejandra 2001 Un diccionario de films argentinos 1930 1995 in Spanish Editorial Corregidor p 308 ISBN 950 05 0896 6 La inmigracion italiana y el tango in Spanish Retrieved 4 February 2023 L archivio dimenticato dell Unione e Benevolenza di Buenos Aires un tesoro per lo studio dell associazionismo italiano in Argentina in Italian p 1 Retrieved 4 February 2023 Federaciones Regionales in Italian Archived from the original on 2 May 2016 Retrieved 13 October 2014 Le sedi della Societa Dante Alighieri divise per paese in Italian Archived from the original on 24 November 2009 Com It Es in Spanish Archived from the original on 4 January 2017 Retrieved 3 January 2017 Scuole Paritarie Italiane All estero PDF in Italian pp 2 3 Archived from the original PDF on 6 June 2015 Retrieved 20 November 2015 L eco d Italia cambia Direttore in Italian Retrieved 11 February 2023 Giornali italiani all estero L Italiano sara il quarto quotidiano d Argentina in Italian Retrieved 11 February 2023 Taylor Matthew Lanfranchi Pierre 2001 Moving With the Ball the migration of professional footballers Berg pp 91 93 ISBN 978 1 85973 307 3 Potenza Picena il paese dei tarocchi Ma i passaporti sono tutti in regola in Italian Retrieved 24 February 2009 External links edit Immigrants Being Transported on Horse Drawn Wagon Buenos Aires Argentina is a photograph by Frank G Carpenter He talks about Italian Argentines in the site caption Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Italian Argentines amp oldid 1195894630, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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