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Province of Chieti

The province of Chieti (Italian: provincia di Chieti; Abruzzese: pruvìngie de Chjìte) is a province in the Abruzzo region of Italy. Its provincial capital is the city Chieti, which has a population of 50,770 inhabitants. The province has a total population of 387,649 inhabitants as of 2017 and spans an area of 2,599.58 square kilometres (1,003.70 sq mi). It is divided into 104 comuni (comune) and the provincial president is Mario Pupillo.[1]

Province of Chieti
Palazzo del Governo at Chieti, the provincial seat.
Map highlighting the location of the province of Chieti in Italy
Country Italy
RegionAbruzzo
Capital(s)Chieti
Comuni104
Government
 • PresidentMario Pupillo (PD)
Area
 • Total2,599.58 km2 (1,003.70 sq mi)
Population
 (30 September 2017)
 • Total387,649
 • Density150/km2 (390/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
66010-66012, 66014-66023, 66026, 66030-66034, 66036-66038, 66040-66043, 66045-66047, 66050-66052, 66054
Telephone prefix085, 0871, 0872, 0873
Vehicle registrationCH
ISTAT069

Chieti's cathedral was first constructed during the 9th century but was reconstructed during the 13th century. The province contains the National Archaeology Museum of Abruzzo, in Italian the Museo Archeologico Nazionale d'Abruzzo, which contains items from the area prior to Roman rule.[2]

History

It was first settled by the Osci people near the Pescara River. In around 1000 BCE it was conquered by Marsi and Marrucini people. The city was also lived in by the Greeks, who named it Teate. It was conquered by the Romans in 305 BCE but after the fall of Rome in 476 CE, Theoderic the Great gained ownership of the city and it was subsequently used as a Lombard fortress. The city was then owned by the Franks, the Normans, the Hohenstaufen, the Angevins and Aragonese rulers until strong control over the city was gained by Charles V of France. Chieti was made the capital of Abruzzo Citra under its period of rule by the House of Bourbon.[2]

The province of Chieti contains Ortona, a town founded by Fretani people for trading with the Greeks, which was the scene of a World War II battle between German and predominantly British and Canadian forces; over 2,000 civilians died and the town was largely destroyed.[2]

Geography

The province of Chieti is one of four provinces in the region of Abruzzo on the eastern coast of Italy. It is the most easternmost province in the region and is bounded to the northeast by the Adriatic Sea. The Province of Pescara lies to the north and the Province of L'Aquila to the northwest. To the south lies the Province of Isernia and the Province of Campobasso lies to the south east, both these provinces being part of the region of Molise. The provincial capital is Chieti, situated on a ridge a few miles inland and just south of the Aterno-Pescara River which flows into the sea at nearby Pescara.[3]

There has been a movement by farmers away from the land and the area. The outflow has been greatest from the hilly and mountainous areas, where the holdings are small and worked by the families who own them. In the period 1951 to 1971, the number of people employed in agriculture in Chieti fell from over 80% to around 45%, the number employed in industry tripled to around 20% and the number employed in the service sector, tripled to around 30%.[4]

Main sights

Chieti

 
The bell tower of the Cathedral of Chieti
  • The Gothic Cathedral, re-built by bishop Attone I in 1069. Of that building only parts of the Romanesque crypt remain. The church was remade in the 14th century and the bell tower was enlarged. After several earthquakes, the church was rebuilt again in the late 17th-18th centuries in Baroque style.
  • Oratory of Sacro Monte dei Morti
  • Church of San Francesco al Corso, founded in 1239. The façade shows an incomplete Baroque restoration.
  • Church of Santa Chiara.
 
The famous Warrior of Capestrano in the National Archeological Museum of Abruzzo in Chieti

Under the church of SS. Pietro e Paolo and the adjoining houses are extensive substructures (in opus reticulatum and brickwork) of the 1st century CE, belonging to a building erected by M. Vectius Marcellus[5] and Helvidia Priscilla. There are also remains of large reservoirs and of an ancient theatre. In the early 21st century, new archeological excavations are under way on the site of the former Campo Sportivo.

Lanciano

 
The Torri Montanare.
  • Cathedral of Santa Maria del Ponte ("St. Mary of the Bridge"), so called because it is built on bridgework along a precipice: is the work of Michitelli (1619) and has some paintings by Pozzulaniello (Giacinto Diana). It houses also an 8th-century Byzantine statue portraying the Madonna, probably brought here during the iconoclast controversy.
  • Chiesa di Santa Maria Maggiore, one of the most important architectural sites in Abruzzo. Built in 1227 according to Bourgogne-Cistercian lines, it was updated in 1540 in Baroque style, with the addition of two aisles and stucco decorations (recently stripped off). The main gate is from 1317.
  • Chiesa di San Francesco (1258), built over a pre-existing 7th-century church. The high altar houses the relics of the Eucharistic Miracle.
  • Chiesa di Sant'Agostino (1270). The façade has maintained the original rose window and the gate, while the single nave interior is a Baroque restoration.
  • Chiesa di San Biagio (11th century) is the oldest church of the city. It has a bell tower and it's always opened on 3 February for the anointing of the throat, a Catholic rite linked to the cult Saint Biagio.
  • Torri Montanare, a relic of the ancient walls (11th century). They consist in two massive towers, the most recent dating to the 15th century, offering a panoramic view of the area.
  • Porta San Biagio (11th century), the only one gate remaining of the nine once existing.
  • Torre civica (19th century), was built over a pre-existing tower next to the cathedral. Nowadays it is a belfry and a clock tower.
  • Torre Aragonese, (15th century) was a tower along the ancient walls.
  • Palazzo dell'Arcivescovado, (16th century) is still the seat of the archbishop and houses a diocesan Museum.
  • Botteghe medievali, was a house built in 1434. It has two floors and on the ground floor there are antique shops, with external bank according to the Roman use.

Vasto

 
Santa Maria Maggiore church bell tower

The old part of the town (centro storico) features a number of interesting buildings and churches dating from the 12th to the 18th century, including:

  • Cathedral of San Giuseppe
  • Santa Maria Maggiore :largest and oldest church in the town, mentioned in a document as early as 1195, with a tall bell tower. Damaged by the Turks in 1566,[6] and by a fire in 1645, it went a thorough restructuring in 1735 in which it got the current shape. It hosts one of alleged Jesus' crown of thorns (Sacra Spina).
  • Castello Caldoresco
  • D'Avalos Palace [it], which houses four museums, called the Musei di Palazzo d'Avalos [it].[7][8]

Below the hill on which the town is located, the beach resort town of Marina di Vasto offers a large sandy beach and several hotels and other facilities.

 
Marina di Vasto and the Golfo di Vasto in the Adriatic Sea, viewed from Vasto

Further north the coast becomes rocky and features interesting pebble and stone beaches and coves, as well as the typical trabocchi, that are typical wooden fishing machines of the Southern Abruzzo coast.
Amongst the most interesting natural areas, also featuring a number of sandy and rocky beaches, is the protected natural area of the Riserva Naturale di Punta Aderci,[9] whose beaches were voted in 2014 3rd of the top 20 beaches in Italy.[10]

Ortona

The origins of Ortona are uncertain. Presumably, it was first inhabited by the Frentani, an Italic population. In 2005, during works near the Castle, a Bronze Age settlement was discovered, and the Roman town largely coincided with this first settlement. Some sections of paved roads and urban walls, as well as some archaeological findings are the only remains of this period. Ortona remained a part of the Roman Empire i.e., the Byzantine Empire for several centuries, before it was annexed by the Kingdom of the Lombards. In 803 the Franks incorporated Ortona into the county of Chieti. From that date on, the town remained tied to Chieti and its territory.

 
The Aragonese castle in Ortona.
 
The Basilica of San Tommaso Apostolo, where are the remains of the saint

In 1258 the relics of the Apostle Thomas were brought to Ortona by the sailor Leone Acciaiuoli. In the first half of the 15th century its walls were built, and during this period Ortona fought with the nearby town of Lanciano in a fierce war that ended in 1427. On June 30, 1447, ships from Venice destroyed the port of Ortona; consequently the King of Sicily at that time commissioned the construction of a Castle to dominate the renovated port. In 1582 the town was acquired by Margaret of Parma, daughter of Emperor Charles V and Duchess of Parma. In 1584 Margaret decided to build a great mansion, known as Palazzo Farnese, which was never completed due to her death.

After the establishment of the Kingdom of Italy in 1860, Ortona became one of the first sea resorts on the Adriatic Sea. On 9 September 1943, the royal family of the House of Savoy left German-occupied Italy from the port of Ortona. The defensive Gustav Line was established by the Germans at Ortona, extending towards Cassino on the opposite side of Italy. Ortona offered the Allies a supply port on the Adriatic and was fiercely defended by the Germans attracted the attention of that the international press in the struggle between the German paratroopers and the 2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade. This led to this battle being known as "Little Stalingrad."

Guardiagrele

 
West view of Santa Maria Maggiore

The biggest church in Guardiagrele is Santa Maria Maggiore of which it has been written:[11]

The façade presents a splendid 14th-century gothic portal, among the most elegant in the Abruzzi Gothic style. The Coronation of the Virgin sculpture group in the portal lunette is also magnificent, attributed to the school of Nicola di Guardiagrele. Under the colonnaded portico, next to the lateral door, is the splendid fresco by Andrea De Litio (1473) portraying Saint Christopher. In the interior, completely rebuilt in the 18th century following an earthquake, crumbling stucco-work in the Baroque style and a shrine of the same period set off a 15th-century fresco representing the Madonna of the Milk.

In addition to Santa Maria Maggiore, there are several other churches and palazzi or mansions of various ages which are of architectural interest, including S. Nicola di Bari (founded in the 4th century), the convent of the Chapuchins (1599), Palazzo De Lucia (16th century), Palazzo Elisii (15th-18th century), the cloister of the Palazzo Comunale Piazza San Francesco (17th century) and Palazzo Marini (1391).

Museums include:

  • Museo Civico (Civic Museum)
  • Museo del Costume e della Tradizione della Nostra Gente (Costume and Folk Museum)
  • Museo del Duomo ("Cathedral Museum"), in Santa Maria Maggiore
  • Museo Archeologico ("Archaeological Museum").

Frazione

International relations

The Province of Chieti is twinned with:

Quality of life

Quality of life indicators according to Il Sole 24 ORE in 2019
Indicators Values
Wealth and consumption
Value added per inhabitant €23,300
Per capita bank deposits €19,777.2
Average monthly mortgage payments €709.8
Average remaining financial exposure €28,029.0
Average price of new 100 m2 apartments in semicentral zones of the capital €1150.0 per m2
Average monthly rental fee of new 100 m2 apartments in semicentral zones of the capital €350.0
Sold m2/offered m2 65.0%
Average old-age pension amount €981.3
Annual family expenditure on durable goods €2191.0
Per capita protests €9.7
Percentage of over 18 population with active credits 38.3%
Average income per taxpayer €17,432
Income per taxpayer variation from 2007 to 2017 1.4%
Environment and services
Average per capita local governments social expenditure for disabled people, senior citizens, and minors €59.0
Percentage of residents dismissed from hospitals out of Region 15.0%
Air pollution in terms of PM10 24.0 μg/m³
Family doctors/1,000 inhabitants 1.1
Pediatricians/1,000 inhabitants aged from 0 to 15 years old 2.7
Justice and safety
Reported car thefts/100,000 inhabitants 109.4
Reported home burglaries/100,000 inhabitants 190.1
Reported rapes/100,000 inhabitants 2.9
Reported crimes/100,000 inhabitants 2679.0
Reported robberies/100,000 inhabitants 20.2
Reported extortions/100,000 inhabitants 11.4
Reported crimes associated with psychoactive drugs/100,000 inhabitants 38.4
Reported frauds and informatics frauds/100,000 inhabitants 265.1
Civil procedures/100,000 inhabitants 2530.4
Percentage of cases pending more than three years 0.1%
Average duration of civil procedures 244.4 days
Defined procedures/new ones 1.0
Reports of crimes associated with money laundering/100,000 inhabitants 0.5
Reported fires/100,000 inhabitants 7.8
Dead and injured people due to road accidents/1,000 inhabitants 3.9
Business and occupation
Regular immigrants/resident population 0.1%
Unemployment rate (from 15 to 74 years old) 11.3%
Youth unemployment rate (from 15 to 29 years old) 30.2%
Goods exported abroad/GDP 65.3%
Inactive resident population 34.9%
Registered companies/100 inhabitants 11.7
Innovative startups/1,000 capital companies 3.3
Difference between new registered companies and ceased companies/companies registered in the former year 0.1
Failing companies/companies registered 1.4%
Demography and society
Domestic net migration -0.6%
Mortality rate per 10,000 inhabitants 11.8
Deaths due to heart attacks/1,000 inhabitants in five years 3.1
Deaths due to tumors/1,000 inhabitants in five years 13.5
Life expectancy at birth 82.9 years
Average number of people per family 2.3
Life expectancy at birth increase 2.1 years
Households and unions/1,000 inhabitants 497.3
Successful births/average resident population 6.6 ‰
Population aged 65 and over/population aged 15–64 0.391
Population aged 65 and over/population aged 0–14 2.016
Difference between population that declares to become resident abroad and vice versa/1,000 inhabitants 3.1
Years of schooling received on average by over 25 population 10.4
Acquisition of citizenship/foreign residents 2.2%
Culture and free time
Cinema seats/100,000 inhabitants 1927.5
Libraries/10,000 inhabitants 3.2
Restaurants and bars/100,000 inhabitants 685.5
Shows/10 km2 175.0
Book shops/100.000 inhabitants 7.0
Gyms/100.000 inhabitants 11.2
Per capita expenditure on shows €9.8
Percentage of population subscriber of ultra-broadband 3.4%
Hotel beds/km2 9.7

References

  1. ^ "Provincia di Chieti". Tutt Italia. Retrieved 18 August 2015.
  2. ^ a b c Roy Palmer Domenico (2002). The Regions of Italy: A Reference Guide to History and Culture. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 10–11. ISBN 978-0-313-30733-1.
  3. ^ The Times Comprehensive Atlas of the World (13 ed.). Times Books. 2011. p. 76. ISBN 9780007419135.
  4. ^ Russell King (2015). Return Migration and Regional Economic Problems (Routledge Library Editions: Economic Geography). Routledge. pp. 94–. ISBN 978-1-317-52459-5.
  5. ^ Probably mentioned by Pliny, H.N., II., 199.
  6. ^ Chiese di Vasto: Santa Maria Maggiore, 2014, at the URL: http://www.vastospa.it/html/la_citt%E0/ch_s_maria.htm[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ "Il Palazzo".
  8. ^ "Musei Palazzo D\'Avalos - Sito del centro museale del Palazzo D\'Avalos - Vasto".
  9. ^ "Riserva Naturale Regionale Punta Aderci |".
  10. ^ Legambiente, 2014 http://www.legambiente.it/contenuti/comunicati/le-spiagge-piu-belle-dell-estate-2014-cala-degli-infreschi-camerota-e-la-piu-ap
  11. ^ I Borghi più belli d'Italia
  12. ^ "Vänorter" (in Swedish). Malmö stad. Retrieved 6 November 2013.

External links

  • Official website (in Italian)


Coordinates: 42°21′N 14°10′E / 42.350°N 14.167°E / 42.350; 14.167

province, chieti, province, chieti, italian, provincia, chieti, abruzzese, pruvìngie, chjìte, province, abruzzo, region, italy, provincial, capital, city, chieti, which, population, inhabitants, province, total, population, inhabitants, 2017, update, spans, ar. The province of Chieti Italian provincia di Chieti Abruzzese pruvingie de Chjite is a province in the Abruzzo region of Italy Its provincial capital is the city Chieti which has a population of 50 770 inhabitants The province has a total population of 387 649 inhabitants as of 2017 update and spans an area of 2 599 58 square kilometres 1 003 70 sq mi It is divided into 104 comuni comune and the provincial president is Mario Pupillo 1 Province of ChietiProvincePalazzo del Governo at Chieti the provincial seat FlagSealMap highlighting the location of the province of Chieti in ItalyCountry ItalyRegionAbruzzoCapital s ChietiComuni104Government PresidentMario Pupillo PD Area Total2 599 58 km2 1 003 70 sq mi Population 30 September 2017 Total387 649 Density150 km2 390 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code66010 66012 66014 66023 66026 66030 66034 66036 66038 66040 66043 66045 66047 66050 66052 66054Telephone prefix085 0871 0872 0873Vehicle registrationCHISTAT069Chieti s cathedral was first constructed during the 9th century but was reconstructed during the 13th century The province contains the National Archaeology Museum of Abruzzo in Italian the Museo Archeologico Nazionale d Abruzzo which contains items from the area prior to Roman rule 2 Contents 1 History 2 Geography 3 Main sights 3 1 Chieti 3 2 Lanciano 3 3 Vasto 3 4 Ortona 3 5 Guardiagrele 4 Frazione 5 International relations 6 Quality of life 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditIt was first settled by the Osci people near the Pescara River In around 1000 BCE it was conquered by Marsi and Marrucini people The city was also lived in by the Greeks who named it Teate It was conquered by the Romans in 305 BCE but after the fall of Rome in 476 CE Theoderic the Great gained ownership of the city and it was subsequently used as a Lombard fortress The city was then owned by the Franks the Normans the Hohenstaufen the Angevins and Aragonese rulers until strong control over the city was gained by Charles V of France Chieti was made the capital of Abruzzo Citra under its period of rule by the House of Bourbon 2 The province of Chieti contains Ortona a town founded by Fretani people for trading with the Greeks which was the scene of a World War II battle between German and predominantly British and Canadian forces over 2 000 civilians died and the town was largely destroyed 2 Geography EditThe province of Chieti is one of four provinces in the region of Abruzzo on the eastern coast of Italy It is the most easternmost province in the region and is bounded to the northeast by the Adriatic Sea The Province of Pescara lies to the north and the Province of L Aquila to the northwest To the south lies the Province of Isernia and the Province of Campobasso lies to the south east both these provinces being part of the region of Molise The provincial capital is Chieti situated on a ridge a few miles inland and just south of the Aterno Pescara River which flows into the sea at nearby Pescara 3 There has been a movement by farmers away from the land and the area The outflow has been greatest from the hilly and mountainous areas where the holdings are small and worked by the families who own them In the period 1951 to 1971 the number of people employed in agriculture in Chieti fell from over 80 to around 45 the number employed in industry tripled to around 20 and the number employed in the service sector tripled to around 30 4 Main sights EditChieti Edit The bell tower of the Cathedral of Chieti The Gothic Cathedral re built by bishop Attone I in 1069 Of that building only parts of the Romanesque crypt remain The church was remade in the 14th century and the bell tower was enlarged After several earthquakes the church was rebuilt again in the late 17th 18th centuries in Baroque style Oratory of Sacro Monte dei Morti Church of San Francesco al Corso founded in 1239 The facade shows an incomplete Baroque restoration Church of Santa Chiara The famous Warrior of Capestrano in the National Archeological Museum of Abruzzo in Chieti Under the church of SS Pietro e Paolo and the adjoining houses are extensive substructures in opus reticulatum and brickwork of the 1st century CE belonging to a building erected by M Vectius Marcellus 5 and Helvidia Priscilla There are also remains of large reservoirs and of an ancient theatre In the early 21st century new archeological excavations are under way on the site of the former Campo Sportivo Lanciano Edit The Torri Montanare Cathedral of Santa Maria del Ponte St Mary of the Bridge so called because it is built on bridgework along a precipice is the work of Michitelli 1619 and has some paintings by Pozzulaniello Giacinto Diana It houses also an 8th century Byzantine statue portraying the Madonna probably brought here during the iconoclast controversy Chiesa di Santa Maria Maggiore one of the most important architectural sites in Abruzzo Built in 1227 according to Bourgogne Cistercian lines it was updated in 1540 in Baroque style with the addition of two aisles and stucco decorations recently stripped off The main gate is from 1317 Chiesa di San Francesco 1258 built over a pre existing 7th century church The high altar houses the relics of the Eucharistic Miracle Chiesa di Sant Agostino 1270 The facade has maintained the original rose window and the gate while the single nave interior is a Baroque restoration Chiesa di San Biagio 11th century is the oldest church of the city It has a bell tower and it s always opened on 3 February for the anointing of the throat a Catholic rite linked to the cult Saint Biagio Torri Montanare a relic of the ancient walls 11th century They consist in two massive towers the most recent dating to the 15th century offering a panoramic view of the area Porta San Biagio 11th century the only one gate remaining of the nine once existing Torre civica 19th century was built over a pre existing tower next to the cathedral Nowadays it is a belfry and a clock tower Torre Aragonese 15th century was a tower along the ancient walls Palazzo dell Arcivescovado 16th century is still the seat of the archbishop and houses a diocesan Museum Botteghe medievali was a house built in 1434 It has two floors and on the ground floor there are antique shops with external bank according to the Roman use Vasto Edit Santa Maria Maggiore church bell tower The old part of the town centro storico features a number of interesting buildings and churches dating from the 12th to the 18th century including Cathedral of San Giuseppe Santa Maria Maggiore largest and oldest church in the town mentioned in a document as early as 1195 with a tall bell tower Damaged by the Turks in 1566 6 and by a fire in 1645 it went a thorough restructuring in 1735 in which it got the current shape It hosts one of alleged Jesus crown of thorns Sacra Spina Castello Caldoresco D Avalos Palace it which houses four museums called the Musei di Palazzo d Avalos it 7 8 Below the hill on which the town is located the beach resort town of Marina di Vasto offers a large sandy beach and several hotels and other facilities Marina di Vasto and the Golfo di Vasto in the Adriatic Sea viewed from Vasto Further north the coast becomes rocky and features interesting pebble and stone beaches and coves as well as the typical trabocchi that are typical wooden fishing machines of the Southern Abruzzo coast Amongst the most interesting natural areas also featuring a number of sandy and rocky beaches is the protected natural area of the Riserva Naturale di Punta Aderci 9 whose beaches were voted in 2014 3rd of the top 20 beaches in Italy 10 Trabocco Ortona Edit The origins of Ortona are uncertain Presumably it was first inhabited by the Frentani an Italic population In 2005 during works near the Castle a Bronze Age settlement was discovered and the Roman town largely coincided with this first settlement Some sections of paved roads and urban walls as well as some archaeological findings are the only remains of this period Ortona remained a part of the Roman Empire i e the Byzantine Empire for several centuries before it was annexed by the Kingdom of the Lombards In 803 the Franks incorporated Ortona into the county of Chieti From that date on the town remained tied to Chieti and its territory The Aragonese castle in Ortona The Basilica of San Tommaso Apostolo where are the remains of the saint In 1258 the relics of the Apostle Thomas were brought to Ortona by the sailor Leone Acciaiuoli In the first half of the 15th century its walls were built and during this period Ortona fought with the nearby town of Lanciano in a fierce war that ended in 1427 On June 30 1447 ships from Venice destroyed the port of Ortona consequently the King of Sicily at that time commissioned the construction of a Castle to dominate the renovated port In 1582 the town was acquired by Margaret of Parma daughter of Emperor Charles V and Duchess of Parma In 1584 Margaret decided to build a great mansion known as Palazzo Farnese which was never completed due to her death After the establishment of the Kingdom of Italy in 1860 Ortona became one of the first sea resorts on the Adriatic Sea On 9 September 1943 the royal family of the House of Savoy left German occupied Italy from the port of Ortona The defensive Gustav Line was established by the Germans at Ortona extending towards Cassino on the opposite side of Italy Ortona offered the Allies a supply port on the Adriatic and was fiercely defended by the Germans attracted the attention of that the international press in the struggle between the German paratroopers and the 2nd Canadian Infantry Brigade This led to this battle being known as Little Stalingrad Guardiagrele Edit West view of Santa Maria Maggiore The biggest church in Guardiagrele is Santa Maria Maggiore of which it has been written 11 The facade presents a splendid 14th century gothic portal among the most elegant in the Abruzzi Gothic style The Coronation of the Virgin sculpture group in the portal lunette is also magnificent attributed to the school of Nicola di Guardiagrele Under the colonnaded portico next to the lateral door is the splendid fresco by Andrea De Litio 1473 portraying Saint Christopher In the interior completely rebuilt in the 18th century following an earthquake crumbling stucco work in the Baroque style and a shrine of the same period set off a 15th century fresco representing the Madonna of the Milk In addition to Santa Maria Maggiore there are several other churches and palazzi or mansions of various ages which are of architectural interest including S Nicola di Bari founded in the 4th century the convent of the Chapuchins 1599 Palazzo De Lucia 16th century Palazzo Elisii 15th 18th century the cloister of the Palazzo Comunale Piazza San Francesco 17th century and Palazzo Marini 1391 Museums include Museo Civico Civic Museum Museo del Costume e della Tradizione della Nostra Gente Costume and Folk Museum Museo del Duomo Cathedral Museum in Santa Maria Maggiore Museo Archeologico Archaeological Museum Frazione EditBrecciarola Giuliopoli Rosello Melone Piane d Archi PianibbieInternational relations EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Italy The Province of Chieti is twinned with Malmo Municipality in Sweden 12 Quality of life EditQuality of life indicators according to Il Sole 24 ORE in 2019Indicators ValuesWealth and consumptionValue added per inhabitant 23 300Per capita bank deposits 19 777 2Average monthly mortgage payments 709 8Average remaining financial exposure 28 029 0Average price of new 100 m2 apartments in semicentral zones of the capital 1150 0 per m2Average monthly rental fee of new 100 m2 apartments in semicentral zones of the capital 350 0Sold m2 offered m2 65 0 Average old age pension amount 981 3Annual family expenditure on durable goods 2191 0Per capita protests 9 7Percentage of over 18 population with active credits 38 3 Average income per taxpayer 17 432Income per taxpayer variation from 2007 to 2017 1 4 Environment and servicesAverage per capita local governments social expenditure for disabled people senior citizens and minors 59 0Percentage of residents dismissed from hospitals out of Region 15 0 Air pollution in terms of PM10 24 0 mg m Family doctors 1 000 inhabitants 1 1Pediatricians 1 000 inhabitants aged from 0 to 15 years old 2 7Justice and safetyReported car thefts 100 000 inhabitants 109 4Reported home burglaries 100 000 inhabitants 190 1Reported rapes 100 000 inhabitants 2 9Reported crimes 100 000 inhabitants 2679 0Reported robberies 100 000 inhabitants 20 2Reported extortions 100 000 inhabitants 11 4Reported crimes associated with psychoactive drugs 100 000 inhabitants 38 4Reported frauds and informatics frauds 100 000 inhabitants 265 1Civil procedures 100 000 inhabitants 2530 4Percentage of cases pending more than three years 0 1 Average duration of civil procedures 244 4 daysDefined procedures new ones 1 0Reports of crimes associated with money laundering 100 000 inhabitants 0 5Reported fires 100 000 inhabitants 7 8Dead and injured people due to road accidents 1 000 inhabitants 3 9Business and occupationRegular immigrants resident population 0 1 Unemployment rate from 15 to 74 years old 11 3 Youth unemployment rate from 15 to 29 years old 30 2 Goods exported abroad GDP 65 3 Inactive resident population 34 9 Registered companies 100 inhabitants 11 7Innovative startups 1 000 capital companies 3 3Difference between new registered companies and ceased companies companies registered in the former year 0 1Failing companies companies registered 1 4 Demography and societyDomestic net migration 0 6 Mortality rate per 10 000 inhabitants 11 8Deaths due to heart attacks 1 000 inhabitants in five years 3 1Deaths due to tumors 1 000 inhabitants in five years 13 5Life expectancy at birth 82 9 yearsAverage number of people per family 2 3Life expectancy at birth increase 2 1 yearsHouseholds and unions 1 000 inhabitants 497 3Successful births average resident population 6 6 Population aged 65 and over population aged 15 64 0 391Population aged 65 and over population aged 0 14 2 016Difference between population that declares to become resident abroad and vice versa 1 000 inhabitants 3 1Years of schooling received on average by over 25 population 10 4Acquisition of citizenship foreign residents 2 2 Culture and free timeCinema seats 100 000 inhabitants 1927 5Libraries 10 000 inhabitants 3 2Restaurants and bars 100 000 inhabitants 685 5Shows 10 km2 175 0Book shops 100 000 inhabitants 7 0Gyms 100 000 inhabitants 11 2Per capita expenditure on shows 9 8Percentage of population subscriber of ultra broadband 3 4 Hotel beds km2 9 7References Edit Provincia di Chieti Tutt Italia Retrieved 18 August 2015 a b c Roy Palmer Domenico 2002 The Regions of Italy A Reference Guide to History and Culture Greenwood Publishing Group pp 10 11 ISBN 978 0 313 30733 1 The Times Comprehensive Atlas of the World 13 ed Times Books 2011 p 76 ISBN 9780007419135 Russell King 2015 Return Migration and Regional Economic Problems Routledge Library Editions Economic Geography Routledge pp 94 ISBN 978 1 317 52459 5 Probably mentioned by Pliny H N II 199 Chiese di Vasto Santa Maria Maggiore 2014 at the URL http www vastospa it html la citt E0 ch s maria htm permanent dead link Il Palazzo Musei Palazzo D Avalos Sito del centro museale del Palazzo D Avalos Vasto Riserva Naturale Regionale Punta Aderci Legambiente 2014 http www legambiente it contenuti comunicati le spiagge piu belle dell estate 2014 cala degli infreschi camerota e la piu ap I Borghi piu belli d Italia Vanorter in Swedish Malmo stad Retrieved 6 November 2013 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Province of Chieti Official website in Italian Coordinates 42 21 N 14 10 E 42 350 N 14 167 E 42 350 14 167 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Province of Chieti amp oldid 1140653745, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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