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South Tyrol

South Tyrol[a] (Austrian German: Südtirol; Italian: Alto Adige; Ladin: Südtirol), officially the Autonomous Province of Bolzano, is an autonomous province in Northern Italy, one of the two that make up the autonomous region of Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol.[4] The province is the northernmost of Italy, the second largest, with an area of 7,400 square kilometres (2,857 sq mi) and has a total population of about 534,000 inhabitants as of 2021.[5] Its capital and largest city is Bolzano (German: Bozen; Ladin: Balsan or Bulsan).

Autonomous Province of Bolzano – South Tyrol
Austrian German: Autonome Provinz Bozen – Südtirol
Italian: Provincia Autonoma di Bolzano – Alto Adige
Ladin: Provinzia Autonoma de Balsan/Bulsan – Südtirol
Map highlighting the location of the province of South Tyrol in Italy (in red)
CountryItaly
RegionTrentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol
Capital(s)Bolzano
Comuni116
Government
 • BodyCouncil
 • GovernorArno Kompatscher (SVP)
Area
 • Total7,399.97 km2 (2,857.14 sq mi)
Population
 (1 January 2019)
 • Total531,178
 • Density72/km2 (190/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal code
39XXX
Telephone prefix0471, 0472, 0473, 0474
Vehicle registrationBZ
GDP (nominal)€24.8 billion (2018)[1]
GDP per capita€47,100 (2018)[2]
HDI (2021)0.912[3]
very high · 5th of 21
ISTAT021
Websitewww.provincia.bz.it
The Atlas Tyrolensis, showing the entire County of Tyrol, printed in Vienna. 1774

According to the 2011 census, 62.3% of the population uses German as their first language (Standard German in the written form and an Austro-Bavarian dialect in the spoken form); 23.4% of the population speaks Italian, mainly in and around the two largest cities (Bolzano, with an Italian-speaking majority, and Meran, with a slight German-speaking majority); 4.1% speaks Ladin, a Rhaeto-Romance language; 10.2% of the population (mainly recent immigrants) speaks another language natively. Of 116 South Tyrolean municipalities, 103 have a German-speaking, eight a Ladin-speaking, and five an Italian-speaking majority.[6] There was large-scale immigration of Italians from the rest of Italy to Bolzano and its surroundings after 1918.[7][8]

The province is granted a considerable level of self-government, consisting of a large range of exclusive legislative and executive powers and a fiscal regime that allows it to retain 90% of revenue, while remaining a net contributor to the national budget.[9] As of 2016, South Tyrol is the wealthiest province in Italy and among the wealthiest in the European Union.

In the wider context of the European Union, the province is one of the three members of the Tyrol–South Tyrol–Trentino Euroregion, which corresponds almost exactly to the historical region of Tyrol.[10] The other members are Tyrol state in Austria, to the north and east, and the Italian Autonomous Province of Trento to the south.

Name

 
A map from 1874 showing South Tirol with approximately the borders of today's South and East Tyrol

South Tyrol (occasionally South Tirol) is the term most commonly used in English for the province,[11] and its usage reflects that it was created from a portion of the southern part of the historic County of Tyrol, a former state of the Holy Roman Empire and crown land of the Austrian Empire of the Habsburgs. German and Ladin speakers usually refer to the area as Südtirol; the Italian equivalent Sudtirolo (sometimes parsed Sud Tirolo[12]) is becoming increasingly common.[13]

Alto Adige (literally translated in English: "Upper Adige"), one of the Italian names for the province, is also used in English.[14] The term had been the name of political subdivisions along the Adige River in the time of Napoleon Bonaparte,[15][16] who created the Department of Alto Adige, part of the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy. It was reused as the Italian name of the current province after its post-World War I creation, and was a symbol of the subsequent forced Italianization of South Tyrol.[17]

The official name of the province today in German is Autonome Provinz Bozen — Südtirol. German speakers usually refer to it not as a Provinz, but as a Land (like the Länder of Germany and Austria).[18] Provincial institutions are referred to using the prefix Landes-, such as Landesregierung (state government) and Landeshauptmann (governor).[19] The official name in Italian is Provincia autonoma di Bolzano — Alto Adige, in Ladin Provinzia autonoma de Balsan/Bulsan — Südtirol.

History

Annexation by Italy

South Tyrol is an administrative entity originated during the First World War. The Allies promised the area to Italy in the Treaty of London of 1915 as an incentive to enter the war on their side. Until 1918, it was part of the Austro-Hungarian princely County of Tyrol, but this almost completely German-speaking territory was occupied by Italy at the end of the war in November 1918 and was annexed to the Kingdom of Italy in 1919. The province as it exists today was created in 1926 after an administrative reorganization of the Kingdom of Italy, and was incorporated together with the province of Trento into the newly created region of Venezia Tridentina ("Trentine Venetia").

With the rise of Italian Fascism, the new regime made efforts to bring forward the Italianization of South Tyrol. The German language was banished from public service, German teaching was officially forbidden, and German newspapers were censored (with the exception of the fascistic Alpenzeitung). The regime also favoured immigration from other Italian regions.

The subsequent alliance between Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini declared that South Tyrol would not follow the destiny of Austria, which had been annexed by Nazi Germany. Instead the dictators agreed that the German-speaking population be transferred to German-ruled territory or dispersed around Italy, but the outbreak of the Second World War prevented them from fully carrying out their plans.[20] Every citizen was given the choice to give up their German cultural identity and stay in fascist Italy, or to leave their homeland for Nazi Germany to retain their cultural identity. This resulted in the division of South Tyrolese families.

In this tense relationship for the population, Walter Caldonazzi from Mals was part of the resistance group around the priest Heinrich Maier, which passed plans and information about production facilities for V-1 rockets, V-2 rockets, Tiger tanks, Messerschmitt Bf 109, and Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet and other aircraft to the Allies. The group planned for an independent Austria with a monarchical form of government after the war, which would include Austria, Bavaria and South Tyrol.[21][22]

In 1943, when the Italian government signed an armistice with the Allies, the region was occupied by Nazi Germany, which reorganised it as the Operation Zone of the Alpine Foothills and put it under the administration of Gauleiter Franz Hofer. The region was de facto annexed to the German Reich (with the addition of the province of Belluno) until the end of the war. Italian rule was restored in 1945 as the Nazi regime ended.

Gruber–De Gasperi Agreement

Austrians demonstrating in 1946 at a peace conference in favour of having the southern Tyrol region returned to Austria

After the war, the Allies decided that the province would remain a part of Italy, under the condition that the German-speaking population be granted a significant level of self-government. Italy and Austria negotiated an agreement in 1946, recognizing the rights of the German minority. Alcide De Gasperi, Italy's prime minister, a native of Trentino, wanted to extend the autonomy to his fellow citizens. This led to the creation of the region called Trentino-Alto Adige/Tiroler Etschland. The Gruber–De Gasperi Agreement of September 1946 was signed by the Italian and Austrian Foreign Ministers, creating the autonomous region of Trentino-South Tyrol, consisting of the autonomous provinces of Trentino and South Tyrol. German and Italian were both made official languages, and German-language education was permitted once more. Still Italians were the majority in the combined region.

This, together with the arrival of new Italian-speaking immigrants, led to strong dissatisfaction among South Tyrolese, which culminated in terrorist acts perpetrated by the Befreiungsausschuss Südtirol (BAS – Liberation Committee of South Tyrol). In the first phase, only public edifices and fascist monuments were targeted. The second phase was bloodier, costing 21 lives (15 members of Italian security forces, two civilians, and four terrorists).

Südtirolfrage

The South Tyrolean Question (Südtirolfrage) became an international issue. As the implementation of the post-war agreement was deemed unsatisfactory by the Austrian government, it became a cause of significant friction with Italy and was taken up by the United Nations in 1960. A fresh round of negotiations took place in 1961 but proved unsuccessful, partly because of the campaign of terrorism.

The issue was resolved in 1971, when a new Austro-Italian treaty was signed and ratified. It stipulated that disputes in South Tyrol would be submitted for settlement to the International Court of Justice in The Hague, that the province would receive greater autonomy within Italy, and that Austria would not interfere in South Tyrol's internal affairs. The new agreement proved broadly satisfactory to the parties involved, and the separatist tensions soon eased.

The autonomous status granted in 1972 has resulted in a considerable level of self-government,[23] and also allows the entity to retain almost 90% of all levied taxes.[24]

Autonomy

 
Plaque at a German-language school in both Italian and German

In 1992, Italy and Austria officially ended their dispute over the autonomy issue on the basis of the agreement of 1972.[25]

The extensive self-government[23] provided by the current institutional framework has been advanced as a model for settling interethnic disputes and for the successful protection of linguistic minorities.[26] This is among the reasons why the Ladin municipalities of Cortina d'Ampezzo/Anpezo, Livinallongo del Col di Lana/Fodom and Colle Santa Lucia/Col have asked in a referendum to be detached from Veneto and reannexed to the province, from which they were separated under the fascist government.[27]

Euroregion

 
The Euroregion Tyrol-South Tyrol-Trentino corresponds to the historic Tyrol region today (excluding Cortina, Livinallongo, Pedemonte and Valvestino)
   South Tyrol (Italy)
   Trentino (Italy)

In 1996, the Euroregion Tyrol-South Tyrol-Trentino was formed between the Austrian state of Tyrol and the Italian provinces of South Tyrol and Trentino. The boundaries of the association correspond to the old County of Tyrol. The aim is to promote regional peace, understanding and cooperation in many areas. The region's assemblies meet together as one on various occasions, and have set up a common liaison office with the European Union in Brussels.

Geography

 
Detailed map of South Tyrol

South Tyrol is located at the northernmost point in Italy. The province is bordered by Austria to the east and north, specifically by the Austrian federal-states Tyrol and Salzburg, and by the Swiss canton of Graubünden to the west. The Italian provinces of Belluno, Trentino, and Sondrio border to the southeast, south, and southwest, respectively.

The landscape itself is mostly cultivated with different types of shrubs and forests and is highly mountainous.

Entirely located in the Alps, the province's landscape is dominated by mountains. The highest peak is the Ortler (3,905 metres, 12,812 ft) in the far west, which is also the highest peak in the Eastern Alps outside the Bernina Range. Even more famous are the craggy peaks of the Dolomites in the eastern part of the region.

The following mountain groups are (partially) in South Tyrol. All but the Sarntal Alps are on the border with Austria, Switzerland, or other Italian provinces. The ranges are clockwise from the west and for each the highest peak is given that is within the province or on its border.

Name Highest peak (German/Italian) metres feet
Ortler Alps Ortler/Ortles 3,905 12,811
Sesvenna Range Muntpitschen/Monpiccio 3,162 10,374
Ötztal Alps Weißkugel/Palla Bianca 3,746 12,291
Stubai Alps Wilder Freiger/Cima Libera 3,426 11,241
Sarntal Alps Hirzer/Punta Cervina 2,781 9,124
Zillertal Alps Hochfeiler/Gran Pilastro 3,510 11,515
Hohe Tauern Dreiherrnspitze/Picco dei Tre Signori 3,499 11,480
Eastern Dolomites Dreischusterspitze/Punta Tre Scarperi 3,152 10,341
Western Dolomites Langkofel/Sassolungo 3,181 10,436

Located between the mountains are many valleys, where the majority of the population lives.

Administrative divisions

The province is divided into eight districts (German: Bezirksgemeinschaften, Italian: comunità comprensoriali), one of them being the chief city of Bolzano. Each district is headed by a president and two bodies called the district committee and the district council. The districts are responsible for resolving intermunicipal disputes and providing roads, schools, and social services such as retirement homes.

The province is further divided into 116 Gemeinden or comuni.[28]

Districts

 
Map of South Tyrol with its eight districts
District (German/Italian) Capital (German/Italian) Area Inhabitants[28]
Bozen/Bolzano Bozen/Bolzano 52 km2 107,436
Burggrafenamt/Burgraviato Meran/Merano 1,101 km2 97,315
Pustertal/Val Pusteria Bruneck/Brunico  2,071 km2 79,086
Überetsch-Unterland/Oltradige-Bassa Atesina Neumarkt/Egna 424 km2 71,435
Eisacktal/Valle Isarco Brixen/Bressanone 624 km2 49,840
Salten-Schlern/Salto-Sciliar Bozen/Bolzano 1,037 km2 48,020
Vinschgau/Val Venosta Schlanders/Silandro 1,442 km2 35,000
Wipptal/Alta Valle Isarco Sterzing/Vipiteno 650 km2 18,220

Largest municipalities

 
The Laubengasse or Via dei portici, a street in the capital Bolzano
 
Brixen is the third largest city
German name Italian name Ladin name Inhabitants[28]
Bozen Bolzano Balsan, Bulsan 107,724
Meran Merano Maran 40,926
Brixen Bressanone Persenon, Porsenù 22,423
Leifers Laives 18,097
Bruneck Brunico Bornech, Burnech 16,636
Eppan an der Weinstraße Appiano sulla Strada del Vino 14,990
Lana Lana 12,468
Kaltern an der Weinstraße Caldaro sulla Strada del Vino 7,512
Ritten Renon 7,507
Sarntal Sarentino 6,863
Kastelruth Castelrotto Ciastel 6,456
Sterzing Vipiteno 6,306
Schlanders Silandro 6,014
Ahrntal Valle Aurina 5,876
Naturns Naturno 5,440
Sand in Taufers Campo Tures 5,230
Latsch Laces 5,145
Klausen Chiusa Tluses, Tlüses 5,134
Mals Malles 5,050
Neumarkt Egna 4,926
Algund Lagundo 4,782
St. Ulrich Ortisei Urtijëi 4,606
Ratschings Racines 4,331
Terlan Terlano 4,132

Climate

Climatically, South Tyrol may be divided into five distinct groups:

The Adige valley area, with cold winters (24-hour averages in January of about 0 °C (32 °F)) and warm summers (24-hour averages in July of about 23 °C (73 °F)), usually classified as humid subtropical climate — Cfa. It has the driest and sunniest climate of the province. The main city in this area is Bolzano.

The midlands, between 300 and 900 metres (980 and 2,950 ft), with cold winters (24-hour averages in January between −3 and 1 °C (27 and 34 °F)) and mild summers (24-hour averages in July between 15 and 21 °C (59 and 70 °F)). This is a typical oceanic climate, classified as Cfb. It is usually wetter than the subtropical climate, and very snowy during the winters. During the spring and autumn, there is an extended foggy season, but fog may occur even on summer mornings. Main towns in this area are Meran, Bruneck, Sterzing, and Brixen. Near the lakes in higher lands (between 1,000 and 1,400 metres (3,300 and 4,600 ft)) the humidity may make the climate in these regions milder during winter, but also cooler in summer, making it more similar to a subpolar oceanic climate, Cfc.

 
Meran/Merano in the summer

The alpine valleys between 900 and 1,400 metres (3,000 and 4,600 ft), with a typically humid continental climate — Dfb, covering the largest part of the province. The winters are usually very cold (24-hour averages in January between −8 and −3 °C (18 and 27 °F)), and the summers, mild with averages between 14 and 19 °C (57 and 66 °F). It is a very snowy climate; snow may occur from early October to April or even May. Main municipalities in this area are Urtijëi, Badia, Sexten, Toblach, Stilfs, Vöran, and Mühlwald.

The alpine valleys between 1,400 and 1,700 metres (4,600 and 5,600 ft), with a subarctic climate — Dfc, with harsh winters (24-hour averages in January between −9 and −5 °C (16 and 23 °F)) and cool, short, rainy and foggy summers (24-hour averages in July of about 12 °C (54 °F)). These areas usually have five months below the freezing point, and snow sometimes occurs even during the summer, in September. This climate is the wettest of the province, with large rainfalls during the summer, heavy snowfalls during spring and fall. The winter is usually a little drier, marked by freezing and dry weeks, although not sufficiently dry to be classified as a Dwc climate. Main municipalities in this area are Corvara, Sëlva, Santa Cristina Gherdëina.

The highlands above 1,700 metres (5,600 ft), with an alpine tundra climate, ET, which becomes an ice cap climate, EF, above 3,000 metres (9,800 ft). The winters are cold, but sometimes not as cold as the higher valleys' winters. In January, most of the areas at 2,000 metres (6,600 ft) have an average temperature of about −5 °C (23 °F), while in the valleys at about 1,600 metres (5,200 ft), the mean temperature may be as low as −8 or −9 °C (18 or 16 °F). The higher lands, above 3,000 metres (9,800 ft) are usually extremely cold, with averages of about −14 °C (7 °F) during the coldest month, January.

Geology

 
Langkofel group in the western Dolomites in winter

The periadriatic seam, which separates the Southern Alps from the Central Alps, runs through South Tyrol in a southwest-northeast direction. In South Tyrol at least three of the four main structural elements of the Alps come to light: the Southern Alpine comes to light south of the periadriatic suture, the Eastern Alpine north of it, and in the northern part of the country, east of the Brenner Pass, the Tauern window, in which the Peninsular and, according to some authors, the Helvetic are visible.[29]

In South Tyrol, the following structure can be roughly recognized: The lowest floor forms the crystalline basement. About 280 million years ago, in the Lower Permian, multiple magmatic events occurred. At that time the Brixen granite was formed at the northern boundary of the Southern Alps, and at about the same time, further south in the Bolzano area, there was strong volcanic activity that formed the Adige Valley volcanic complex. In the Upper Permian a period began in which sedimentary rocks were formed. At first, these were partly clastic sediments, among which the Gröden sandstone is found. In the Triassic, massive carbonate platforms of dolomitic rocks then formed; this process was interrupted in the Middle Triassic by a brief but violent phase of volcanic activity.

In South Tyrol, the Eastern Alps consist mainly of metamorphic rocks, such as gneisses or mica schists, with occasional intercalations of marble and Mesozoic sedimentary rocks with metamorphic overprint (e.g., in the Ortler or southwest of the Brenner). Various metamorphic rocks are found in the Tauern Window, such as Hochstegen marble (as in Wolfendorn), Grünschiefer (as in Hochfeiler), or rocks of the Zentralgneiss (predominantly in the area of the Zillertal Main Ridge).[30]

The province of South Tyrol has placed numerous geological natural monuments under protection. Among the best known are the Bletterbach Gorge, a 12 km (7½ mile) long canyon in the municipality of Aldein, and the Ritten Earth Pyramids, which are the largest in Europe with a height of up to 30 metres (98 ft).[31]

Mountains

 
Drei Zinnen-Tre Cime di Lavaredo in the Sexten Dolomites bordering the province of Belluno

According to the Alpine Association, South Tyrol is home to 13 mountain groups of the Eastern Alps, of which only the Sarntal Alps are entirely within national borders. The remaining twelve are (clockwise, starting from the west): Sesvenna Group, Ötztal Alps, Stubai Alps, Zillertal Alps, Venediger Group, Rieserferner Group, Villgratner Mountains, Carnic Alps, Dolomites, Fleimstal Alps, Nonsberg Group and Ortler Alps. Of particular note are the Dolomites, parts of which were recognized by UNESCO in 2009 as a "Dolomite World Heritage Site".

Although some isolated massifs approach 4,000 metres (13,000 ft) and show strong glaciation (especially in the Ortler Alps and on the main ridge of the Alps), South Tyrol is by far dominated by mountains with altitudes of between 2,000 and 3,000 metres (6,600 and 9,800 ft). Among the multitude of peaks, the Dolomites are the highest in the Alps. Among the large number of peaks, three stand out for their alpine or cultural importance: the Ortler (3,905 metres, 12,812 ft) as the highest mountain in South Tyrol, the Schlern (2,563 metres, 8,409 ft) as the country's "landmark" and the Drei Zinnen (2,999 metres, 9,839 ft) as the center of alpine climbing. Other well-known mountains are the Königspitze (3,851 metres, 12,635 ft), the Weißkugel (3,739 metres, 12,267 ft), the Similaun (3,599 metres, 11,808 ft), the Hochwilde (3,480 metres, 11,417 ft), the Sarner Weißhorn (2,705 metres, 8,875 ft), the Hochfeiler (3,509 metres, 11,512 ft), the Dreiherrnspitze (3,499 metres, 11,480 ft), the Hochgall (3,436 metres, 11,273 ft), the Peitlerkofel (2,875 metres, 9,432 ft), the Langkofel (3,181 metres, 10,436 ft) and the Rosengartenspitze (2,981 metres, 9,780 ft).

The extensive mountain landscapes, about 34% of the total area of South Tyrol, are alpine pastures (including the 57 square kilometres (22 sq mi) of the great Alpe di Siusi). Along the main valleys, the mountain ranges descend in many places to valley bottoms over gently terraced landscapes, which are geological remains of former valley systems; situated between inhospitable high mountains and formerly boggy or deeply incised valley bottoms, these areas known as the "Mittelgebirge" (including, for example, the Schlern area) are of particular importance in terms of settlement history.[32]

Valleys

 
Val Badia, near the town of Badia

The three main valleys of South Tyrol are the Adige Valley, the Eisack Valley and the Puster Valley, formed by the Ice Age Adige glacier and its tributaries. The highest part of the Adige valley in western South Tyrol, from Reschen (1,507 metres or 4,944 feet) to Töll (approx. 500 metres or 1,600 feet) near Merano, is called Vinschgau; the southernmost section, from Bolzano to Salurner Klause (207 metres or 679 feet), is divided into Überetsch and Unterland. From there, the Adige Valley continues in a southerly direction until it merges with the Po plain at Verona.

At Bolzano, the Eisack Valley merges into the Adige Valley. The Eisack Valley runs from Bolzano northeastward to Franzensfeste, where it merges with the Wipp Valley, which runs first northwestward and then northward over the Brenner Pass to Innsbruck. In the town of Brixen, the Eisack Valley meets the Puster Valley, which passes through Bruneck and reaches Lienz via the Toblacher Sattel (1,210 metres or 3,970 feet). In addition to the three main valleys, South Tyrol has a large number of side valleys. The most important and populated side valleys are (from west to east) Sulden, Schnals, Ulten, Passeier, Ridnaun, the Sarntal, Pfitsch, Gröden, the Gadertal, the Tauferer Ahrntal and Antholz.

In mountainous South Tyrol, about 64.5% of the total land area is above 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) above sea level and only 14% below 1,000 metres (3,300 ft).[33] Therefore, a large part of the population is concentrated in relatively small areas in the valleys at an altitude of between 100 and 1,200 metres (330 and 3,940 ft), mainly in the area of the extensive alluvial cones and broad basins. The most densely populated areas are in the Adige valley, where three of the four largest cities, Bolzano, Merano and Laives, are located. The flat valley bottoms are mainly used for agriculture.

Hydrography

 
Braies Lake or Pragser Wildsee

The most important river in South Tyrol is the Adige, which rises at the Reschen Pass, flows for a distance of about 140 kilometres (87 mi) to the border at the Salurner Klause, and then flows into the Po Valley and the Adriatic Sea. The Adige, whose total length of 415 kilometres (258 mi) in Italy is exceeded only by the Po, drains 97% of the territory's surface area. Its river system also includes the Eisack, about 100 kilometres (62 mi) long, and the Rienz, about 80 kilometres (50 mi) long, the next two largest rivers in South Tyrol. They are fed by numerous rivers and streams in the tributary valleys. The most important tributaries are the Plima, the Passer, the Falschauer, the Talfer, the Ahr and the Gader. The remaining 3% of the area is drained by the Drava and Inn river systems to the Black Sea and by the Piave river system to the Adriatic Sea, respectively.[34]

In South Tyrol there are 176 natural lakes with an area of more than half a hectare (1¼ acre), most of which are located above 2,000 metres (6,600 ft) altitude. Only 13 natural lakes are larger than 5 ha, and only three of them are situated below 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) altitude: the Kalterer See (215 metres, 705 ft), the Großer (492 metres, 1,614 ft) and the Kleiner Montiggler See (514 metres, 1,686 ft). Fourteen South Tyrolean reservoirs used for energy production include the Reschensee (1,498 metres, 4,915 ft), which with an area of 523 hectares (2.02 sq mi) forms the largest standing body of water in South Tyrol, the Zufrittsee (1,850 metres, 6,070 ft) and the Arzkarsee (2,250 metres, 7,382 ft).

The natural monuments designated by the province of South Tyrol include numerous hydrological objects, such as streams, waterfalls, moors, glaciers and mountain lakes like the Pragser Wildsee (1,494 metres, 4,902 ft), the Karersee (1,519 metres, 4,984 ft) or the Spronser Seen (2,117–2,589 metres, 6,946–8,494 ft).[35]

Vegetation

 
Group of spruce and pine trees in Latemar forest

Approximately 50% of the area of South Tyrol is covered by forests,[36] another 40% is above 2,000 metres (6,600 ft) and thus largely beyond the forest demarcation line, which varies between 1,900 and 2,200 metres (6,200 and 7,200 ft). In each case, more than half of the total forest area is located on land with a slope steeper than 20° and at altitudes between 1,200 and 1,800 metres (3,900 and 5,900 ft). Approximately 24% of the forest area can be classified as protective forest preserving settlements, traffic routes and other human infrastructure. A 1997 study classified about 35% of South Tyrol's forests as near-natural or natural, about 41% as moderately modified and about 24% as heavily modified or artificial. The forests are found in the valley bottoms.

The flat valley bottoms were originally completely covered with riparian forests, of which only very small remnants remain along the rivers. The remaining areas have given way to settlements and agricultural land. On the valley slopes, sub-Mediterranean mixed deciduous forests are found up to 800 or 900 metres (2,600 or 3,000 ft) altitude, characterized mainly by manna ash, hop hornbeam, hackberry, sweet chestnut and downy oak. From about 600 metres (2,000 ft) of altitude, red beech or pine forests can appear instead, colonizing difficult and arid sites (more rarely). At altitudes between 800 and 1,500 metres (2,600 and 4,900 ft), spruce forests are found; between 900 and 2,000 metres (3,000 and 6,600 ft), montane and subalpine spruce forests predominate. The latter are often mixed with tree species such as larch, rowan, white pine and stone pine. The larch and stone pine forests at the upper edge of the forest belt occupy relatively small areas. Beyond the forest edge, subalpine dwarf shrub communities, alpine grasslands and, lately, alpine tundra dominate the landscape as vegetation types.[37]

Politics

 
The assembly building of South Tyrol
 
Luis Durnwalder was governor of South Tyrol from 1989 until 2014

The local government system is based upon the provisions of the Italian Constitution and the Autonomy Statute of the Region Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol.[38] The 1972 second Statute of Autonomy for Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol devolved most legislative and executive competences from the regional level to the provincial level, creating de facto two separate regions.

The considerable legislative power of the province is vested in an assembly, the Landtag of South Tyrol (German: Südtiroler Landtag; Italian: Consiglio della Provincia Autonoma di Bolzano; Ladin: Cunsëi dla Provinzia Autonoma de Bulsan). The legislative powers of the assembly are defined by the second Statute of Autonomy.

The executive powers are attributed to the government (German: Landesregierung; Italian: Giunta Provinciale) headed by the Landeshauptmann Arno Kompatscher.[39] He belongs to the South Tyrolean People's Party, which has been governing with a parliamentary majority since 1948. South Tyrol is characterized by long sitting presidents, having only had two presidents between 1960 and 2014 (Silvius Magnago 1960–1989, Luis Durnwalder 1989–2014).

A fiscal regime allows the province to retain a large part of most levied taxes, in order to execute and administer its competences. Nevertheless, South Tyrol remains a net contributor to the Italian national budget.[40]

Last provincial elections

 
Parties Votes % Seats +/−
South Tyrolean People's Party 119,108 41.9 15 −2
Team Köllensperger 43,315 15.2 6 +6
League 31,510 11.1 4 +4
Greens 19,391 6.8 3 ±0
Die Freiheitlichen 17,620 6.2 2 −4
South Tyrolean Freedom 16,927 6.0 2 −1
Democratic Party 10,806 3.8 1 −1
Five Star Movement 6,670 2.4 1 ±0
Upper Adige in the HeartBrothers of Italy 4,883 1.7 1 ±0
Citizens' Union 3,664 1.3 0 −1
We South Tyrol 3,428 1.2 0 ±0
Forza Alto Adige 2,825 1.0 0 ±0
CasaPound Italy 2,451 0.9 0 ±0
United Left 1,753 0.6 0 ±0
Total 284,351 100.0 35 ±0
Source: Province of Bolzano 28 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine
Popular vote
SVP
41.9%
TK
15.2%
L
11.4%
Grüne
6.8%
dF
6.2%
STF
6.0%
PD
3.8%
M5S
2.4%
AACFdI
1.7%
BUfS
1.3%
NOI
1.2%
FAA
1.0%
CPI
0.9%
SU
0.6%

List of governors

Governors of South Tyrol
Governor Portrait Party Term Legislature Election
Karl Erckert   SVP 13 December 1948 12 December 1952 I Legislature 1948
13 December 1952 15 December 1955† II Legislature 1952
Alois Pupp   SVP 7 January 1956 12 December 1956
13 December 1956 12 December 1960 III Legislature 1956
Silvius Magnago   SVP 13 December 1960 13 December 1964 IV Legislature 1960
14 December 1964 12 December 1968 V Legislature 1964
13 December 1968 12 December 1973 VI Legislature 1968
13 December 1973 12 December 1978 VII Legislature 1973
13 December 1978 12 December 1983 VIII Legislature 1978
13 December 1983 12 December 1988 IX Legislature 1983
13 December 1988 17 March 1989 X Legislature 1988
Luis Durnwalder   SVP 17 March 1989 12 December 1993
13 December 1993 16 December 1998 XI Legislature 1993
17 December 1998 20 November 2003 XII Legislature 1998
21 November 2003 2 December 2008 XIII Legislature 2003
3 December 2008 27 November 2013 XIV Legislature 2008
28 November 2013 7 January 2014 XV Legislature 2013
Arno Kompatscher   SVP 7 January 2014 20 November 2018
21 November 2018 Incumbent XVI Legislature 2018

Provincial Government

 
Widmann Palace in Bolzano, seat of the provincial government

The provincial government (Landesregierung) of South Tyrol (formerly also called provincial committee, Giunta provinciale in Italian, Junta provinziala in Ladin) consists of a provincial governor and a variable number of provincial councilors. Currently (2021), the provincial government consists of eight provincial councilors and the provincial governor. The deputies of the provincial governor are appointed from among the provincial councilors. The current governor is Arno Kompatscher (SVP), his deputies are the provincial councilors Arnold Schuler (SVP), Giuliano Vettorato (LN) and Daniel Alfreider (SVP).

The Governor and the Provincial Councilors are elected by Parliament by secret ballot with an absolute majority of votes. The composition of the provincial government must in any case reflect the proportional distribution of the German and Italian language groups in the provincial parliament. In the past, this provision prevented the German-dominated South Tyrol People's Party (SVP) from governing alone and allowed Italian parties to participate in the provincial government. Since the Ladin language group, with just under 4% of South Tyrol's resident population, has little electoral potential, a separate provision in the autonomy statute allows Ladin representation in the provincial government regardless of their proportional representation in the provincial parliament.

Secessionist movement

Given the region's historical and cultural association with neighboring Austria, calls for the secession of South Tyrol and its reunification with Austria do surface from time to time among some minor groups of German-speakers , although falling short of an majority in the province , the majority does not support a separation.[41] Among the political parties that support South Tyrol's reunification into Austria are South Tyrolean Freedom, Die Freiheitlichen and Citizens' Union for South Tyrol.[42]

Economy

 
Vineyards of St. Magdalena in Bolzano with St. Justina and Rosengarten group in the background

In 2016 South Tyrol had a GDP per capita of €42,600, making it the richest province in Italy and one of the richest in the European Union.[43]

The unemployment level in 2007 was roughly 2.4% (2.0% for men and 3.0% for women). Residents are employed in a variety of sectors, from agriculture — the province is a large producer of apples, and its South Tyrol wine are also renowned — to industry to services, especially tourism. Spas located on the Italian Alps have become a favorite for tourists seeking wellness.[44]

South Tyrol is home to numerous mechanical engineering companies, some of which are the global market leaders in their sectors: the Leitner Group that specializes in cable cars and wind energy, TechnoAlpin AG, which is the global market leader in snow-making technology and the snow groomer company Prinoth.

 
Cable car on Mount Seceda in the Dolomites

The unemployment rate stood at 3.8% in 2020.[45]

Transport

 
License plate of South Tyrol (Bz)

The region is, together with northern and eastern Tyrol, an important transit point between southern Germany and Northern Italy. Freights by road and rail pass through here. One of the most important highways is the A22, also called the Autostrada del Brennero. It connects to the Brenner Autobahn in Austria.

The vehicle registration plate of South Tyrol is the two-letter provincial code Bz for the capital city, Bolzano. Along with the autonomous Trentino (Tn) and Aosta Valley (Ao), South Tyrol is allowed to surmount its license plates with its coat of arms.

Rail transport goes over the Brenner Pass. The Brenner Railway is a major line connecting the Austrian and Italian railways from Innsbruck and Verona climbing the Wipptal, passing over the Brenner Pass and descending down the Eisack Valley to Bolzano and then down the Adige Valley from Bolzano to Rovereto and to Verona. The line is part of the Line 1 of Trans-European Transport Networks (TEN-T).

Other railways are the Pustertalbahn, Ritten Railway and Vinschgaubahn. Due to the steep slopes of the mountains, a number of funiculars exist, such as the Gardena Ronda Express funicular and Mendel Funicular.

The Brenner Base Tunnel is under construction and scheduled to be completed by 2025. With a planned length of 55 kilometres (34 mi), this tunnel will increase freight train average speed to 120 kilometres per hour (75 mph) and reduce transit time by over an hour.[46]

Larger cities used to have their own tramway system, such as the Meran Tramway and Bolzano Tramway. These were replaced after the Second World War with buses. Many other cities and municipalities have their own bus system or are connected with each other by it.

The Bolzano Airport is the only airport serving the region.

Demographics

Languages

Languages of
South Tyrol.
Majorities per municipality in 2011:
 
Official
Sourceastat info 6/2012, 38, Volkszählung 2011/Censimento della popolazione 2011, pp. 6-7
 
Electronic identity cards are issued in three languages (Italian, German, English) in South Tyrol.

German and Italian are both official languages of South Tyrol. In some eastern municipalities Ladin is the third official language.

A majority of the inhabitants of contemporary South Tyrol speak native Austro-Bavarian dialects of the German language. Standard German plays a dominant role in education and media. All citizens have the right to use their own mother tongue, even at court. Schools are separated for each language group. All traffic signs are officially bi- or trilingual. Most Italian place names were translated from German by Italian Ettore Tolomei, the author of the Prontuario dei nomi locali dell'Alto Adige.[47]

To reach a fair allocation of jobs in public service a system called ethnic proportion (Italian: proporzionale etnica, German: ethnischer Proporz) has been established. Every ten years, when the general census of population takes place, each citizen has to declare the linguistic group to which they belong or want to be aggregated to. According to the results they decide how many people of which group are going to be employed in public service.

At the time of the annexation of the southern part of Tyrol by Italy in 1919, the overwhelming majority of the population spoke German and identified with the Austrian or German nationality: in 1910, according to the last population census before World War I, the German-speaking population numbered 224,000, the Ladin 9,000 and the Italian 7,000.[7]

As a result of the Italianization of South Tyrol about 23% of the population are Italian-speakers (they were 33%, 138,000 of 414,000 inhabitants in the 1971 census) according to the census of 2011. 103 out of 116 comuni have a majority of German native speakers — with Martell reaching 100% — eight have a Ladin-speaking majority, and five a majority of Italian speakers. The Italian-speaking population lives mainly around the provincial capital Bolzano, where they are the majority (73.8% of the inhabitants), and partially a result of Benito Mussolini's policy of Italianisation after he took power in 1922, when he encouraged immigration from the rest of Italy.[8]

The other four comuni where the Italian-speaking population is the majority are Laives, Salorno, Bronzolo and Vadena. The eight comuni with Ladin majorities are: La Val, Badia, Corvara, Mareo, San Martin de Tor, Santa Cristina Gherdëina, Sëlva, Urtijëi. Most of the immigrants from South Tyrol to the United States identify themselves as being of German rather than Austrian identity. According to the United States Census Bureau, in 2015, there were 365 individuals living in the U.S. born in Italy who identified themselves as being of Austrian ancestry.[48] By contrast, in the same year, there were 1040 individuals living in the U.S. born in Italy who identified themselves as being of German ancestry.[49]

The linguistic breakdown according to the census of 2011:[50]

Language Number %
German 314,604 69.4%
Italian 118,120 26.1%
Ladin 20,548 4.5%
Total 453,272 100%

Religion

The majority of the population is Christian, mostly in the Catholic tradition. The Roman Catholic Diocese of Bolzano-Brixen corresponds to the territory of the province of South Tyrol. Since 27 July 2011 the bishop of Bolzano-Brixen is Ivo Muser.

Catholic Church

 
Cathedral of the Assumption of Mary in Bolzano

The vast majority of the population of South Tyrol is baptized Catholic. There is archaeological evidence of early Christian sites in the area as early as Late Antiquity;[51] Säben in the Eisack Valley became an important ecclesiastical center during this period, which was only replaced by Brixen as an episcopal see in the late Middle Ages. The territory of present-day South Tyrol was divided for centuries between the dioceses of Brixen, Chur (until 1808/1816) and Trent (until 1964).[52]

The most famous bishop of Brixen was the polymath Nicholas of Cusa. Important figures of the regional ecclesiastical life in the 19th century were the beatified bishop of Trent Johann Nepomuk von Tschiderer and the mystic Maria von Mörl.

In 1964, with reference to modern political boundaries, the Bishopric of Brixen, which had lost its extensive territories of North and East Tyrol after World War I, was enlarged to form the Diocese of Bolzano-Brixen, whose extension is now identical to that of the province of South Tyrol. Since then, the faithful have been led by Bishops Joseph Gargitter (1964-1986), Wilhelm Egger (1986-2008), Karl Golser (2008-2011) and Ivo Muser (since 2011). The diocese comprises 28 deaneries and 281 parishes (in 2014), 23 its episcopal churches are the Cathedral of Brixen and the Cathedral of Bolzano. Cassian and Vigilius are venerated as diocesan patrons.[53] Important references in the current discourses of the local Catholic Church are St. Joseph Freinademetz and Blessed Joseph Mayr-Nusser.

Other communities

There is a Lutheran community in Merano (founded 1861) and another one in Bolzano (founded 1889). Since the Middle Ages the Jewish presence has been documented in South Tyrol. In 1901 the Synagogue of Merano was built. As of 2015, South Tyrol was home to about 14,000 Muslims.[54]

Culture

Traditions

South Tyrol has long-standing traditions, mainly inherited from its membership in the historical Tyrol. The Schützen associations are particularly fond of Tyrolean traditions.

 
A Musikkapelle in historic Tyrolean costumes

The Scheibenschlagen are the traditional "throwing of burning discs" on the first Sunday of Lent, the Herz-Jesu-Feuer are the "fires of the Sacred Heart of Jesus" that are lit on the third Sunday after Pentecost. The Krampus are disguised demons who accompany St Nicholas.

There are also several legends and sagas linked to the peoples of the Dolomites; among the best known are the legend of King Laurin and that of the Kingdom of Fanes, which belongs to the Ladin mythological heritage.

Alpine Transhumance (from German "Almabtrieb"), is a farm practice: every year, between September and October, the livestock that stayed on the high pastures is brought back to the valley, with traditional music and dances. Especially, the transhumance between the Ötztal (in Austria) and Schnals Valley and Passeier Valley was recognised by UNESCO as universal intangible heritage in 2019.[55]

Education

Architecture

 
Tyrolean architecture
 
Tirol Castle, which gave the wider region its name

The region features a large number of castles and churches. Many of the castles and Ansitze were built by the local nobility and the Habsburg rulers. See List of castles in South Tyrol.

Museums

Among the major museums of South Tyrol are:

Media

German-language TV channels in South Tyrol:

Music

The Bozner Bergsteigerlied and the Andreas-Hofer-Lied are considered to be the unofficial anthems of South Tyrol.[57]

The folk musical group Kastelruther Spatzen from Kastelruth and the rock band Frei.Wild from Brixen have received high recognition in the German-speaking part of the world.[citation needed]

Award-winning electronic music producer Giorgio Moroder was born and raised in South Tyrol in a mixed Italian, German and Ladin-speaking environment.

Sports

South Tyrolese have been successful at winter sports and they regularly form a large part of Italy's contingent at the Winter Olympics: in the last edition (2022), South Tyroleans won 3 out of the 17 Italian medals, all three bronzes (of which two won by German-speaking South Tyroleans). Famed mountain climber Reinhold Messner, the first climber to climb Mount Everest without the use of oxygen tanks, was born and raised in the region. Other successful South Tyrolese include luger Armin Zöggeler, figure skater Carolina Kostner, skier Isolde Kostner, luge and bobsleigh medallist Gerda Weissensteiner, tennis players Andreas Seppi and Jannik Sinner, and team principal of Haas F1 Team in the FIA Formula One World Championship Guenther Steiner.

HC Interspar Bolzano-Bozen Foxes are one of Italy's most successful ice hockey teams, while the most important football club in South Tyrol is F.C. Südtirol, which won its first-ever promotion to Serie B in 2022.

The province is famous worldwide for its mountain climbing opportunities, while in winter it is home to a number of popular ski resorts including Val Gardena, Alta Badia and Seiser Alm.

See also

References

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  3. ^ "Sub-national HDI - Area Database - Global Data Lab". hdi.globaldatalab.org. Retrieved 5 March 2023.
  4. ^ [1] 25 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine Statuto speciale per il Trentino-Alto Adige .
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  6. ^ "Statistisches Jahrbuch für Südtirol 2014 / statistico della Provincia di Bolzano 2014" (PDF). Table 3.18, page 119. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
  7. ^ a b Oscar Benvenuto (ed.): "South Tyrol in Figures 2008", Provincial Statistics Institute of the Autonomous Province of South Tyrol, Bozen/Bolzano 2007, p. 19, Table 11
  8. ^ a b Steininger, Rolf (2003). South Tyrol, A Minority Conflict of the Twentieth Century. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 0-7658-0800-5.
  9. ^ Provincia Autonmia di Alto Adige, official site)
  10. ^ Cortina d'Ampezzo, Livinallongo/Buchenstein and Colle Santa Lucia, formerly parts of Tyrol, now belong to the region of Veneto.
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  20. ^ Hannes Obermair (2020). "Großdeutschland ruft!" Südtiroler NS-Optionspropaganda und völkische Sozialisation – "La Grande Germania chiamaǃ" La propaganda nazionalsocialista sulle Opzioni in Alto Adige e la socializzazione 'völkisch' (in German and Italian). Tyrol Castle: South Tyrolean Museum of History. ISBN 978-88-95523-35-4.
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Bibliography

  • (in German) Gottfried Solderer (ed) (1999–2004). Das 20. Jahrhundert in Südtirol. 6 Vol., Bozen: Raetia Verlag. ISBN 978-88-7283-137-3
  • Antony E. Alcock (2003). The History of the South Tyrol Question. London: Michael Joseph. 535 pp.
  • Rolf Steininger (2003). South Tyrol: A Minority Conflict of the Twentieth Century. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7658-0800-4
  • Georg Grote (2012). The South Tyrol Question 1866–2010. From National Rage to Regional State. Oxford: Peter Lang. ISBN 978-3-03911-336-1
  • Georg Grote, Hannes Obermair (2017). A Land on the Threshold. South Tyrolean Transformations, 1915–2015. Oxford/Bern/New York: Peter Lang. ISBN 978-3-0343-2240-9

External links

  • Official website for the Civic Network of South Tyrol, the Autonomous Province of Bolzano/Bozen
  • Special Statute for Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol
  • Tourist information about South Tyrol
  • The most accurate digital map of South Tyrol

south, tyrol, this, article, about, italian, administrative, division, other, uses, disambiguation, alto, adige, redirects, here, other, uses, alto, adige, disambiguation, austrian, german, südtirol, italian, alto, adige, ladin, südtirol, officially, autonomou. This article is about the Italian administrative division For other uses see South Tyrol disambiguation Alto Adige redirects here For other uses see Alto Adige disambiguation South Tyrol a Austrian German Sudtirol Italian Alto Adige Ladin Sudtirol officially the Autonomous Province of Bolzano is an autonomous province in Northern Italy one of the two that make up the autonomous region of Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol 4 The province is the northernmost of Italy the second largest with an area of 7 400 square kilometres 2 857 sq mi and has a total population of about 534 000 inhabitants as of 2021 5 Its capital and largest city is Bolzano German Bozen Ladin Balsan or Bulsan Autonomous Province of Bolzano South Tyrol Austrian German Autonome Provinz Bozen SudtirolItalian Provincia Autonoma di Bolzano Alto AdigeLadin Provinzia Autonoma de Balsan Bulsan SudtirolAutonomous provinceFlagCoat of armsMap highlighting the location of the province of South Tyrol in Italy in red CountryItalyRegionTrentino Alto Adige SudtirolCapital s BolzanoComuni116Government BodyCouncil GovernorArno Kompatscher SVP Area Total7 399 97 km2 2 857 14 sq mi Population 1 January 2019 Total531 178 Density72 km2 190 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal code39XXXTelephone prefix0471 0472 0473 0474Vehicle registrationBZGDP nominal 24 8 billion 2018 1 GDP per capita 47 100 2018 2 HDI 2021 0 912 3 very high 5th of 21ISTAT021Websitewww wbr provincia wbr bz wbr it The Atlas Tyrolensis showing the entire County of Tyrol printed in Vienna 1774 According to the 2011 census 62 3 of the population uses German as their first language Standard German in the written form and an Austro Bavarian dialect in the spoken form 23 4 of the population speaks Italian mainly in and around the two largest cities Bolzano with an Italian speaking majority and Meran with a slight German speaking majority 4 1 speaks Ladin a Rhaeto Romance language 10 2 of the population mainly recent immigrants speaks another language natively Of 116 South Tyrolean municipalities 103 have a German speaking eight a Ladin speaking and five an Italian speaking majority 6 There was large scale immigration of Italians from the rest of Italy to Bolzano and its surroundings after 1918 7 8 The province is granted a considerable level of self government consisting of a large range of exclusive legislative and executive powers and a fiscal regime that allows it to retain 90 of revenue while remaining a net contributor to the national budget 9 As of 2016 South Tyrol is the wealthiest province in Italy and among the wealthiest in the European Union In the wider context of the European Union the province is one of the three members of the Tyrol South Tyrol Trentino Euroregion which corresponds almost exactly to the historical region of Tyrol 10 The other members are Tyrol state in Austria to the north and east and the Italian Autonomous Province of Trento to the south Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Annexation by Italy 2 2 Gruber De Gasperi Agreement 2 3 Sudtirolfrage 2 4 Autonomy 2 5 Euroregion 3 Geography 3 1 Administrative divisions 3 2 Districts 3 3 Largest municipalities 3 4 Climate 3 5 Geology 3 6 Mountains 3 7 Valleys 3 8 Hydrography 3 9 Vegetation 4 Politics 4 1 Last provincial elections 4 2 List of governors 4 3 Provincial Government 4 4 Secessionist movement 5 Economy 5 1 Transport 6 Demographics 6 1 Languages 6 2 Religion 6 2 1 Catholic Church 6 2 2 Other communities 7 Culture 7 1 Traditions 7 2 Education 7 3 Architecture 7 4 Museums 7 5 Media 7 6 Music 7 7 Sports 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksName Edit A map from 1874 showing South Tirol with approximately the borders of today s South and East Tyrol South Tyrol occasionally South Tirol is the term most commonly used in English for the province 11 and its usage reflects that it was created from a portion of the southern part of the historic County of Tyrol a former state of the Holy Roman Empire and crown land of the Austrian Empire of the Habsburgs German and Ladin speakers usually refer to the area as Sudtirol the Italian equivalent Sudtirolo sometimes parsed Sud Tirolo 12 is becoming increasingly common 13 Alto Adige literally translated in English Upper Adige one of the Italian names for the province is also used in English 14 The term had been the name of political subdivisions along the Adige River in the time of Napoleon Bonaparte 15 16 who created the Department of Alto Adige part of the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy It was reused as the Italian name of the current province after its post World War I creation and was a symbol of the subsequent forced Italianization of South Tyrol 17 The official name of the province today in German is Autonome Provinz Bozen Sudtirol German speakers usually refer to it not as a Provinz but as a Land like the Lander of Germany and Austria 18 Provincial institutions are referred to using the prefix Landes such as Landesregierung state government and Landeshauptmann governor 19 The official name in Italian is Provincia autonoma di Bolzano Alto Adige in Ladin Provinzia autonoma de Balsan Bulsan Sudtirol History EditMain article History of South Tyrol Annexation by Italy Edit South Tyrol is an administrative entity originated during the First World War The Allies promised the area to Italy in the Treaty of London of 1915 as an incentive to enter the war on their side Until 1918 it was part of the Austro Hungarian princely County of Tyrol but this almost completely German speaking territory was occupied by Italy at the end of the war in November 1918 and was annexed to the Kingdom of Italy in 1919 The province as it exists today was created in 1926 after an administrative reorganization of the Kingdom of Italy and was incorporated together with the province of Trento into the newly created region of Venezia Tridentina Trentine Venetia With the rise of Italian Fascism the new regime made efforts to bring forward the Italianization of South Tyrol The German language was banished from public service German teaching was officially forbidden and German newspapers were censored with the exception of the fascistic Alpenzeitung The regime also favoured immigration from other Italian regions Main article South Tyrol Option Agreement The subsequent alliance between Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini declared that South Tyrol would not follow the destiny of Austria which had been annexed by Nazi Germany Instead the dictators agreed that the German speaking population be transferred to German ruled territory or dispersed around Italy but the outbreak of the Second World War prevented them from fully carrying out their plans 20 Every citizen was given the choice to give up their German cultural identity and stay in fascist Italy or to leave their homeland for Nazi Germany to retain their cultural identity This resulted in the division of South Tyrolese families In this tense relationship for the population Walter Caldonazzi from Mals was part of the resistance group around the priest Heinrich Maier which passed plans and information about production facilities for V 1 rockets V 2 rockets Tiger tanks Messerschmitt Bf 109 and Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet and other aircraft to the Allies The group planned for an independent Austria with a monarchical form of government after the war which would include Austria Bavaria and South Tyrol 21 22 In 1943 when the Italian government signed an armistice with the Allies the region was occupied by Nazi Germany which reorganised it as the Operation Zone of the Alpine Foothills and put it under the administration of Gauleiter Franz Hofer The region was de facto annexed to the German Reich with the addition of the province of Belluno until the end of the war Italian rule was restored in 1945 as the Nazi regime ended Gruber De Gasperi Agreement Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message source source track Austrians demonstrating in 1946 at a peace conference in favour of having the southern Tyrol region returned to Austria After the war the Allies decided that the province would remain a part of Italy under the condition that the German speaking population be granted a significant level of self government Italy and Austria negotiated an agreement in 1946 recognizing the rights of the German minority Alcide De Gasperi Italy s prime minister a native of Trentino wanted to extend the autonomy to his fellow citizens This led to the creation of the region called Trentino Alto Adige Tiroler Etschland The Gruber De Gasperi Agreement of September 1946 was signed by the Italian and Austrian Foreign Ministers creating the autonomous region of Trentino South Tyrol consisting of the autonomous provinces of Trentino and South Tyrol German and Italian were both made official languages and German language education was permitted once more Still Italians were the majority in the combined region This together with the arrival of new Italian speaking immigrants led to strong dissatisfaction among South Tyrolese which culminated in terrorist acts perpetrated by the Befreiungsausschuss Sudtirol BAS Liberation Committee of South Tyrol In the first phase only public edifices and fascist monuments were targeted The second phase was bloodier costing 21 lives 15 members of Italian security forces two civilians and four terrorists Sudtirolfrage Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources South Tyrol news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The South Tyrolean Question Sudtirolfrage became an international issue As the implementation of the post war agreement was deemed unsatisfactory by the Austrian government it became a cause of significant friction with Italy and was taken up by the United Nations in 1960 A fresh round of negotiations took place in 1961 but proved unsuccessful partly because of the campaign of terrorism The issue was resolved in 1971 when a new Austro Italian treaty was signed and ratified It stipulated that disputes in South Tyrol would be submitted for settlement to the International Court of Justice in The Hague that the province would receive greater autonomy within Italy and that Austria would not interfere in South Tyrol s internal affairs The new agreement proved broadly satisfactory to the parties involved and the separatist tensions soon eased The autonomous status granted in 1972 has resulted in a considerable level of self government 23 and also allows the entity to retain almost 90 of all levied taxes 24 Autonomy Edit Plaque at a German language school in both Italian and German In 1992 Italy and Austria officially ended their dispute over the autonomy issue on the basis of the agreement of 1972 25 The extensive self government 23 provided by the current institutional framework has been advanced as a model for settling interethnic disputes and for the successful protection of linguistic minorities 26 This is among the reasons why the Ladin municipalities of Cortina d Ampezzo Anpezo Livinallongo del Col di Lana Fodom and Colle Santa Lucia Col have asked in a referendum to be detached from Veneto and reannexed to the province from which they were separated under the fascist government 27 Euroregion Edit The Euroregion Tyrol South Tyrol Trentino corresponds to the historic Tyrol region today excluding Cortina Livinallongo Pedemonte and Valvestino North and East Tyrol Austria South Tyrol Italy Trentino Italy In 1996 the Euroregion Tyrol South Tyrol Trentino was formed between the Austrian state of Tyrol and the Italian provinces of South Tyrol and Trentino The boundaries of the association correspond to the old County of Tyrol The aim is to promote regional peace understanding and cooperation in many areas The region s assemblies meet together as one on various occasions and have set up a common liaison office with the European Union in Brussels Geography Edit Detailed map of South Tyrol South Tyrol is located at the northernmost point in Italy The province is bordered by Austria to the east and north specifically by the Austrian federal states Tyrol and Salzburg and by the Swiss canton of Graubunden to the west The Italian provinces of Belluno Trentino and Sondrio border to the southeast south and southwest respectively The landscape itself is mostly cultivated with different types of shrubs and forests and is highly mountainous Entirely located in the Alps the province s landscape is dominated by mountains The highest peak is the Ortler 3 905 metres 12 812 ft in the far west which is also the highest peak in the Eastern Alps outside the Bernina Range Even more famous are the craggy peaks of the Dolomites in the eastern part of the region The following mountain groups are partially in South Tyrol All but the Sarntal Alps are on the border with Austria Switzerland or other Italian provinces The ranges are clockwise from the west and for each the highest peak is given that is within the province or on its border Ulten Valley Name Highest peak German Italian metres feetOrtler Alps Ortler Ortles 3 905 12 811Sesvenna Range Muntpitschen Monpiccio 3 162 10 374Otztal Alps Weisskugel Palla Bianca 3 746 12 291Stubai Alps Wilder Freiger Cima Libera 3 426 11 241Sarntal Alps Hirzer Punta Cervina 2 781 9 124Zillertal Alps Hochfeiler Gran Pilastro 3 510 11 515Hohe Tauern Dreiherrnspitze Picco dei Tre Signori 3 499 11 480Eastern Dolomites Dreischusterspitze Punta Tre Scarperi 3 152 10 341Western Dolomites Langkofel Sassolungo 3 181 10 436Located between the mountains are many valleys where the majority of the population lives Administrative divisions Edit See also Municipalities of South Tyrol The province is divided into eight districts German Bezirksgemeinschaften Italian comunita comprensoriali one of them being the chief city of Bolzano Each district is headed by a president and two bodies called the district committee and the district council The districts are responsible for resolving intermunicipal disputes and providing roads schools and social services such as retirement homes The province is further divided into 116 Gemeinden or comuni 28 Districts Edit See also Districts of Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol Map of South Tyrol with its eight districts District German Italian Capital German Italian Area Inhabitants 28 Bozen Bolzano Bozen Bolzano 52 km2 107 436Burggrafenamt Burgraviato Meran Merano 1 101 km2 97 315Pustertal Val Pusteria Bruneck Brunico 2 071 km2 79 086Uberetsch Unterland Oltradige Bassa Atesina Neumarkt Egna 424 km2 71 435Eisacktal Valle Isarco Brixen Bressanone 624 km2 49 840Salten Schlern Salto Sciliar Bozen Bolzano 1 037 km2 48 020Vinschgau Val Venosta Schlanders Silandro 1 442 km2 35 000Wipptal Alta Valle Isarco Sterzing Vipiteno 650 km2 18 220Largest municipalities Edit The Laubengasse or Via dei portici a street in the capital Bolzano Brixen is the third largest city German name Italian name Ladin name Inhabitants 28 Bozen Bolzano Balsan Bulsan 107 724Meran Merano Maran 40 926Brixen Bressanone Persenon Porsenu 22 423Leifers Laives 18 097Bruneck Brunico Bornech Burnech 16 636Eppan an der Weinstrasse Appiano sulla Strada del Vino 14 990Lana Lana 12 468Kaltern an der Weinstrasse Caldaro sulla Strada del Vino 7 512Ritten Renon 7 507Sarntal Sarentino 6 863Kastelruth Castelrotto Ciastel 6 456Sterzing Vipiteno 6 306Schlanders Silandro 6 014Ahrntal Valle Aurina 5 876Naturns Naturno 5 440Sand in Taufers Campo Tures 5 230Latsch Laces 5 145Klausen Chiusa Tluses Tluses 5 134Mals Malles 5 050Neumarkt Egna 4 926Algund Lagundo 4 782St Ulrich Ortisei Urtijei 4 606Ratschings Racines 4 331Terlan Terlano 4 132Climate Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Climatically South Tyrol may be divided into five distinct groups The Adige valley area with cold winters 24 hour averages in January of about 0 C 32 F and warm summers 24 hour averages in July of about 23 C 73 F usually classified as humid subtropical climate Cfa It has the driest and sunniest climate of the province The main city in this area is Bolzano The midlands between 300 and 900 metres 980 and 2 950 ft with cold winters 24 hour averages in January between 3 and 1 C 27 and 34 F and mild summers 24 hour averages in July between 15 and 21 C 59 and 70 F This is a typical oceanic climate classified as Cfb It is usually wetter than the subtropical climate and very snowy during the winters During the spring and autumn there is an extended foggy season but fog may occur even on summer mornings Main towns in this area are Meran Bruneck Sterzing and Brixen Near the lakes in higher lands between 1 000 and 1 400 metres 3 300 and 4 600 ft the humidity may make the climate in these regions milder during winter but also cooler in summer making it more similar to a subpolar oceanic climate Cfc Meran Merano in the summer The alpine valleys between 900 and 1 400 metres 3 000 and 4 600 ft with a typically humid continental climate Dfb covering the largest part of the province The winters are usually very cold 24 hour averages in January between 8 and 3 C 18 and 27 F and the summers mild with averages between 14 and 19 C 57 and 66 F It is a very snowy climate snow may occur from early October to April or even May Main municipalities in this area are Urtijei Badia Sexten Toblach Stilfs Voran and Muhlwald The alpine valleys between 1 400 and 1 700 metres 4 600 and 5 600 ft with a subarctic climate Dfc with harsh winters 24 hour averages in January between 9 and 5 C 16 and 23 F and cool short rainy and foggy summers 24 hour averages in July of about 12 C 54 F These areas usually have five months below the freezing point and snow sometimes occurs even during the summer in September This climate is the wettest of the province with large rainfalls during the summer heavy snowfalls during spring and fall The winter is usually a little drier marked by freezing and dry weeks although not sufficiently dry to be classified as a Dwc climate Main municipalities in this area are Corvara Selva Santa Cristina Gherdeina The highlands above 1 700 metres 5 600 ft with an alpine tundra climate ET which becomes an ice cap climate EF above 3 000 metres 9 800 ft The winters are cold but sometimes not as cold as the higher valleys winters In January most of the areas at 2 000 metres 6 600 ft have an average temperature of about 5 C 23 F while in the valleys at about 1 600 metres 5 200 ft the mean temperature may be as low as 8 or 9 C 18 or 16 F The higher lands above 3 000 metres 9 800 ft are usually extremely cold with averages of about 14 C 7 F during the coldest month January Geology Edit Langkofel group in the western Dolomites in winterThe periadriatic seam which separates the Southern Alps from the Central Alps runs through South Tyrol in a southwest northeast direction In South Tyrol at least three of the four main structural elements of the Alps come to light the Southern Alpine comes to light south of the periadriatic suture the Eastern Alpine north of it and in the northern part of the country east of the Brenner Pass the Tauern window in which the Peninsular and according to some authors the Helvetic are visible 29 In South Tyrol the following structure can be roughly recognized The lowest floor forms the crystalline basement About 280 million years ago in the Lower Permian multiple magmatic events occurred At that time the Brixen granite was formed at the northern boundary of the Southern Alps and at about the same time further south in the Bolzano area there was strong volcanic activity that formed the Adige Valley volcanic complex In the Upper Permian a period began in which sedimentary rocks were formed At first these were partly clastic sediments among which the Groden sandstone is found In the Triassic massive carbonate platforms of dolomitic rocks then formed this process was interrupted in the Middle Triassic by a brief but violent phase of volcanic activity In South Tyrol the Eastern Alps consist mainly of metamorphic rocks such as gneisses or mica schists with occasional intercalations of marble and Mesozoic sedimentary rocks with metamorphic overprint e g in the Ortler or southwest of the Brenner Various metamorphic rocks are found in the Tauern Window such as Hochstegen marble as in Wolfendorn Grunschiefer as in Hochfeiler or rocks of the Zentralgneiss predominantly in the area of the Zillertal Main Ridge 30 The province of South Tyrol has placed numerous geological natural monuments under protection Among the best known are the Bletterbach Gorge a 12 km 7 mile long canyon in the municipality of Aldein and the Ritten Earth Pyramids which are the largest in Europe with a height of up to 30 metres 98 ft 31 Mountains Edit Drei Zinnen Tre Cime di Lavaredo in the Sexten Dolomites bordering the province of Belluno According to the Alpine Association South Tyrol is home to 13 mountain groups of the Eastern Alps of which only the Sarntal Alps are entirely within national borders The remaining twelve are clockwise starting from the west Sesvenna Group Otztal Alps Stubai Alps Zillertal Alps Venediger Group Rieserferner Group Villgratner Mountains Carnic Alps Dolomites Fleimstal Alps Nonsberg Group and Ortler Alps Of particular note are the Dolomites parts of which were recognized by UNESCO in 2009 as a Dolomite World Heritage Site Although some isolated massifs approach 4 000 metres 13 000 ft and show strong glaciation especially in the Ortler Alps and on the main ridge of the Alps South Tyrol is by far dominated by mountains with altitudes of between 2 000 and 3 000 metres 6 600 and 9 800 ft Among the multitude of peaks the Dolomites are the highest in the Alps Among the large number of peaks three stand out for their alpine or cultural importance the Ortler 3 905 metres 12 812 ft as the highest mountain in South Tyrol the Schlern 2 563 metres 8 409 ft as the country s landmark and the Drei Zinnen 2 999 metres 9 839 ft as the center of alpine climbing Other well known mountains are the Konigspitze 3 851 metres 12 635 ft the Weisskugel 3 739 metres 12 267 ft the Similaun 3 599 metres 11 808 ft the Hochwilde 3 480 metres 11 417 ft the Sarner Weisshorn 2 705 metres 8 875 ft the Hochfeiler 3 509 metres 11 512 ft the Dreiherrnspitze 3 499 metres 11 480 ft the Hochgall 3 436 metres 11 273 ft the Peitlerkofel 2 875 metres 9 432 ft the Langkofel 3 181 metres 10 436 ft and the Rosengartenspitze 2 981 metres 9 780 ft The extensive mountain landscapes about 34 of the total area of South Tyrol are alpine pastures including the 57 square kilometres 22 sq mi of the great Alpe di Siusi Along the main valleys the mountain ranges descend in many places to valley bottoms over gently terraced landscapes which are geological remains of former valley systems situated between inhospitable high mountains and formerly boggy or deeply incised valley bottoms these areas known as the Mittelgebirge including for example the Schlern area are of particular importance in terms of settlement history 32 Valleys Edit Val Badia near the town of Badia The three main valleys of South Tyrol are the Adige Valley the Eisack Valley and the Puster Valley formed by the Ice Age Adige glacier and its tributaries The highest part of the Adige valley in western South Tyrol from Reschen 1 507 metres or 4 944 feet to Toll approx 500 metres or 1 600 feet near Merano is called Vinschgau the southernmost section from Bolzano to Salurner Klause 207 metres or 679 feet is divided into Uberetsch and Unterland From there the Adige Valley continues in a southerly direction until it merges with the Po plain at Verona At Bolzano the Eisack Valley merges into the Adige Valley The Eisack Valley runs from Bolzano northeastward to Franzensfeste where it merges with the Wipp Valley which runs first northwestward and then northward over the Brenner Pass to Innsbruck In the town of Brixen the Eisack Valley meets the Puster Valley which passes through Bruneck and reaches Lienz via the Toblacher Sattel 1 210 metres or 3 970 feet In addition to the three main valleys South Tyrol has a large number of side valleys The most important and populated side valleys are from west to east Sulden Schnals Ulten Passeier Ridnaun the Sarntal Pfitsch Groden the Gadertal the Tauferer Ahrntal and Antholz In mountainous South Tyrol about 64 5 of the total land area is above 1 500 metres 4 900 ft above sea level and only 14 below 1 000 metres 3 300 ft 33 Therefore a large part of the population is concentrated in relatively small areas in the valleys at an altitude of between 100 and 1 200 metres 330 and 3 940 ft mainly in the area of the extensive alluvial cones and broad basins The most densely populated areas are in the Adige valley where three of the four largest cities Bolzano Merano and Laives are located The flat valley bottoms are mainly used for agriculture Hydrography Edit Braies Lake or Pragser Wildsee The most important river in South Tyrol is the Adige which rises at the Reschen Pass flows for a distance of about 140 kilometres 87 mi to the border at the Salurner Klause and then flows into the Po Valley and the Adriatic Sea The Adige whose total length of 415 kilometres 258 mi in Italy is exceeded only by the Po drains 97 of the territory s surface area Its river system also includes the Eisack about 100 kilometres 62 mi long and the Rienz about 80 kilometres 50 mi long the next two largest rivers in South Tyrol They are fed by numerous rivers and streams in the tributary valleys The most important tributaries are the Plima the Passer the Falschauer the Talfer the Ahr and the Gader The remaining 3 of the area is drained by the Drava and Inn river systems to the Black Sea and by the Piave river system to the Adriatic Sea respectively 34 In South Tyrol there are 176 natural lakes with an area of more than half a hectare 1 acre most of which are located above 2 000 metres 6 600 ft altitude Only 13 natural lakes are larger than 5 ha and only three of them are situated below 1 000 metres 3 300 ft altitude the Kalterer See 215 metres 705 ft the Grosser 492 metres 1 614 ft and the Kleiner Montiggler See 514 metres 1 686 ft Fourteen South Tyrolean reservoirs used for energy production include the Reschensee 1 498 metres 4 915 ft which with an area of 523 hectares 2 02 sq mi forms the largest standing body of water in South Tyrol the Zufrittsee 1 850 metres 6 070 ft and the Arzkarsee 2 250 metres 7 382 ft The natural monuments designated by the province of South Tyrol include numerous hydrological objects such as streams waterfalls moors glaciers and mountain lakes like the Pragser Wildsee 1 494 metres 4 902 ft the Karersee 1 519 metres 4 984 ft or the Spronser Seen 2 117 2 589 metres 6 946 8 494 ft 35 Vegetation Edit Group of spruce and pine trees in Latemar forest Approximately 50 of the area of South Tyrol is covered by forests 36 another 40 is above 2 000 metres 6 600 ft and thus largely beyond the forest demarcation line which varies between 1 900 and 2 200 metres 6 200 and 7 200 ft In each case more than half of the total forest area is located on land with a slope steeper than 20 and at altitudes between 1 200 and 1 800 metres 3 900 and 5 900 ft Approximately 24 of the forest area can be classified as protective forest preserving settlements traffic routes and other human infrastructure A 1997 study classified about 35 of South Tyrol s forests as near natural or natural about 41 as moderately modified and about 24 as heavily modified or artificial The forests are found in the valley bottoms The flat valley bottoms were originally completely covered with riparian forests of which only very small remnants remain along the rivers The remaining areas have given way to settlements and agricultural land On the valley slopes sub Mediterranean mixed deciduous forests are found up to 800 or 900 metres 2 600 or 3 000 ft altitude characterized mainly by manna ash hop hornbeam hackberry sweet chestnut and downy oak From about 600 metres 2 000 ft of altitude red beech or pine forests can appear instead colonizing difficult and arid sites more rarely At altitudes between 800 and 1 500 metres 2 600 and 4 900 ft spruce forests are found between 900 and 2 000 metres 3 000 and 6 600 ft montane and subalpine spruce forests predominate The latter are often mixed with tree species such as larch rowan white pine and stone pine The larch and stone pine forests at the upper edge of the forest belt occupy relatively small areas Beyond the forest edge subalpine dwarf shrub communities alpine grasslands and lately alpine tundra dominate the landscape as vegetation types 37 Politics EditMain article Politics of South Tyrol The assembly building of South Tyrol Luis Durnwalder was governor of South Tyrol from 1989 until 2014 The local government system is based upon the provisions of the Italian Constitution and the Autonomy Statute of the Region Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol 38 The 1972 second Statute of Autonomy for Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol devolved most legislative and executive competences from the regional level to the provincial level creating de facto two separate regions The considerable legislative power of the province is vested in an assembly the Landtag of South Tyrol German Sudtiroler Landtag Italian Consiglio della Provincia Autonoma di Bolzano Ladin Cunsei dla Provinzia Autonoma de Bulsan The legislative powers of the assembly are defined by the second Statute of Autonomy The executive powers are attributed to the government German Landesregierung Italian Giunta Provinciale headed by the Landeshauptmann Arno Kompatscher 39 He belongs to the South Tyrolean People s Party which has been governing with a parliamentary majority since 1948 South Tyrol is characterized by long sitting presidents having only had two presidents between 1960 and 2014 Silvius Magnago 1960 1989 Luis Durnwalder 1989 2014 A fiscal regime allows the province to retain a large part of most levied taxes in order to execute and administer its competences Nevertheless South Tyrol remains a net contributor to the Italian national budget 40 Last provincial elections Edit Main article Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol provincial elections 2018 General election 2 Parties Votes Seats South Tyrolean People s Party 119 108 41 9 15 2Team Kollensperger 43 315 15 2 6 6League 31 510 11 1 4 4Greens 19 391 6 8 3 0Die Freiheitlichen 17 620 6 2 2 4South Tyrolean Freedom 16 927 6 0 2 1Democratic Party 10 806 3 8 1 1Five Star Movement 6 670 2 4 1 0Upper Adige in the Heart Brothers of Italy 4 883 1 7 1 0Citizens Union 3 664 1 3 0 1We South Tyrol 3 428 1 2 0 0Forza Alto Adige 2 825 1 0 0 0CasaPound Italy 2 451 0 9 0 0United Left 1 753 0 6 0 0Total 284 351 100 0 35 0Source Province of Bolzano Archived 28 January 2019 at the Wayback MachinePopular voteSVP 41 9 TK 15 2 L 11 4 Grune 6 8 dF 6 2 STF 6 0 PD 3 8 M5S 2 4 AAC FdI 1 7 BUfS 1 3 NOI 1 2 FAA 1 0 CPI 0 9 SU 0 6 List of governors Edit Main article List of governors of South Tyrol Governors of South TyrolGovernor Portrait Party Term Legislature ElectionKarl Erckert SVP 13 December 1948 12 December 1952 I Legislature 194813 December 1952 15 December 1955 II Legislature 1952Alois Pupp SVP 7 January 1956 12 December 195613 December 1956 12 December 1960 III Legislature 1956Silvius Magnago SVP 13 December 1960 13 December 1964 IV Legislature 196014 December 1964 12 December 1968 V Legislature 196413 December 1968 12 December 1973 VI Legislature 196813 December 1973 12 December 1978 VII Legislature 197313 December 1978 12 December 1983 VIII Legislature 197813 December 1983 12 December 1988 IX Legislature 198313 December 1988 17 March 1989 X Legislature 1988Luis Durnwalder SVP 17 March 1989 12 December 199313 December 1993 16 December 1998 XI Legislature 199317 December 1998 20 November 2003 XII Legislature 199821 November 2003 2 December 2008 XIII Legislature 20033 December 2008 27 November 2013 XIV Legislature 200828 November 2013 7 January 2014 XV Legislature 2013Arno Kompatscher SVP 7 January 2014 20 November 201821 November 2018 Incumbent XVI Legislature 2018Provincial Government Edit Widmann Palace in Bolzano seat of the provincial government The provincial government Landesregierung of South Tyrol formerly also called provincial committee Giunta provinciale in Italian Junta provinziala in Ladin consists of a provincial governor and a variable number of provincial councilors Currently 2021 the provincial government consists of eight provincial councilors and the provincial governor The deputies of the provincial governor are appointed from among the provincial councilors The current governor is Arno Kompatscher SVP his deputies are the provincial councilors Arnold Schuler SVP Giuliano Vettorato LN and Daniel Alfreider SVP The Governor and the Provincial Councilors are elected by Parliament by secret ballot with an absolute majority of votes The composition of the provincial government must in any case reflect the proportional distribution of the German and Italian language groups in the provincial parliament In the past this provision prevented the German dominated South Tyrol People s Party SVP from governing alone and allowed Italian parties to participate in the provincial government Since the Ladin language group with just under 4 of South Tyrol s resident population has little electoral potential a separate provision in the autonomy statute allows Ladin representation in the provincial government regardless of their proportional representation in the provincial parliament Secessionist movement Edit Main article South Tyrolean secessionist movement Given the region s historical and cultural association with neighboring Austria calls for the secession of South Tyrol and its reunification with Austria do surface from time to time among some minor groups of German speakers although falling short of an majority in the province the majority does not support a separation 41 Among the political parties that support South Tyrol s reunification into Austria are South Tyrolean Freedom Die Freiheitlichen and Citizens Union for South Tyrol 42 Economy Edit Vineyards of St Magdalena in Bolzano with St Justina and Rosengarten group in the background In 2016 South Tyrol had a GDP per capita of 42 600 making it the richest province in Italy and one of the richest in the European Union 43 The unemployment level in 2007 was roughly 2 4 2 0 for men and 3 0 for women Residents are employed in a variety of sectors from agriculture the province is a large producer of apples and its South Tyrol wine are also renowned to industry to services especially tourism Spas located on the Italian Alps have become a favorite for tourists seeking wellness 44 South Tyrol is home to numerous mechanical engineering companies some of which are the global market leaders in their sectors the Leitner Group that specializes in cable cars and wind energy TechnoAlpin AG which is the global market leader in snow making technology and the snow groomer company Prinoth Cable car on Mount Seceda in the Dolomites The unemployment rate stood at 3 8 in 2020 45 Transport Edit License plate of South Tyrol Bz The region is together with northern and eastern Tyrol an important transit point between southern Germany and Northern Italy Freights by road and rail pass through here One of the most important highways is the A22 also called the Autostrada del Brennero It connects to the Brenner Autobahn in Austria The vehicle registration plate of South Tyrol is the two letter provincial code Bz for the capital city Bolzano Along with the autonomous Trentino Tn and Aosta Valley Ao South Tyrol is allowed to surmount its license plates with its coat of arms Rail transport goes over the Brenner Pass The Brenner Railway is a major line connecting the Austrian and Italian railways from Innsbruck and Verona climbing the Wipptal passing over the Brenner Pass and descending down the Eisack Valley to Bolzano and then down the Adige Valley from Bolzano to Rovereto and to Verona The line is part of the Line 1 of Trans European Transport Networks TEN T Other railways are the Pustertalbahn Ritten Railway and Vinschgaubahn Due to the steep slopes of the mountains a number of funiculars exist such as the Gardena Ronda Express funicular and Mendel Funicular The Brenner Base Tunnel is under construction and scheduled to be completed by 2025 With a planned length of 55 kilometres 34 mi this tunnel will increase freight train average speed to 120 kilometres per hour 75 mph and reduce transit time by over an hour 46 Larger cities used to have their own tramway system such as the Meran Tramway and Bolzano Tramway These were replaced after the Second World War with buses Many other cities and municipalities have their own bus system or are connected with each other by it The Bolzano Airport is the only airport serving the region Demographics EditLanguages Edit Further information History of South Tyrol Linguistic and demographic history Languages of South Tyrol Majorities per municipality in 2011 Official German majority 103 Ladin majority 8 Italian majority 5 Sourceastat info 6 2012 38 Volkszahlung 2011 Censimento della popolazione 2011 pp 6 7 Electronic identity cards are issued in three languages Italian German English in South Tyrol German and Italian are both official languages of South Tyrol In some eastern municipalities Ladin is the third official language A majority of the inhabitants of contemporary South Tyrol speak native Austro Bavarian dialects of the German language Standard German plays a dominant role in education and media All citizens have the right to use their own mother tongue even at court Schools are separated for each language group All traffic signs are officially bi or trilingual Most Italian place names were translated from German by Italian Ettore Tolomei the author of the Prontuario dei nomi locali dell Alto Adige 47 To reach a fair allocation of jobs in public service a system called ethnic proportion Italian proporzionale etnica German ethnischer Proporz has been established Every ten years when the general census of population takes place each citizen has to declare the linguistic group to which they belong or want to be aggregated to According to the results they decide how many people of which group are going to be employed in public service At the time of the annexation of the southern part of Tyrol by Italy in 1919 the overwhelming majority of the population spoke German and identified with the Austrian or German nationality in 1910 according to the last population census before World War I the German speaking population numbered 224 000 the Ladin 9 000 and the Italian 7 000 7 As a result of the Italianization of South Tyrol about 23 of the population are Italian speakers they were 33 138 000 of 414 000 inhabitants in the 1971 census according to the census of 2011 103 out of 116 comuni have a majority of German native speakers with Martell reaching 100 eight have a Ladin speaking majority and five a majority of Italian speakers The Italian speaking population lives mainly around the provincial capital Bolzano where they are the majority 73 8 of the inhabitants and partially a result of Benito Mussolini s policy of Italianisation after he took power in 1922 when he encouraged immigration from the rest of Italy 8 The other four comuni where the Italian speaking population is the majority are Laives Salorno Bronzolo and Vadena The eight comuni with Ladin majorities are La Val Badia Corvara Mareo San Martin de Tor Santa Cristina Gherdeina Selva Urtijei Most of the immigrants from South Tyrol to the United States identify themselves as being of German rather than Austrian identity According to the United States Census Bureau in 2015 there were 365 individuals living in the U S born in Italy who identified themselves as being of Austrian ancestry 48 By contrast in the same year there were 1040 individuals living in the U S born in Italy who identified themselves as being of German ancestry 49 The linguistic breakdown according to the census of 2011 50 Language Number German 314 604 69 4 Italian 118 120 26 1 Ladin 20 548 4 5 Total 453 272 100 Religion Edit The majority of the population is Christian mostly in the Catholic tradition The Roman Catholic Diocese of Bolzano Brixen corresponds to the territory of the province of South Tyrol Since 27 July 2011 the bishop of Bolzano Brixen is Ivo Muser Catholic Church Edit Cathedral of the Assumption of Mary in Bolzano The vast majority of the population of South Tyrol is baptized Catholic There is archaeological evidence of early Christian sites in the area as early as Late Antiquity 51 Saben in the Eisack Valley became an important ecclesiastical center during this period which was only replaced by Brixen as an episcopal see in the late Middle Ages The territory of present day South Tyrol was divided for centuries between the dioceses of Brixen Chur until 1808 1816 and Trent until 1964 52 The most famous bishop of Brixen was the polymath Nicholas of Cusa Important figures of the regional ecclesiastical life in the 19th century were the beatified bishop of Trent Johann Nepomuk von Tschiderer and the mystic Maria von Morl In 1964 with reference to modern political boundaries the Bishopric of Brixen which had lost its extensive territories of North and East Tyrol after World War I was enlarged to form the Diocese of Bolzano Brixen whose extension is now identical to that of the province of South Tyrol Since then the faithful have been led by Bishops Joseph Gargitter 1964 1986 Wilhelm Egger 1986 2008 Karl Golser 2008 2011 and Ivo Muser since 2011 The diocese comprises 28 deaneries and 281 parishes in 2014 23 its episcopal churches are the Cathedral of Brixen and the Cathedral of Bolzano Cassian and Vigilius are venerated as diocesan patrons 53 Important references in the current discourses of the local Catholic Church are St Joseph Freinademetz and Blessed Joseph Mayr Nusser Other communities Edit There is a Lutheran community in Merano founded 1861 and another one in Bolzano founded 1889 Since the Middle Ages the Jewish presence has been documented in South Tyrol In 1901 the Synagogue of Merano was built As of 2015 South Tyrol was home to about 14 000 Muslims 54 Culture EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Traditions Edit South Tyrol has long standing traditions mainly inherited from its membership in the historical Tyrol The Schutzen associations are particularly fond of Tyrolean traditions A Musikkapelle in historic Tyrolean costumes The Scheibenschlagen are the traditional throwing of burning discs on the first Sunday of Lent the Herz Jesu Feuer are the fires of the Sacred Heart of Jesus that are lit on the third Sunday after Pentecost The Krampus are disguised demons who accompany St Nicholas There are also several legends and sagas linked to the peoples of the Dolomites among the best known are the legend of King Laurin and that of the Kingdom of Fanes which belongs to the Ladin mythological heritage Alpine Transhumance from German Almabtrieb is a farm practice every year between September and October the livestock that stayed on the high pastures is brought back to the valley with traditional music and dances Especially the transhumance between the Otztal in Austria and Schnals Valley and Passeier Valley was recognised by UNESCO as universal intangible heritage in 2019 55 Education Edit Main article School system in South Tyrol Architecture Edit Tyrolean architecture Tirol Castle which gave the wider region its name The region features a large number of castles and churches Many of the castles and Ansitze were built by the local nobility and the Habsburg rulers See List of castles in South Tyrol Museums Edit Among the major museums of South Tyrol are the South Tyrol Museum of Archaeology which has the mummy of Otzi the Iceman the Museion Museum of modern and contemporary art of Bolzano the Messner Mountain Museum of Reinhold Messner the White Tower Brixen museumMedia Edit German language TV channels in South Tyrol RAS 56 Rai Sudtirol Sudtirol Digital Fernsehen Sudtirol HeuteMusic Edit The Bozner Bergsteigerlied and the Andreas Hofer Lied are considered to be the unofficial anthems of South Tyrol 57 The folk musical group Kastelruther Spatzen from Kastelruth and the rock band Frei Wild from Brixen have received high recognition in the German speaking part of the world citation needed Award winning electronic music producer Giorgio Moroder was born and raised in South Tyrol in a mixed Italian German and Ladin speaking environment Sports Edit South Tyrolese have been successful at winter sports and they regularly form a large part of Italy s contingent at the Winter Olympics in the last edition 2022 South Tyroleans won 3 out of the 17 Italian medals all three bronzes of which two won by German speaking South Tyroleans Famed mountain climber Reinhold Messner the first climber to climb Mount Everest without the use of oxygen tanks was born and raised in the region Other successful South Tyrolese include luger Armin Zoggeler figure skater Carolina Kostner skier Isolde Kostner luge and bobsleigh medallist Gerda Weissensteiner tennis players Andreas Seppi and Jannik Sinner and team principal of Haas F1 Team in the FIA Formula One World Championship Guenther Steiner HC Interspar Bolzano Bozen Foxes are one of Italy s most successful ice hockey teams while the most important football club in South Tyrol is F C Sudtirol which won its first ever promotion to Serie B in 2022 The province is famous worldwide for its mountain climbing opportunities while in winter it is home to a number of popular ski resorts including Val Gardena Alta Badia and Seiser Alm See also EditHistory of South Tyrol Tyrol Tyrol South Tyrol Trentino EuroregionReferences Edit Eurostat Tables Graphs and Maps Interface TGM table European Commission 12 August 2011 Retrieved 2 September 2019 Regional GDP per capita ranged from 30 to 263 of the EU average in 2018 Press release ec europa eu Retrieved 1 September 2020 Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab hdi globaldatalab org Retrieved 5 March 2023 1 Archived 25 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine Statuto speciale per il Trentino Alto Adige Trentino Alto Adige Autonomous Region Italy Population Statistics Charts Map and Location Statistisches Jahrbuch fur Sudtirol 2014 statistico della Provincia di Bolzano 2014 PDF Table 3 18 page 119 Retrieved 13 April 2015 a b Oscar Benvenuto ed South Tyrol in Figures 2008 Provincial Statistics Institute of the Autonomous Province of South Tyrol Bozen Bolzano 2007 p 19 Table 11 a b Steininger Rolf 2003 South Tyrol A Minority Conflict of the Twentieth Century Transaction Publishers ISBN 0 7658 0800 5 Provincia Autonmia di Alto Adige official site Cortina d Ampezzo Livinallongo Buchenstein and Colle Santa Lucia formerly parts of Tyrol now belong to the region of Veneto Cf for instance Antony E Alcock The History of the South Tyrol Question London Michael Joseph 1970 Rolf Steininger South Tyrol A Minority Conflict of the Twentieth Century New Brunswick New Jersey Transaction Publishers 2003 Bondi Sandro 25 January 2011 Lettera del ministro per i beni culturali Bondi al presidente del consiglio Durnwalder PDF in Italian Rome Il Ministro per i Beni e le Attivita Culturali archived from the original Letter on 10 June 2011 retrieved 4 June 2011 Cole John 2003 The Last Become First The Rise of Ultimogeniture in Contemporary South Tyrol in Grandits Hannes Heady Patrick eds Distinct Inheritances Property Family and Community in a Changing Europe Munster Lit Verlag p 263 ISBN 3 8258 6961 X Cfr for instance this article from britishcouncil org PDF Archived from the original PDF on 13 August 2011 Cisalpine Republic 1798 Raccolta delle leggi proclami ordini ed avvisi Vol 5 in Italian Milan Luigi Viladini p 184 Frederick C Schneid 2002 Napoleon s Italian campaigns 1805 1815 Milan Praeger Publishers p 99 ISBN 978 0 275 96875 5 Steininger Rolf 2003 South Tyrol A Minority Conflict of the Twentieth Century New Brunswick New Jersey Transaction Publishers p 21 ISBN 978 0 7658 0800 4 Heiss Hans 2003 Von der Provinz zum Land Sudtirols Zweite Autonomie in Solderer Gottfried ed Das 20 Jahrhundert in Sudtirol 1980 2000 vol V Bozen Bolzano Raetia p 50 ISBN 978 88 7283 204 2 Landesregierung Autonome Provinz Bozen Landesregierung Hannes Obermair 2020 Grossdeutschland ruft Sudtiroler NS Optionspropaganda und volkische Sozialisation La Grande Germania chiamaǃ La propaganda nazionalsocialista sulle Opzioni in Alto Adige e la socializzazione volkisch in German and Italian Tyrol Castle South Tyrolean Museum of History ISBN 978 88 95523 35 4 Caldonazzi Walter Austria Forum Elisabeth Boeckl Klamper Thomas Mang Wolfgang Neugebauer Gestapo Leitstelle Wien 1938 1945 Vienna 2018 ISBN 978 3 902494 83 2 pp 299 305 Hans Schafranek Widerstand und Verrat Gestapospitzel im antifaschistischen Untergrund Vienna 2017 ISBN 978 3 7076 0622 5 pp 161 248 Fritz Molden Die Feuer in der Nacht Opfer und Sinn des osterreichischen Widerstandes 1938 1945 Vienna 1988 p 122 Christoph Thurner The CASSIA Spy Ring in World War II Austria A History of the OSS s Maier Messner Group 2017 Memorial dedicated to four brave Tyrolese resistance fighters a b Danspeckgruber Wolfgang F 2002 The Self Determination of Peoples Community Nation and State in an Interdependent World Lynne Rienner Publishers p 193 ISBN 1 55587 793 1 Anthony Alcock The South Tyrol Autonomy A Short Introduction PDF Archived from the original PDF on 21 August 2011 Retrieved 14 November 2007 Rolf Steininger South Tyrol A Minority Conflict of the Twentieth Century Transaction Publishers 2003 ISBN 978 0 7658 0800 4 pp 2 Tbilisi s S Ossetia Diplomatic Offensive Gains Momentum Archived from the original on 8 October 2007 Retrieved 14 November 2007 Referendum Cortina trionfo dei si superato il quorum nei tre Comuni La Repubblica Rome 29 October 2007 Retrieved 20 August 2013 a b c South Tyrol in figures PDF Provincial Statistics Institute ASTAT Archived from the original PDF on 5 September 2011 Retrieved 4 September 2011 Entstehungsgeschichte NaturStein Sudtirol www naturstein suedtirol it Retrieved 3 June 2021 Geologische Bundesanstalt Geofast Karten SPA Sudtiroler Informatik AG Informatica Alto Adige Natur Landschaft und Raumentwicklung Landesverwaltung Autonome Provinz Bozen Sudtirol Landesverwaltung in German Retrieved 3 June 2021 Ernst Steinicke Giuliana Andreotti Das Pustertal Geographische Profile im Raum von Innichen und Bruneck In Ernst Steinicke Hrsg Europaregion Tirol Sudtirol Trentino Band 3 Spezialexkursionen in Sudtirol Institut fur Geographie der Universitat Innsbruck Innsbruck 2003 ISBN 3 901182 35 7 S 14 Reinhard Kuntzke Christiane Hauch Sudtirol DuMont Reise Taschenbuch Dumont Reiseverlag Ostfildern 2012 ISBN 978 3 7701 7251 1 S 44 SPA Sudtiroler Informatik AG Informatica Alto Adige Landesagentur fur Umwelt und Klimaschutz Autonome Provinz Bozen Sudtirol Landesagentur fur Umwelt und Klimaschutz in German Retrieved 7 June 2021 SPA Sudtiroler Informatik AG Informatica Alto Adige Natur Landschaft und Raumentwicklung Landesverwaltung Autonome Provinz Bozen Sudtirol Landesverwaltung in German Retrieved 7 June 2021 Sudtirols Wald Flachen Abteilung Forstwirtschaft Autonome Provinz Bozen Sudtirol 2 April 2015 Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 7 June 2021 Lebensgemeinschaft Wald Abteilung Forstwirtschaft Autonome Provinz Bozen Sudtirol 2 April 2015 Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 7 June 2021 Special Statute for Trentino Alto Adige PDF Archived from the original PDF on 26 September 2007 Retrieved 14 November 2007 Mayr Walter 25 August 2010 The South Tyrol Success Story Italy s German Speaking Province Escapes the Crisis Spiegel Online Retrieved 24 November 2012 Durnwalder s party the South Tyrolean People s Party SVP has ruled the province with an absolute or relative majority since 1948 Dati Regionali 2012 shock Residuo Fiscale saldo attivo per 95 miliardi al Nord 27 May 2013 Retrieved 19 September 2014 South Tyrol heading to unofficial independence referendum in autumn 7 March 2013 Nationalia info Retrieved 28 March 2014 Website of South Tylorean Freedom Retrieved 28 March 2014 Regional GDP in the European Union 2016 Rysman Laura 4 February 2019 Italian Alpine Spas Where Sports Are an Afterthought NYT Unemployment NUTS 2 regions Eurostat The Brenner Base Tunnel Brenner Basistunnel BBT SE Archived from the original on 2 February 2016 Retrieved 21 April 2014 Steininger Rolf 2003 South Tyrol A Minority Conflict of the Twentieth Century New Brunswick New Jersey Transaction Publishers pp 21 46 ISBN 978 0 7658 0800 4 Explore Census Data Explore Census Data Statistisches Jahrbuch fur Sudtirol 2014 Annuario statistico della Provincia di Bolzano 2014 PDF Table 3 18 page 119 Retrieved 13 April 2015 Leo Andergassen Sudtirol Kunst vor Ort Athesia Bozen 2002 ISBN 88 8266 111 3 S 7 Heinrich Kofler Geschichte des Dekanats Schlanders von seiner Errichtung im Jahr 1811 bis zur freiwilligen Demission von Dekan Josef Schonauer 1989 In Marktgemeinde Schlanders Hrsg Schlanders und seine Geschichte Band 2 Von 1815 bis zur Gegenwart Tappeiner Lana 2010 ISBN 978 88 7073 531 4 S 11 186 insbesondere S 11 15 PDF Datei Diozesanpatrone Hl Kassian und Hl Vigilius Archived from the original on 10 June 2016 Retrieved 6 June 2021 Parteli Elisabeth 15 January 2015 Verdachtig religios German ff Sudtiroler Wochenmagazin Nr 4 pp 36 47 Retrieved 11 December 2016 Transumance Television Rundfunkanstalt Sudtirol RAS Rainer Seberich 1979 Singen unter dem Faschismus Ein Untersuchungsbericht zur politischen und kulturellen Bedeutung der Volksliedpflege Der Schlern 50 4 1976 pp 209 218 here p 212 t e ˈ r oʊ l te ROHLBibliography Edit in German Gottfried Solderer ed 1999 2004 Das 20 Jahrhundert in Sudtirol 6 Vol Bozen Raetia Verlag ISBN 978 88 7283 137 3 Antony E Alcock 2003 The History of the South Tyrol Question London Michael Joseph 535 pp Rolf Steininger 2003 South Tyrol A Minority Conflict of the Twentieth Century New Brunswick New Jersey Transaction Publishers ISBN 978 0 7658 0800 4 Georg Grote 2012 The South Tyrol Question 1866 2010 From National Rage to Regional State Oxford Peter Lang ISBN 978 3 03911 336 1 Georg Grote Hannes Obermair 2017 A Land on the Threshold South Tyrolean Transformations 1915 2015 Oxford Bern New York Peter Lang ISBN 978 3 0343 2240 9External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to South Tyrol Wikivoyage has a travel guide for South Tyrol Official website for the Civic Network of South Tyrol the Autonomous Province of Bolzano Bozen Special Statute for Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol Tourist information about South Tyrol The most accurate digital map of South Tyrol Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title South Tyrol amp oldid 1156151280, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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