fbpx
Wikipedia

Ticino

Ticino (/tɪˈn/), sometimes Tessin (/tɛˈsn, tɛˈsæ̃/), officially[4] the Republic and Canton of Ticino or less formally the Canton of Ticino,[a] is one of the 26 cantons forming the Swiss Confederation. It is composed of eight districts and its capital city is Bellinzona. It is also traditionally divided into the Sopraceneri and the Sottoceneri, respectively north and south of Monte Ceneri. Red and blue are the colours of its flag.

Ticino
Republic and Canton of Ticino
Repubblica e Cantone Ticino (Italian)
Location in Switzerland
Map of Ticino

Coordinates: 46°19′N 8°49′E / 46.317°N 8.817°E / 46.317; 8.817
CountrySwitzerland
CapitalBellinzona
Largest CityLugano
Subdivisions115 municipalities, 8 districts
Government
 • ExecutiveCouncil of State (5)
 • LegislativeGrand Council (90)
Area
 • Total2,812.21 km2 (1,085.80 sq mi)
Population
 (December 2020)[2]
 • Total350,986
 • Density120/km2 (320/sq mi)
GDP
 • TotalCHF 29.311 billion (2020)
 • Per capitaCHF 83,450 (2020)
ISO 3166 codeCH-TI
Highest point3,402 m (11,161 ft): Adula (Rheinwaldhorn)
Lowest point195 m (640 ft): Lake Maggiore
Joined1803
LanguagesItalian
Websitewww.ti.ch

Ticino is the southernmost canton of Switzerland. It is one of the three large southern Alpine cantons, along with Valais and the Grisons. However, unlike all other cantons, it lies almost entirely south of the Alps and has no natural access to the Swiss Plateau. Through the main crest of the Gotthard and adjacent mountain ranges, it borders the canton of Valais to the northwest, the canton of Uri to the north and the canton of Grisons to the northeast; the latter canton being also the only one to share some borders with Ticino at the level of the plains. The canton shares international borders with Italy as well, including a small Italian enclave.

Named after the Ticino, its longest river, it is the only canton where Italian is the sole official language and represents the bulk of the Italian-speaking area of Switzerland along with the southern parts of the Grisons. In 2020, Ticino had a population of 350,986.[2] The largest city is Lugano, and the two other notable centres are Bellinzona and Locarno. While the geography of the Sopraceneri region is marked by the High Alps and Lake Maggiore, that of the Sottoceneri is marked by the Alpine foothills and Lake Lugano. The canton, which has become one of the major tourist destinations of Switzerland, distinguishes itself from the rest of the country by its warm climate, and its meridional culture and gastronomy.

The land now occupied by the canton was annexed from Italian cities in the 15th century by various Swiss forces in the last transalpine campaigns of the Old Swiss Confederacy. In the Helvetic Republic, established in 1798, it was divided between the two new cantons of Bellinzona and Lugano. The Act of Mediation in 1803 saw these two cantons combine to form the modern canton of Ticino. Because of its unusual position, the canton relies on important infrastructure for connection with the rest of the country. The first major north–south railway link across the Alps, the Gotthard Railway, opened in 1882. In 2016, the Gotthard Base Tunnel was inaugurated, which finally provided a fully flat route through the Alps.

Etymology edit

The name Ticino was chosen for the newly established canton in 1803, after the river Ticino which flows through it from the Novena Pass to Lake Maggiore.[5]

Known as Ticinus in Roman times, the river appears on the Tabula Peutingeriana as Ticenum. Johann Kaspar Zeuss attributed Celtic origins to the name, tracing it to the Celtic tek, itself from an Indo-European root tak, meaning "melting, flowing".[6]

The official name of the canton is Republic and Canton of Ticino (Italian: Repubblica e Cantone Ticino), and the two-letter code is TI. It is one of the four cantons of Switzerland officially referred to as "republics", along with Geneva, Neuchâtel and Jura.

History edit

 
The Castles of Bellinzona, guarding the access to the Gotthard and other Alpine passes since the Roman Era

During the Bronze and Iron Ages, the area of what is today Ticino was settled by the Lepontii, a Celtic tribe. Later, probably around the rule of Augustus, it became part of the Roman Empire. After the fall of the Western Empire, it was ruled by the Ostrogoths, the Lombards and the Franks. Around 1100 it was the centre of a struggle between the free communes of Milan and Como: in the 14th century, it was acquired by the Visconti, Dukes of Milan. In the fifteenth century, the Swiss Confederates conquered the valleys south of the Alps in three separate conquests.

Between 1403 and 1422 some of these lands were already annexed by forces from the canton of Uri, but subsequently lost. Uri conquered the Leventina Valley in 1440.[7] In a second conquest Uri, Schwyz and Nidwalden gained the town of Bellinzona and the Riviera in 1500.[7] Some of the land and Bellinzona itself were previously annexed by Uri in 1419 but lost again in 1422. The third conquest was fought by troops from the entire Confederation (at that time constituted by 12 cantons). In 1512 Locarno, the Maggia Valley, Lugano and Mendrisio were annexed. Subsequently, the upper valley of the river Ticino, from the St. Gotthard to the town of Biasca (Leventina Valley) was part of Uri. The remaining territory (Baliaggi Ultramontani, Ennetbergische Vogteien, the Bailiwicks Beyond the Mountains) was administered by the Twelve Cantons. These districts were governed by bailiffs holding office for two years and purchasing it from the members of the League.[7]

 
Ticinese franco, currency of Ticino until the introduction of the Swiss franc in 1850.

The lands of the canton of Ticino are the last lands to be conquered by the Swiss Confederation. The Confederation gave up any further conquests after their defeat at the battle of Marignano in 1515 by Francis I of France. The Valle Leventina revolted unsuccessfully against Uri in 1755.[7] In February 1798 an attempt of annexation by the Cisalpine Republic was repelled by a volunteer militia in Lugano. Between 1798 and 1803, during the Helvetic Republic, two cantons were created (Bellinzona and Lugano) but in 1803 the two were unified to form the canton of Ticino that joined the Swiss Confederation as a full member in the same year under the Act of Mediation.[8] During the Napoleonic Wars, many Ticinesi (as was the case for other Swiss) served in Swiss military units allied with the French. The canton minted its own currency, the Ticinese franco, between 1813 and 1850, when it began the use of the Swiss franc.

As a particularly poor region, Ticino was a land of emigration. Notable examples include the chocolatiers (cioccolatieri) of the Val Blenio, who migrated throughout Europe (see Swiss chocolate#History).[9][10]

Until 1878 the three largest cities, Bellinzona, Lugano and Locarno, alternated as capital of the canton. In 1878, however, Bellinzona became the only and permanent capital. The 1870–1891 period saw a surge of political turbulence in Ticino, and the authorities needed the assistance of the federal government to restore order in several instances, in 1870, 1876, 1889 and 1890–1891.[11]

The current cantonal constitution dates from 1997. The previous constitution, heavily modified, was codified in 1830, nearly 20 years before the constitution of the Swiss Confederation.[12]

Geography edit

 
The Verzasca Valley (here near Lavertezzo) is the most central valley of Ticino[13]

Ticino is the southernmost canton of Switzerland. With a few exceptions in the extreme north and south of the canton, it lies entirely in the Ticino basin, a tributary of the Po. Along with Valais and the Grisons, it is one of the three cantons whose territory extends into the Po basin (lands to the south of the Alps). However, unlike the other Po basin cantons (and all other cantons), all settlements of Ticino are on the south side of the Alps, therefore separated from the Swiss Plateau (and most of the country) by the great Alpine barrier. The canton also comprehends some small areas in the Rhine basin in the north, at the Gotthard Pass and around lake of Santa Maria. The extreme south of the canton is drained by the Po as well, but through the Breggia and Adda,[14] and Gaggiolo, Olona, Lambro.

The canton is traditionally (but not administratively) split into two regions. The northern region, the Sopraceneri, is formed by the valleys around Lake Maggiore and includes the highest mountains of the canton and the main Alpine watershed. The southern region, the Sottoceneri, is the region around Lake Lugano, and marks the beginning of the southern Alpine foothills. Between the two regions is Monte Ceneri, a moderately elevated mountain pass and important north–south axis.[14] The Sopraceneri is constituted by the districts of Bellinzona, Blenio, Leventina, Locarno, Riviera and Vallemaggia, and makes up about 85% of the territory and 43% of the population.[15] The Sottoceneri is constituted by the districts of Lugano and Mendrisio, and makes up about 15% of the territory and 57% of the population.[16] While Lugano, the largest city, is in the densely populated Sottoceneri, the two other main cities, Bellinzona and Locarno, are in the Sopraceneri.

The Ticino, which gives its name to the canton, is the largest river of Ticino. It flows from the northwest through the Bedretto Valley and the Leventina Valley to enter Lake Maggiore near Locarno. Its main tributaries are the Brenno in the Blenio Valley and the Moesa in the Mesolcina Valley in the Grisons. The lands of most of the canton are shaped by the river, which in its mid portion forms a wide valley, commonly known as the Riviera. The western lands of the canton, however, are drained by the Maggia. The Verzasca Valley is between the Leventina Valley and the Maggia Valley. There is also a smaller area that drains directly into the Lake Lugano. Most of the land is considered within the Alps, but a small area is part of the plain of the Po which drains the north of Italy.

 
High Alpine landscape on Pizzo Campo Tencia

Although it includes the lowest point of Switzerland (Lake Maggiore) as well as its lowest town (Ascona), the topography of Ticino is extremely rugged, as it is the canton with the fourth largest elevation difference. It lies essentially within the Alps, in particular the Lepontine Alps, the Saint-Gotthard Massif and the Lugano Prealps. The longest and deepest valleys are those of the Ticino, Verzasca and Maggia. The two highest mountains are the Rheinwaldhorn and the Basòdino. Other notable mountains are Pizzo Rotondo (highest of the Gotthard Massif), Pizzo Campo Tencia (highest fully within the canton), Monte Generoso (highest south of Lake Lugano) and Monte Tamaro (most prominent of the canton). For an exhaustive list, see list of mountains of Ticino.

The area of the canton is 2,812 square kilometres (1,086 sq mi), of which about three-quarters are considered productive to trees or crops.[17] Forests cover about a third of the area, but also the lakes Maggiore (or Verbano) and Lugano (or Ceresio) make up a considerable minority. The canton shares borders with three other cantons across the main ridge of the Alps: Valais to the northwest, to which it is connected by the Nufenen Pass, Uri to the north, to which it is connected by the Gotthard Pass and the Grisons to the northeast, to which it is connected by the Lukmanier Pass and the Mesolcina Valley; the latter valley, a few kilometres north of Bellinzona, being the only (natural) low elevation access to another canton. Ticino shares international borders with Italy as well. To the southwest is the region of Piedmont and to the southeast is the region of Lombardy. The main border crossing between Italy and Switzerland is that of Chiasso, in the extreme south of the canton.[14]

Climate edit

 
 
Olive trees at Gandria (Lake Lugano) and palm trees on the Brissago Islands (Lake Maggiore)

The climate of Ticino is mostly influenced by the Mediterranean Sea, the Alps protecting it from north European weather.[18][19] As a consequence, the plains experience warm and moist summers, and mild winters. This climate is noticeably warmer and wetter than the rest of Switzerland's. In German-speaking Switzerland, Ticino is nicknamed Sonnenstube (sun porch), owing to the more than 2,300 sunshine hours the canton receives every year, compared to 1,700 for Zurich.[20] The canton can experience particularly heavy storms and rainfalls in summer. It is the region of Switzerland with the highest level of lightning discharge.[21] Conversely, the canton can experience severe droughts in both summer and winter, making it the region most affected by forest fires in the country.[22]

The climate of Ticino is highly diverse as elevations range from Lake Maggiore, affected by subtropical climate, to the high Alps, affected by subarctic and tundra climate.[23][24] Therefore, similarly to the rest of Switzerland, many different types of ecosystems are found in the region. In the lower areas, deciduous forests are omnipresent, while at high elevations they tend to be replaced by coniferous forests, except in the Sottoceneri (Lugano Prealps), where they are almost absent. The treeline is located at around 2,000 metres in the Sopraceneri and 1,600 metres in the Sottoceneri.[25] The Basòdino, Ticino's second-highest mountain, is covered by the largest glacier of the canton. In winter, skiing is popular in the highest locations, notably in Airolo and Bosco/Gurin. In the lower regions, especially around Lake Maggiore and Lake Lugano, vineyards, olive trees[26] and other fruits common to southern Europe are grown.[27] Several types of cold hardy palm trees and other subtropical species may be grown here, and although none are native, their presence in the ecosystem is increasing.[28] Numerous gardens, especially near the lakes, such as the Brissago Islands and the Scherrer Park, are renowned for their exotic plants.

Diocese edit

The Diocese of Lugano is co-extensive to the canton.

Wine region edit

Ticino is one of the wine regions for Swiss wine. The defined region encompasses all of the canton plus the neighbouring Italian-speaking district of Moesa (Misox and Calanca valleys) in the canton of the Grisons.

Government edit

 
 
Palazzo delle Orsoline and nearby Piazza Indipendenza with commemorative obelisk in Bellinzona

The current Constitution of the Republic and Canton of Ticino, originating from a draft approved on 18 August 1801 during the Helvetic Republic,[29] was approved on 14 December 1997.[30] In its preamble, it states that it was created by the Ticinese people (popolo) "in order to guaranty peaceful life together with respect for the dignity of man, fundamental liberties and social justice (...) faithful to its historic task to interpret Italian culture within the Helvetic Confederation".[30]

The Grand Council (Gran Consiglio) is the legislative authority of the canton, exercising sovereignty over any matter not explicitly delegated by the constitution to another authority.[30] The Gran Consiglio has 90 members called deputati (deputies), elected in a single constituency using the proportional representation system.[30] Deputies serve four-year terms, and annually nominate a President and two vice-presidents.

The five-member Council of State (Italian: Consiglio di Stato), not to be confused with the federal Council of States, is the executive authority of the canton, and it directs cantonal affairs according to law and the constitution. It is elected in a single constituency using the proportional representation system. Currently, the five members of the Government are Claudio Zali, Raffaele De Rosa, Manuele Bertoli, Norman Gobbi and Christian Vitta.

Each year, the Council of State nominates its president.[30] The current president of the Council of State is Norman Gobbi.[31]

The most recent elections were held in April 2019; the next elections will be on 2 April 2023.[32]

The cantonal capital is Bellinzona. The Palazzo delle Orsoline on Piazza Governo is the meeting place for both the Grand Council and the Council of State.[30] Nearby Piazza Governo is Piazza Indipendenza, which commemorates the independence of the canton.

Politics edit

Federal election results edit

Percentage of the total vote per party in the canton in the National Council Elections 1971–2019[33][34]
Party Ideology 1971 1975 1979 1983 1987 1991 1995 1999 2003 2007 2011 2015 2019
FDP.The Liberalsa Classical liberalism 38.4 39.1 36.3 37.9 34.8 29.4 30.5 27.7 29.8 28.1 24.8 23.7 20.5
CVP/PDC/PPD/PCD Christian democracy 34.8 35.7 34.1 34.0 38.2 26.9 28.4 25.9 24.6 24.1 20.0 20.1 18.2
SP/PS Social democracy 13.1 13.9 15.2 13.8 9.3 6.7 17.1 18.8 25.8 18.1 16.6 15.9 14.1
SVP/UDC Conservatism 2.4 * b 2.3 2.1 1.3 1.0 1.5 5.3 7.6 8.7 9.7 11.3 11.7
EVP/PEV Christian democracy * * * * * * * 0.2 * * * * *
GLP/PVL Green liberalism * * * * * * * * * * * 0.8 1.0
PdA/PST-POP/PC/PSL Socialism 2.8 3.6 2.7 * 1.2 0.7 1.3 1.3 * 1.3 1.2 0.5 0.8
PSA Socialism 6.7 7.6 9.4 10.6 11.0 10.0 c * * * * * *
GPS/PES Green politics * * * * 1.9 1.0 1.7 1.4 3.0 4.8 6.7 3.5 12.1
FGA Feminist * * * * 0.9 * * * * * * * *
SD/DS National conservatism 1.8 * * * * * * * * * * * *
Ticino League Right-wing populism * * * * * 23.5 18.6 18.5 8.0 14.0 17.5 21.7 16.9
Other * 0.2 * 1.8 1.4 0.8 1.0 0.9 1.3 0.8 3.4 2.4 4.7
Voter participation % 60.6 64.7 59.6 61.6 60.2 67.5 52.8 49.7 48.6 47.4 54.3 54.4 49.8
^a FDP before 2009, FDP.The Liberals after 2009
^b "*" indicates that the party was not on the ballot in this canton.
^c Part of the SP/PS

Referendum decisions edit

Since a referendum in September 2013, Ticino is the only Swiss canton where wearing full-face veils is illegal.[35] Supporters of the ban cited the case of a 20-year-old Pakistani woman from Bellinzona, who was killed by her husband for refusing to wear a headscarf.[36][37] The Burqa ban was later approved by the Grand Council in November 2015.[38]

In September 2016, Ticino voters approved a Swiss People's Party-sponsored referendum that gives precedence to Swiss workers, as opposed to foreign workers, defying freedom of movement agreements between Switzerland and the EU.[39][40]

Political subdivisions edit

Districts edit

 
Districts of Ticino canton

The canton is divided into eight districts:[41]

History of the districts edit

Leventina was a subject of the canton of Uri until 1798, the year the Helvetic Republic was founded, when it became part of the new canton of Bellinzona along with the Swiss condominiums of Bellinzona, Riviera and Blenio. The condominiums of Locarno, Lugano, Mendrisio and Vallemaggia became part of the new canton of Lugano in 1798. These two cantons formed into one canton, Ticino, in 1803 when it joined the (restored) Swiss Confederation as a member canton. The former condominiums and Leventina became the eight districts of the canton of Ticino, which exist to the present day and are provided for by the cantonal constitution.

Municipalities and circles edit

There are 108 municipalities in the canton (as of June 2021). These municipalities (comuni) are grouped in 38 circoli (circles or sub-districts) which are in turn grouped into the eight districts (distretti).[42]

The mayor (sindaco) is the president of the municipal government (municipio) which comprises at least three members; a council also exists. The members of the council and the municipio are elected every four years by the citizens resident in the comune – the next elections are scheduled for April 2024.[32]

Since the late 1990s, there has been an ongoing project to aggregate some municipalities, with the constitution of the canton allowing for the Grand Council of Ticino to promote and lead in deciding on mergers.[41] This has resulted in changes to some of the circles, with many circles now consisting of just one or two municipalities. The most populous municipality – Lugano (having merged with numerous other municipalities) – is subdivided into quartieri (quarters)[citation needed] which are grouped into three (cantonal) circles. In the modern day, the circle serves only as a territorial unit with limited public functions, most notably the local judiciary.

Demographics edit

 
The canton is predominantly Catholic (here the Madonna del Sasso sanctuary in Orselina)

Religion in canton of Ticino (age 15+, 2012)[43]

  Catholic (70%)
  Other Christian Churches (5%)
  Islam (2%)
  Other religion (1%)
  Unaffiliated (16%)
  Undetermined (2%)

Ticino has a population (as of 31 December 2020) of 350,986.[2] As of 2013, the population included 94,366 foreigners, or about 27.2% of the total population. The largest groups of foreign population were Italians (46.2%), followed by Croats (6.5%) and Portuguese (5.9%).[43] The population density (in 2005) is 114.6 persons per km2.[17] As of 2000, 83.1% of the population spoke Italian, 8.3% spoke German and 1.7% spoke Serbo-Croatian.[17]

As of 2019, 70.0% of the total population was Catholic.[44] According to a 2012 survey, the population aged 15 years and older was mostly Catholic (70%); further Christian denominations accounted for 10% of the population (including Swiss Reformed 4%), 2% were Muslim and 1% of the population adhered to another religion (including Jews 0.1%).[43]

The official language, and the one used for most written communication, is Swiss Italian. Despite being very similar to standard Italian, Swiss Italian presents some differences to the Italian spoken in Italy due to the influence of French and German from which it assimilates words. Dialects of the Lombard language such as Ticinese are still spoken, especially in the valleys, but they are not used for official purposes.

Despite the dominance of Italian speakers, fluency in Standard or Swiss German is sometimes taken to be an important prerequisite for employment, regardless of sector or sphere of work.[45][better source needed]

In 2016, Ticino was the European region with the second highest life expectancy at 85.0 years, and the highest male life expectancy at 82.7 years.[46]

Historical population edit

The historical population is given in the following table:

Historic Population Data[47]
Year Total Population Swiss Non-Swiss Population share
of total country
1850 117 759 109,952 7,807 4.9%
1880 130,394 110,306 20,088 4.6%
1900 138,638 108,181 30,457 4.2%
1950 175,055 144,909 30,146 3.7%
1970 245,458 177,954 67,504 3.9%
2000 306,846 228,057 78,789 4.2%
2020 350,986 4.1%

Economy edit

 
The bay of Lugano, the largest Italian-speaking city of Switzerland

Tertiary sector workers make up 76.5% of the Ticinese workforce, compared to the Swiss average of 67.1%. Commerce (23.1%), tourism (10.1%) and financial activities (3.9%) are all important for the local economy, while the contribution from agriculture and fishing is marginal, employing 6.5% of the workforce on a Swiss average of 15.4%.[48] The median gross private sector monthly salary in 2012 was 5,091 francs (US$5,580), below the national average of 6,118 francs (US$6,703). [49] However, due to lesser cost of living and lower taxation compared to most other cantons, the overall disposable mean income is high.[50] The GDP per capita at 82,438 francs in 2014, was seventh highest in Switzerland.[51] Ticino is counted among the most prosperous regions of Switzerland and of Europe.[52]

Lugano is Switzerland's third largest financial centre after Zurich and Geneva.[53] The banking industry alone has 8,400 employees and generates 17% of the gross cantonal product.[54] Because of Ticino's shared language and culture, its financial industry has very close ties to Italy.[54] In 2017, Ticino had an unemployment rate of 4%, higher than the Switzerland average which was estimated at 3.7%.[55]

Frontalieri, commuter workers living in Italy (mostly in the provinces of Varese and Como) but working regularly in Ticino, form a large part (over 20%) of the workforce, far larger than in the rest of Switzerland, where the rate is below 5%. Foreigners in general hold 44.3% of all the jobs, again a much higher rate than elsewhere in the Confederation (27%).[56] Frontalieri are usually paid less than Swiss workers for their jobs, and tend to serve as low-cost labour.[57]

 
Hikers above Lake Maggiore. Ticino is a popular tourist destination for its climate and scenery

Italy is by far Ticino's most important foreign trading partner, but there's a huge trade deficit between imports (5 billion CHF) and exports (1.9 billion).[58] By 2013, Germany had become the canton's main export market, receiving 23.1% of the total, compared to 15.8% for Italy and 9.9% for the United States.[59] Many Italian companies relocate to Ticino, either temporarily or permanently, seeking lower taxes and an efficient bureaucracy:[60] just as many Ticinese entrepreneurs doing business in Italy complain of red tape and widespread protectionism.[61] The region has been attracting multinational companies particularly from the fashion industry due to its closeness to Milan. Hugo Boss, Gucci, VF Corporation and other popular brands are located there. Because the international fashion business has become a significant employer for Swiss and Italians alike, the region has also been termed the "Fashion Valley".[62]

Three of the world's largest gold refineries are based in Ticino,[63] including the Pamp refinery in Castel San Pietro, the leading manufacturer of minted gold bars.[64] Large companies based in the canton include: Bally, Hupac.

The opening of the Gotthard Railway in 1882 led to the establishment of a sizeable tourist industry mostly catering to German speakers,[65] although since the early 2000s the industry has suffered from the competition of more distant destinations. In 2011, 1,728,888 overnight stays were recorded.[66] The mild climate throughout the year makes the canton a popular destination for hikers.[67] The high Alps of Ticino include numerous tourist facilities such as the Monte Generoso Railway, the Ritom Funicular and the Cardada Cableway. Among other tourist attractions are the Verzasca Dam, popular with bungee jumpers,[67] and Swissminiatur in Melide, a miniature park featuring scale models of over 120 Swiss monuments.[68] The Brissago Islands on Lake Maggiore are the only Swiss islands south of the Alps, and house botanical gardens with 1,600 different plant species from five continents.[69]

Transport edit

 
Leventina Valley. Leading to Central Switzerland, the Gotthard axis consists of several railways and highways, here the A2 motorway and south portal of the Gotthard Base Tunnel.

The Gotthard is a strategic mountain pass of Central Switzerland and Ticino since the 13th century. Several tunnels underneath the Gotthard connect the canton to northern Switzerland: the first to open was the 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) long Gotthard Rail Tunnel in 1882, replacing the pass road, connecting Airolo with Göschenen in the canton of Uri.[70] A 17 km (11 mi) motorway tunnel, the Gotthard Road Tunnel, opened in 1980.[71] A second rail tunnel through the pass, the Gotthard Base Tunnel, was opened on 1 June 2016. The new tunnel is the longest tunnel in the world,[72] reducing travel time between Zürich and Lugano to 1 hour 40 minutes.[72] It is the first flat route through the Alps and provides for the first time a low-level route to the cities of the Swiss Plateau.

The Ceneri Base Tunnel, inaugurated in 2020, constitutes another revolution in the canton, by providing fast links to both Locarno and Bellinzona from Lugano, and making the latter city an important railway node. The base tunnel bypasses the old Monte Ceneri axis.

 
Treno Gottardo at Bellinzona

Treni Regionali Ticino Lombardia (TiLo), a joint venture between the Italian Ferrovie dello Stato and the Swiss Federal Railways launched in 2004, manages the traffic between the regional railways of Lombardy and the Ticino railway network via a S-Bahn system.[73] The canton is also served by the Treno Gottardo from northern Switzerland, operated by the Südostbahn (SOB).

The Regional Bus and Rail Company of Ticino provides the urban and suburban bus network of Locarno, operates the cable cars between Verdasio and Rasa, and between Intragna – Pila – Costa on behalf of the owning companies, and, together with an Italian company, the Centovalli and Vigezzina Railway which connects the Gotthard trans-Alpine rail route at Locarno with the Simplon trans-Alpine route at Domodossola, with further connections with Brig in Valais.

The canton has a higher than average incidence of traffic accidents, recording 16 deaths or serious injuries per 100 million km in the 2004–2006 period, compared to a Swiss average of 6.[74]

Lugano Airport is the busiest airport in southeast Switzerland, serving some 200,000 passengers a year.[75]

Education and science edit

There are two major centres of education and research located in the canton of Ticino. University of Italian Switzerland (USI, Università della Svizzera Italiana) in Lugano is the only Swiss university teaching primarily in Italian. The University of Applied Sciences and Arts of Southern Switzerland (SUPSI, Scuola Universitaria Professionale della Svizzera Italiana), in Manno, is a professional training college focused on a practical method of teaching in the areas of applied art, economy, social work, technology and production science.[54]

There is also a small American and Swiss accredited private college, Franklin University Switzerland, located above Lugano,[76] as well as The American School in Switzerland in Collina d'Oro, a K-13 international school accepting day and boarding students.

Following Google Scholar, several scientists working in Ticino have received more than 100,000 scientific citations and have an h-index greater than 100, for example, Michele Parrinello in chemistry (Profile), Jürgen Schmidhuber in artificial intelligence (Profile), and Antonio Lanzavecchia in immunology (Profile).

Culture edit

 
People gathering on Piazza Grande during the Locarno Festival

As the only predominantly Italian-speaking canton, Ticino notably distinguishes itself from the rest of the country by its meridional, or Mediterranean, culture.[77] Cultural identity of Ticino is complex and is marked by its long history as a bailiwick of the Swiss Confederacy, until its independence of 1803.[78] Ticinese identity was gradually forged in the 19th century, partly thanks to the efforts of major intellectual figures such as Stefano Franscini and Carlo Cattaneo.[79] Cantonal patriotism is particularly strong in Ticino; this is reflected by the use of the term repubblica in official documents.[80][81]

Ticino is particularly known for its rich architectural heritage, ranging from the anonymous rock architecture of grottos and splüi, over Romanesque and baroque to contemporary styles. The birthplace of Francesco Borromini, the canton is home to internationally recognized architects, such as Mario Botta, Aurelio Galfetti, Luigi Snozzi, and Livio Vacchini.[82] As early as the 18th century, aristocrats from Russia and Italy employed numerous architects from Ticino.[83] More recently, the region became a centre of the Neo-Rationalist Tendenza movement.[84]

 
Rustic stone houses in Foroglio (Val Bavona - Maggia Valley)

Ticino hosts two World Heritage Sites: the Three Castles of Bellinzona and Monte San Giorgio.[82] The city of Locarno is host to the Locarno International Film Festival, Switzerland's most prestigious film festival, held during the second week of August.[85] Estival Jazz, a free open-air jazz festival, is held in Lugano and Mendrisio in late June and July.[86][87] Another jazz festival is held in Ascona. Rabadan is the major carnival festival of the canton. It has been ongoing now for more than 150 years.[88]

Traditional folk music of Ticino also distinguishes itself from that of northern Switzerland.[89] Among traditional instruments are the accordion, the guitar and, since the 19th century, the mandolin. Duos and trios with mandolin and guitar typically accompany regional folk songs.[90] However, like most of Switzerland, Ticino has a long brass-band tradition. A regional, reduced version, is the bandella, an ensemble consisting of brass instruments and clarinets.[91]

 
 
 
 
Specialities from Ticino: Salami, polenta, rice and olive oil

Polenta, along with chestnuts and potatoes, was for centuries one of the staple foods in Ticino, and it remains a mainstay of local cuisine.[92] Nowadays, the most typical dishes are polenta, often served with meat (such as rabbit) and gravy sauce, and risotto, often with saffron.[93] Local products of Ticino, called Nostrani, include a large variety of cheeses, meat specialities such as salami and prosciutto,[94] and wines, especially red merlot. Olive oil is produced in small quantities but olive cultivation is growing in the canton.[95] Sweet products of Ticino notably include the Torta di Pane, a cake made with stale bread softened in milk and containing dried and candied fruits,[96] and Panettone, a yeast-leavened bread containing candied fruits.[97][98] Gazzosa ticinese, a soft drink available in lemon and a number of other flavours, is one of the most popular beverages from Ticino, and is also common in other regions of Switzerland. It usually comes in flip-top bottles.[99] The estimate for the production of gazzosa in Ticino is 7–8 million bottles a year.[100] Food and wine were historically conserved in grottos, which were ubiquitous stone structures built in shadowy and fresh areas. They have become rustic, family-run open-air restaurants in the latter part of the 20th century. They serve traditional food and local wine (usually Merlot or similar), often in a little ceramic jug known as boccalino, which is also a popular souvenir for tourists.[101]

Newspapers and magazines published in Ticino include Corriere del Ticino, LaRegione Ticino, Giornale del Popolo, Il Mattino della Domenica, Il Caffè, L'Informatore, and the German-language Tessiner Zeitung.[102][103] In Lugano is based Radiotelevisione svizzera (RSI), a radio and television broadcasting branch of the national Swiss Broadcasting Corporation.

Bocce is a folk game that was once a popular pastime locally, but by the early 21st century it was seldom played by younger people.[104] Notable sports teams include HC Lugano, HC Ambrì-Piotta (ice hockey), FC Lugano (association football) and Lugano Tigers (basketball). Lugano has hosted the Italy-Belgium match at the 1954 FIFA World Cup, the 1953 and 1996 UCI Road World Championships, the 18th Chess Olympiad, and the annual BSI Challenger Lugano tennis tournament and Gran Premio Città di Lugano Memorial Albisetti 20 km racewalk.

Notable people edit

 
Ignazio Cassis, 2022
 
Clay Regazzoni, 1971

Notes edit

  1. ^ Italian: Repubblica e Cantone Ticino, informally Canton Ticino [kanˈton tiˈtʃiːno]; Lombard: Cantón Teṡín [kanˈtoŋ teˈziŋ]; German: Kanton Tessin [ˈkantɔn tɛˈsiːn] ; French: Canton du Tessin [kɑ̃tɔ̃ dy tɛsɛ̃]; Romansh: Chantun dal Tessin [tɕɐnˈtun dɐl teˈsin] .

References edit

  1. ^ Arealstatistik Land Cover - Kantone und Grossregionen nach 6 Hauptbereichen accessed 27 October 2017
  2. ^ a b c "Ständige und nichtständige Wohnbevölkerung nach institutionellen Gliederungen, Geburtsort und Staatsangehörigkeit". bfs.admin.ch (in German). Swiss Federal Statistical Office - STAT-TAB. 31 December 2020. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  3. ^ Statistik, Bundesamt für (21 January 2021). "Bruttoinlandsprodukt (BIP) nach Grossregion und Kanton - 2008-2018 | Tabelle". Bundesamt für Statistik (in German). Retrieved 1 July 2023.
  4. ^ Il Ticino in breve, ti.ch (official website of the canton). Retrieved 2021-01-25. ("Ticino is officially called the Republic and Canton of Ticino, its official language is Italian and its capital is Bellinzona")
  5. ^ . Azienda elettrica ticinese. Archived from the original on 28 October 2014. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
  6. ^ Roberto Rampoldi (1901). "Intorno all'origine e al significato del nome Ticino". Internet Archive. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
  7. ^ a b c d Coolidge 1911, p. 934.
  8. ^ Coolidge 1911, p. 933.
  9. ^ Luigi, Lorenzetti (2007). "Emigrazione, imprenditorialità e rischi : i cioccolatieri bleniesi (XVIII-XIX secc.". Il cioccolato. Industria, mercato e società in Italia e Svizzera (XVIII-XX sec.). FrancoAngeli. pp. 39–52).
  10. ^ Ainardi, Mauro Silvio (2008). Le fabbriche da cioccolata: nascita e sviluppo di un'industria lungo i canali di Torino. Umberto Allemandi. p. 51. ISBN 9788842215639. Dall'elenco dei nominativi emerge come la produzione artigianale della cioccolata a Torino, nei primi decenni del XIX secolo, sia appannaggio di alcune famiglie originarie del Canton Ticino [From the list of names it emerges how the artisanal production of chocolate in Turin, in the first decades of the 19th century, was the prerogative of some families originating from the Canton of Ticino]
  11. ^ Goldstein, Leslie Friedman (21 August 2001). Constituting Federal Sovereignty: The European Union in Comparative Context. JHU Press. p. 132. ISBN 9780801866630 – via Internet Archive.
  12. ^ . Ti.ch. Archived from the original on 19 May 2006. Retrieved 28 January 2012.
  13. ^ "Mergoscia - Corippo". Agenzia turistica ticinese. Retrieved 24 October 2023. Da Mergoscia, centro geografico del Ticino, seguendo il sentiero sopra il lago di Vogorno fino a Corippo.
  14. ^ a b c "Ticino on the Swiss National Map". Federal Office of Topography. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
  15. ^ "Sopraceneri". Historical Dictionary of Switzerland. Retrieved 14 March 2022. Il S. comprende i distr. di Bellinzona, Riviera, Blenio, Leventina, Locarno e Vallemaggia, che si estendono su ca. 2379 km2, pari all'85% ca. del territorio cant., e contano 142'627 ab. (2008), ossia il 43% della pop. ticinese.
  16. ^ "Sottoceneri". Historical Dictionary of Switzerland. Retrieved 14 March 2022. Costituito dagli attuali distr. di Lugano e Mendrisio, il S., di ca. 432 km2 di estensione e con 189'123 ab. (2008), comprende ca. il 15% del territorio cant., ma il 57% della pop. ed è quindi caratterizzato da una densità demografica già nel passato piuttosto elevata (oltre 100 ab. per km2 nel 1808).
  17. ^ a b c Federal Department of Statistics (2008). . Archived from the original on 25 June 2008. Retrieved 23 November 2008.
  18. ^ Lucy J. Sheppard (2013). Forest Growth Responses to the Pollution Climate of the 21st Century. Springer Science+Business Media. ISBN 9789401715782. The Ticino region situated to the south of the Swiss Alps generally experiences a Mediterranean climate, with hot but relatively moist summer seasons. The Alps form an arc around the plain of the Po valley, acting as a barrier against central European weather
  19. ^ P. Lionello (2006). Mediterranean Climate Variability. Elsevier. p. 346. ISBN 9780080460796. The heaviest rain events take place when the cyclone path is in such a position that it produces the local convergence of moist Mediterranean air. In the Western Mediterranean, this feeding flow is southerly for northern Italy and Ticino
  20. ^ Jürg Steiner; Manuschak Karnusian; Omar Gisler (28 March 2014). MARCO POLO Reiseführer Tessin. Mair Dumont Marco Polo. p. 23. ISBN 978-3-8297-7172-6.
  21. ^ "Luganese fulminato, bersaglio prediletto di Zeus". Swissinfo. 7 August 2009. Retrieved 2 March 2022. I dati raccolti da MeteoSvizzera sono impressionanti: nel 2008 in un raggio di trenta chilometri attorno a Lugano, sono stati registrati più di 13 mila fulmini, mentre in località analoghe come quota a nord delle Alpi, ne sono stati registrati fra 3 mila e 6 mila. [The data collected by MeteoSwiss are impressive: in 2008 in a radius of thirty kilometres around Lugano, more than 13,000 lightning strikes were recorded, while in locations north of the Alps with a similar elevation, between 3,000 and 6,000 were recorded.]
  22. ^ M. Masellis (2012). The Management of Burns and Fire Disasters: Perspectives 2000. Springer Science+Business Media. p. 520. ISBN 9789400903616. The Ticino is the canton most affected by forest fires in all Switzerland. Its geographical position at the southern foot of the Alps determines a climate that is extremely favourable to the development and spread of forest fires.
  23. ^ "Isole di Brissago - Bosco Gurin". Agenzia turistica ticinese SA. Retrieved 14 March 2022. The Trekking dei fiori, a new 5-day experience within the local nature and culture, spans the entire region of the Locarnese National Park Project, going from a subtropical climate to the alpine climate.
  24. ^ Reynard, Emmanuel (2020). Landscapes and Landforms of Switzerland. Springer Nature. p. 325. ISBN 9783030432034. For its geographical location and its particular morphological configurations, the Upper Ticino is located between the harsh Alpine climate and the more temperate Mediterranean climate.
  25. ^ Christiane M. A. De Micheli Schulthess (2001). Aspects of Roman Pottery in Canton Ticino (Switzerland) (PDF) (PhD). University of Nottingham. In the alpine region (Sopraceneri) the upper limit of the forests reaches 1900-2000m asl. This limit reaches 1600m asl in the subalpine region (Sottoceneri), characterized by the almost exclusive presence of hardwood forests.
  26. ^ Irene, Solari (16 October 2021). . Corriere del Ticino. Archived from the original on 15 April 2022. Retrieved 20 February 2022. Il mese scorso l'olio d'oliva ticinese è stato inserito nel patrimonio culinario svizzero, annoverato tra i prodotti d'eccellenza del nostro Paese. [Last month, Ticino olive oil was included in the Swiss culinary heritage, counted among the products of excellence of our country.]
  27. ^ James Redfern (1971). A Lexical Study of Raeto-Romance and Contiguous Italian Dialect Areas. Mouton Publishers. p. 38. ISBN 9783110824841. The canton of the Ticino marks the geographic descent from high Alps to plain and is, therefore, a land of climatic as well as linguistic transition, where heat and abundant moisture favour almonds, figs, and all the fruits common to southern Europe, except the olive.
  28. ^ Palm trees go wild in Ticino, Swissinfo, February 15, 2001 ("Palm trees and other exotic species have become so common in the forests of Switzerland's southern canton of Ticino they must now be considered as "native".")
  29. ^ "Il Canton Ticino si appresta a festeggiare i suoi 200 anni" (in Italian). swissinfo. 20 August 2001. Retrieved 9 July 2009.
  30. ^ a b c d e f "Constitution of the Republic and Canton of Ticino" (in Italian). Federal Authorities of the Swiss Confederation. 14 December 1997. Retrieved 9 July 2009.
  31. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 August 2014. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
  32. ^ a b "Ecco le date delle elezioni cantonali 2023 e delle comunali 2024". www.cdt.ch (in Italian). 1 October 2021. Retrieved 12 December 2021.
  33. ^ (Report). Swiss Federal Statistical Office. 2015. Archived from the original on 2 August 2016. Retrieved 8 August 2016.
  34. ^ "Wahlen 2019 - Kanton Tessin: laufend aktualisierte Ergebnisse". www.elections.admin.ch. Retrieved 30 October 2021.
  35. ^ Squires, Nick. "Burkas and niqabs banned from Swiss canton". Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 29 October 2013.
  36. ^ . Daily Times. Archived from the original on 6 November 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
  37. ^ Giorgio Ghiringhelli. (PDF). Corriere del Ticino. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 November 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
  38. ^ "MPs in Swiss canton of Ticino Back Burqa Ban". The Local. 24 November 2015. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  39. ^ "Ticino Votes to Favour Local Workers Over Foreigners". The Local. 26 September 2016. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  40. ^ Atkins, Ralph (25 September 2016). "Swiss Canton Votes for Tougher Controls on Foreign Workers". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  41. ^ a b "RS 131.229 Costituzione della Repubblica e Cantone Ticino, del 14 dicembre 1997". Admin.ch. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  42. ^ "CAN – Raccolta delle leggi del Cantone Ticino". www3.ti.ch.
  43. ^ a b c "Annuario Statistico Ticinese 2015" (in Italian). Ufficio di Statistica del Cantone Ticino. Retrieved 4 April 2019.
  44. ^ "Diocese of Lugano – Statistics". Retrieved 11 April 2021.
  45. ^ Mackey, William; Ornstein, Jacob (22 July 2011). Sociolinguistic Studies in Language Contact: Methods and Cases. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 9783110810752 – via Google Books.
  46. ^ "Eurostat-Life expectancy at birth by sex and NUTS 2 region". Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  47. ^ "Tessin (Kanton)". Historisches Lexikon der Schweiz (in German). Retrieved 25 January 2022.
  48. ^ (PDF) (in Italian). Ufficio di statistica. 15 January 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 8 July 2009.
  49. ^ "Monatlicher Bruttolohn nach Grossregionen – Privater Sektor – Schweiz". Bundesamt für Statistik. Retrieved 14 November 2014. (exchange rate of 0.9126 on 31 December 2012)
  50. ^ "Survey pinpoints least expensive places to live". Swissinfo.ch. 13 December 2016. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  51. ^ "Cantonal gross domestic product (GDP) per capita – 2008–2014 | Table". Federal Statistical Office. 28 October 2016. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  52. ^ "6 Swiss regions in Europe's 10 most prosperous". Le News. 12 May 2017. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  53. ^ Povoledo, Elisabetta (13 October 2010). "Far Right Party's Ad Campaign Draws Criticism in Switzerland". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 November 2014.
  54. ^ a b c . United States Commercial Service. 14 March 2007. Archived from the original on 12 October 2008. Retrieved 6 November 2008.
  55. ^ "Swiss unemployment rises. French-speaking cantons worst affected". Le News. 15 February 2017. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  56. ^ (PDF) (in Italian). Ufficio di statistica. 1 July 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 8 July 2009.
  57. ^ Frontalieri in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  58. ^ (PDF). Ufficio di statistica. 1 July 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 8 July 2009.
  59. ^ . USTAT. Archived from the original on 11 December 2014. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  60. ^ (in Italian). Il caffè. 5 July 2009. Archived from the original on 12 February 2010. Retrieved 8 July 2009.
  61. ^ (in Italian). Il Caffè. 5 July 2009. Archived from the original on 12 February 2010. Retrieved 8 July 2009.
  62. ^ N. Rütti & A. Ramp (May 2017). "Zwischen dem Tessin und Italien – Nirgendwo in Mitteleuropa zeigt sich deutlicher, was der Wegfall von Grenzen bedeutet" (in German). Neue Zürcher Zeitung (Wirtschaft). Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  63. ^ "Gold refineries – another Swiss money-spinner". BBC News. Retrieved 13 November 2014.
  64. ^ . CdT.ch. Archived from the original on 13 November 2014. Retrieved 13 November 2014.
  65. ^ "Die Sonnenstube der Schweiz: "Das Paradies ist hier!"". NZZ.ch. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  66. ^ "Tessiner Tourismuszahlen: Im Allzeittief". NZZ.ch. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  67. ^ a b "Ticino's warmer climate attracts hikers year-round". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  68. ^ Nicola Williams; Damien Simonis; Kerry Walker (2009). Switzerland. Lonely Planet. p. 334. ISBN 978-1-74220-381-2.
  69. ^ "Floral paradise blossoms on Brissago islands". swissinfo.ch. 10 June 2003. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  70. ^ Hans-Peter Bärtschi: Gotthardbahn in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland, 29 July 2004.
  71. ^ Gotthard Pass – The traffics from the late 19th century to the present in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  72. ^ a b (PDF) (in Italian). Portal of canton of Ticino. 20 October 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 8 July 2009.
  73. ^ (PDF). Portal of canton of Ticino. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 October 2007. Retrieved 8 July 2009.
  74. ^ (PDF). Bureau de prévention des accidents. p. 71. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
  75. ^ (PDF). Airports Council International. 6 December 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 November 2008. Retrieved 8 July 2009.
  76. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 April 2012. Retrieved 15 April 2012.
  77. ^ Kincaid, John; Alan Tarr, George (2005). Constitutional Origins, Structure, and Change in Federal Countries. McGill-Queen's Press. p. 349. ISBN 9780773528499. On the south side of the Alps, the Canton of Ticino and parts of the Engadine Valley enjoy certain characteristics of Mediterranean culture.
  78. ^ "Cenobio: rivista trimestrale di cultura della Svizzera italiana". Cenobio: 103. 2002. I diversi ingredienti dell'appartenenza nazionale e del sentimento patrio dei ticinesi rivelano un'apparente ambivalenza, incomprensibile se non si considera la natura duplice e complessa dell'identità ticinese. Durante i tre secoli di dominazione elvetica nei baliaggi meridionali, anche se perdura l'identità dei ticinesi con la stirpe italica (grazie soprattutto ai tradizionali scambi commerciali e umani con la Lombardia), il loro carattere di "italianità" si amalgama progressivamente – risultato delle strette consuetudini statuali, politiche e amministrative – con quello insorgente di "svizzerità" (elvetismo). [The different ingredients of national belonging and the homeland sentiment of the Ticinese reveal an apparent ambivalence, incomprehensible if one does not consider the dual and complex nature of the Ticinese identity. During the three centuries of Swiss domination in the southern bailiwicks, even if the identity of the Ticinese with the Italic lineage persists (thanks above all to the traditional commercial and human exchanges with Lombardy), their "Italian" character gradually amalgamates - the result of strict state, political and administrative customs - with the rising one of "Swissness".]
  79. ^ Atti di Convegno internazionale di studi: L'umanesimo latino in Svizzera. Fondazione Cassamarca. 2002. p. 64. Retrieved 11 April 2022. importante ricordare che all'inizio del Novecento il Ticino aveva appena un secolo di esistenza autonoma, che l'identità ticinese si era formata a poco a poco nell'Ottocento grazie agli sforzi di personalità come Carlo Cattaneo e Stefano Franscini [it is important to remember that at the beginning of the twentieth century Ticino had barely a century of autonomous existence, that the Ticinese identity was gradually formed in the nineteenth century thanks to the efforts of personalities such as Carlo Cattaneo and Stefano Franscini]
  80. ^ Lepori, Pierre (2008). Il teatro nella Svizzera italiana: la generazione dei "fondatori" (1932-1987). Casagrande. p. 24. ISBN 9788877135155. Francesco Chiesa (che pure aveva attribuito al Ticino l'epiteto di "Repubblica dell'iperbole") su "La Voce" (18 dicembre 1912) afferma: "I Ticinesi hanno generalmente un concetto altissimo del loro paese, delle loro istituzioni, dei loro uomini. Un critico rigido potrebbe in alcuni casi trovare esagerate le lodi, e un tantino eroicomico il tono (...). Ma è bello e quasi commovente che in un paese di tenaci odi politici e di così voluttuosi pettegolezzi, tutti: rossi e neri, campagnuoli e cittadini, siano tanto concordi in questo sentimento di esaltata stima".
  81. ^ "République" (in French). Historical Dictionary of Switzerland. Retrieved 1 February 2021. Les nouveaux cantons de la Suisse latine choisirent le titre de république, qui soulignait leur indépendance, alors que "canton" met l'accent sur l'appartenance à la Confédération; Genève, Neuchâtel et le Tessin l'ont conservé jusqu'à nos jours. [The new cantons of Latin Switzerland chose the title of republic, which underlined their independence, while "canton" emphasizes membership of the Confederation; Geneva, Neuchâtel and Ticino have kept it to this day.]
  82. ^ a b (PDF). Swissnews.ch. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 December 2014. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  83. ^ (PDF). BTU Cottbus. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 December 2014. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  84. ^ K. Michael Hays (2000). Architecture Theory Since 1968. MIT Press. p. 246. ISBN 978-0-262-58188-2.
  85. ^ Max Oettli (2011). CultureShock! Switzerland. Marshall Cavendish. p. 189. ISBN 978-981-4435-93-2.
  86. ^ Nicola Williams; Damien Simonis; Kerry Walker (2009). Switzerland. Lonely Planet. p. 330. ISBN 978-1-74220-381-2.
  87. ^ Joanne Lane (1 July 2007). Adventure Guide to Sicily. Hunter Publishing, Inc. p. 165. ISBN 978-1-58843-627-6.
  88. ^ "150 anni di Rabadan, vuoi rivederlo?". Radiotelevisione svizzera. 9 February 2018. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  89. ^ Gentile, Gianni (1991). La vita quotidiana in Svizzera dal 1300. Armando Dadò Editore. p. 275. ISBN 9788885115293. Sono fioriti però anche differenti generi di musica popolare: nella Svizzera tedesca i Ländler e le sonorità del corno delle Alpi e degli Jodler. L'arte del coro è stata coltivata nella Svizzera romanda e nel Grigioni romancio grazie a una preesistente ricca tradizione. Nel Ticino e in Italia invece fu soprattutto l'opera di stile veristico a diventare patrimonio popolare. I garzoni panettieri e macellai, mentre pedalavano sulle loro biciclette per fare le consegne, zufolavano le arie più famose di Verdi, Puccini e Mascagni. [However, different genres of popular music also flourished: in German-speaking Switzerland the Ländler and the sounds of the Alphorn and the Jodlers. Choir art was cultivated in French-speaking Switzerland and Romansh Grisons thanks to a pre-existing rich tradition. In Ticino and Italy, on the other hand, it was above all the veristic style work that became popular heritage. The bakers and butchers, while pedaling on their bicycles to make deliveries, whistled the most famous arias of Verdi, Puccini and Mascagni.]
  90. ^ Aonzo, Carlo (2015). Northern Italian & Ticino Region Folk Songs for Mandolin. Mel Bay Publications. p. 5. ISBN 9781610659406. il mandolino è arrivato in Ticino, e qui ha messo delle importanti radici, essendo tra i principali rappresentanti del patrimonio culturale locale [the mandolin arrived in Ticino, and here it has taken roots, being among the main representatives of the local cultural heritage]
  91. ^ Rice, Timothy (2017). "Switzerland: The Italian-speaking part". The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music: Europe. Routledge. ISBN 9781351544269.
  92. ^ "Tessiner Polenta". TicinoTopTen. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  93. ^ Oettli, Max (2011). CultureShock! Switzerland. Marshall Cavendish. p. 158. ISBN 9789814435932.
  94. ^ "Salumi: Prodotti tipici". Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  95. ^ "Olio d'oliva ticinese". Culinary Heritage of Switzerland. Retrieved 9 March 2022. Nel 1494, 1600 e 1709, gli oliveti vennero quasi completamente distrutti dal gelo. Anni dopo, furono accantonati in favore dei gelsi, così da promuovere l'allevamento dei bachi da seta. Verso la fine degli anni '80 del secolo scorso, la coltivazione dell'olivo è stata ripresa [In 1494, 1600 and 1709, frost destroyed almost all the olive trees. Later, they were replaced by mulberry trees to promote the breeding of silkworms. Olive cultivation in Ticino was revived at the end of the 1980s]
  96. ^ "Torta di Pane". Culinary Heritage of Switzerland. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  97. ^ "Panettone". Culinary Heritage of Switzerland. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  98. ^ "Panettone al cioccolato, un ticinese batte tutti" [Chocolate panettone, a Ticinese beats everyone]. Radiotelevisione svizzera. 21 December 2021. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  99. ^ "Gazosa – die Kultlimonade aus dem Tessin". Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen. Retrieved 26 November 2014.
  100. ^ "La gazzosa ticinese sfonda il Gottardo" (PDF). Il Caffè. Retrieved 26 November 2014.
  101. ^ . Boccalino Grotto. Archived from the original on 5 December 2014. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  102. ^ (PDF). REMP. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 December 2014. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
  103. ^ (PDF). REMP. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 December 2014. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
  104. ^ "Boccia – vom Zeitvertreib zum Leistungssport: Kommen die Kugelschieber zu olympischen Ehren?". NZZ.ch. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  105. ^ Nicht, Christoph. "Pietro Magno und die italienischen Stukkateurtrupps" (PDF). Frankenland.franconica.uni-wuerzburg.de. Retrieved 4 September 2019.

Bibliography edit

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainCoolidge, William Augustus Brevoort (1911). "Ticino". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 26 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 933–934.
  • Marcello Sorce Keller,"Canton Ticino: una identità musicale?", Cenobio, LII(2003), April–June, pp. 171–184; also later published in Bulletin – Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Musikethnologie und Gesellschaft für die Volksmusik in der Schweiz, October 2005, pp. 30–37.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Canton of Ticino at Wikimedia Commons
  • (in Italian) official site
  • Ticino Tourism, official website of tourism office
  • Official statistics
  • "Ticino in a nutshell" (PDF). Repubblica e Cantone Ticino, Dipartimento delle istituzioni Residenza governativa. 2012. Retrieved 9 December 2019.

ticino, other, uses, disambiguation, sometimes, tessin, officially, republic, canton, less, formally, canton, cantons, forming, swiss, confederation, composed, eight, districts, capital, city, bellinzona, also, traditionally, divided, into, sopraceneri, sottoc. For other uses see Ticino disambiguation Ticino t ɪ ˈ tʃ iː n oʊ sometimes Tessin t ɛ ˈ s iː n t ɛ ˈ s ae officially 4 the Republic and Canton of Ticino or less formally the Canton of Ticino a is one of the 26 cantons forming the Swiss Confederation It is composed of eight districts and its capital city is Bellinzona It is also traditionally divided into the Sopraceneri and the Sottoceneri respectively north and south of Monte Ceneri Red and blue are the colours of its flag TicinoCantonRepublic and Canton of TicinoRepubblica e Cantone Ticino Italian FlagCoat of armsLocation in Switzerland Map of TicinoCoordinates 46 19 N 8 49 E 46 317 N 8 817 E 46 317 8 817CountrySwitzerlandCapitalBellinzonaLargest CityLuganoSubdivisions115 municipalities 8 districtsGovernment ExecutiveCouncil of State 5 LegislativeGrand Council 90 Area 1 Total2 812 21 km2 1 085 80 sq mi Population December 2020 2 Total350 986 Density120 km2 320 sq mi GDP 3 TotalCHF 29 311 billion 2020 Per capitaCHF 83 450 2020 ISO 3166 codeCH TIHighest point3 402 m 11 161 ft Adula Rheinwaldhorn Lowest point195 m 640 ft Lake MaggioreJoined1803LanguagesItalianWebsitewww wbr ti wbr chTicino is the southernmost canton of Switzerland It is one of the three large southern Alpine cantons along with Valais and the Grisons However unlike all other cantons it lies almost entirely south of the Alps and has no natural access to the Swiss Plateau Through the main crest of the Gotthard and adjacent mountain ranges it borders the canton of Valais to the northwest the canton of Uri to the north and the canton of Grisons to the northeast the latter canton being also the only one to share some borders with Ticino at the level of the plains The canton shares international borders with Italy as well including a small Italian enclave Named after the Ticino its longest river it is the only canton where Italian is the sole official language and represents the bulk of the Italian speaking area of Switzerland along with the southern parts of the Grisons In 2020 Ticino had a population of 350 986 2 The largest city is Lugano and the two other notable centres are Bellinzona and Locarno While the geography of the Sopraceneri region is marked by the High Alps and Lake Maggiore that of the Sottoceneri is marked by the Alpine foothills and Lake Lugano The canton which has become one of the major tourist destinations of Switzerland distinguishes itself from the rest of the country by its warm climate and its meridional culture and gastronomy The land now occupied by the canton was annexed from Italian cities in the 15th century by various Swiss forces in the last transalpine campaigns of the Old Swiss Confederacy In the Helvetic Republic established in 1798 it was divided between the two new cantons of Bellinzona and Lugano The Act of Mediation in 1803 saw these two cantons combine to form the modern canton of Ticino Because of its unusual position the canton relies on important infrastructure for connection with the rest of the country The first major north south railway link across the Alps the Gotthard Railway opened in 1882 In 2016 the Gotthard Base Tunnel was inaugurated which finally provided a fully flat route through the Alps Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 2 Diocese 3 3 Wine region 4 Government 5 Politics 5 1 Federal election results 5 2 Referendum decisions 6 Political subdivisions 6 1 Districts 6 2 History of the districts 6 3 Municipalities and circles 7 Demographics 7 1 Historical population 8 Economy 9 Transport 10 Education and science 11 Culture 12 Notable people 13 Notes 14 References 14 1 Bibliography 15 External linksEtymology editThe name Ticino was chosen for the newly established canton in 1803 after the river Ticino which flows through it from the Novena Pass to Lake Maggiore 5 Known as Ticinus in Roman times the river appears on the Tabula Peutingeriana as Ticenum Johann Kaspar Zeuss attributed Celtic origins to the name tracing it to the Celtic tek itself from an Indo European root tak meaning melting flowing 6 The official name of the canton is Republic and Canton of Ticino Italian Repubblica e Cantone Ticino and the two letter code is TI It is one of the four cantons of Switzerland officially referred to as republics along with Geneva Neuchatel and Jura History editFurther information Transalpine campaigns of the Old Swiss Confederacy nbsp The Castles of Bellinzona guarding the access to the Gotthard and other Alpine passes since the Roman EraDuring the Bronze and Iron Ages the area of what is today Ticino was settled by the Lepontii a Celtic tribe Later probably around the rule of Augustus it became part of the Roman Empire After the fall of the Western Empire it was ruled by the Ostrogoths the Lombards and the Franks Around 1100 it was the centre of a struggle between the free communes of Milan and Como in the 14th century it was acquired by the Visconti Dukes of Milan In the fifteenth century the Swiss Confederates conquered the valleys south of the Alps in three separate conquests Between 1403 and 1422 some of these lands were already annexed by forces from the canton of Uri but subsequently lost Uri conquered the Leventina Valley in 1440 7 In a second conquest Uri Schwyz and Nidwalden gained the town of Bellinzona and the Riviera in 1500 7 Some of the land and Bellinzona itself were previously annexed by Uri in 1419 but lost again in 1422 The third conquest was fought by troops from the entire Confederation at that time constituted by 12 cantons In 1512 Locarno the Maggia Valley Lugano and Mendrisio were annexed Subsequently the upper valley of the river Ticino from the St Gotthard to the town of Biasca Leventina Valley was part of Uri The remaining territory Baliaggi Ultramontani Ennetbergische Vogteien the Bailiwicks Beyond the Mountains was administered by the Twelve Cantons These districts were governed by bailiffs holding office for two years and purchasing it from the members of the League 7 nbsp Ticinese franco currency of Ticino until the introduction of the Swiss franc in 1850 The lands of the canton of Ticino are the last lands to be conquered by the Swiss Confederation The Confederation gave up any further conquests after their defeat at the battle of Marignano in 1515 by Francis I of France The Valle Leventina revolted unsuccessfully against Uri in 1755 7 In February 1798 an attempt of annexation by the Cisalpine Republic was repelled by a volunteer militia in Lugano Between 1798 and 1803 during the Helvetic Republic two cantons were created Bellinzona and Lugano but in 1803 the two were unified to form the canton of Ticino that joined the Swiss Confederation as a full member in the same year under the Act of Mediation 8 During the Napoleonic Wars many Ticinesi as was the case for other Swiss served in Swiss military units allied with the French The canton minted its own currency the Ticinese franco between 1813 and 1850 when it began the use of the Swiss franc As a particularly poor region Ticino was a land of emigration Notable examples include the chocolatiers cioccolatieri of the Val Blenio who migrated throughout Europe see Swiss chocolate History 9 10 Until 1878 the three largest cities Bellinzona Lugano and Locarno alternated as capital of the canton In 1878 however Bellinzona became the only and permanent capital The 1870 1891 period saw a surge of political turbulence in Ticino and the authorities needed the assistance of the federal government to restore order in several instances in 1870 1876 1889 and 1890 1891 11 The current cantonal constitution dates from 1997 The previous constitution heavily modified was codified in 1830 nearly 20 years before the constitution of the Swiss Confederation 12 Geography editSee also Geography of Switzerland nbsp The Verzasca Valley here near Lavertezzo is the most central valley of Ticino 13 Ticino is the southernmost canton of Switzerland With a few exceptions in the extreme north and south of the canton it lies entirely in the Ticino basin a tributary of the Po Along with Valais and the Grisons it is one of the three cantons whose territory extends into the Po basin lands to the south of the Alps However unlike the other Po basin cantons and all other cantons all settlements of Ticino are on the south side of the Alps therefore separated from the Swiss Plateau and most of the country by the great Alpine barrier The canton also comprehends some small areas in the Rhine basin in the north at the Gotthard Pass and around lake of Santa Maria The extreme south of the canton is drained by the Po as well but through the Breggia and Adda 14 and Gaggiolo Olona Lambro The canton is traditionally but not administratively split into two regions The northern region the Sopraceneri is formed by the valleys around Lake Maggiore and includes the highest mountains of the canton and the main Alpine watershed The southern region the Sottoceneri is the region around Lake Lugano and marks the beginning of the southern Alpine foothills Between the two regions is Monte Ceneri a moderately elevated mountain pass and important north south axis 14 The Sopraceneri is constituted by the districts of Bellinzona Blenio Leventina Locarno Riviera and Vallemaggia and makes up about 85 of the territory and 43 of the population 15 The Sottoceneri is constituted by the districts of Lugano and Mendrisio and makes up about 15 of the territory and 57 of the population 16 While Lugano the largest city is in the densely populated Sottoceneri the two other main cities Bellinzona and Locarno are in the Sopraceneri The Ticino which gives its name to the canton is the largest river of Ticino It flows from the northwest through the Bedretto Valley and the Leventina Valley to enter Lake Maggiore near Locarno Its main tributaries are the Brenno in the Blenio Valley and the Moesa in the Mesolcina Valley in the Grisons The lands of most of the canton are shaped by the river which in its mid portion forms a wide valley commonly known as the Riviera The western lands of the canton however are drained by the Maggia The Verzasca Valley is between the Leventina Valley and the Maggia Valley There is also a smaller area that drains directly into the Lake Lugano Most of the land is considered within the Alps but a small area is part of the plain of the Po which drains the north of Italy nbsp High Alpine landscape on Pizzo Campo TenciaAlthough it includes the lowest point of Switzerland Lake Maggiore as well as its lowest town Ascona the topography of Ticino is extremely rugged as it is the canton with the fourth largest elevation difference It lies essentially within the Alps in particular the Lepontine Alps the Saint Gotthard Massif and the Lugano Prealps The longest and deepest valleys are those of the Ticino Verzasca and Maggia The two highest mountains are the Rheinwaldhorn and the Basodino Other notable mountains are Pizzo Rotondo highest of the Gotthard Massif Pizzo Campo Tencia highest fully within the canton Monte Generoso highest south of Lake Lugano and Monte Tamaro most prominent of the canton For an exhaustive list see list of mountains of Ticino The area of the canton is 2 812 square kilometres 1 086 sq mi of which about three quarters are considered productive to trees or crops 17 Forests cover about a third of the area but also the lakes Maggiore or Verbano and Lugano or Ceresio make up a considerable minority The canton shares borders with three other cantons across the main ridge of the Alps Valais to the northwest to which it is connected by the Nufenen Pass Uri to the north to which it is connected by the Gotthard Pass and the Grisons to the northeast to which it is connected by the Lukmanier Pass and the Mesolcina Valley the latter valley a few kilometres north of Bellinzona being the only natural low elevation access to another canton Ticino shares international borders with Italy as well To the southwest is the region of Piedmont and to the southeast is the region of Lombardy The main border crossing between Italy and Switzerland is that of Chiasso in the extreme south of the canton 14 Climate edit nbsp nbsp Olive trees at Gandria Lake Lugano and palm trees on the Brissago Islands Lake Maggiore The climate of Ticino is mostly influenced by the Mediterranean Sea the Alps protecting it from north European weather 18 19 As a consequence the plains experience warm and moist summers and mild winters This climate is noticeably warmer and wetter than the rest of Switzerland s In German speaking Switzerland Ticino is nicknamed Sonnenstube sun porch owing to the more than 2 300 sunshine hours the canton receives every year compared to 1 700 for Zurich 20 The canton can experience particularly heavy storms and rainfalls in summer It is the region of Switzerland with the highest level of lightning discharge 21 Conversely the canton can experience severe droughts in both summer and winter making it the region most affected by forest fires in the country 22 The climate of Ticino is highly diverse as elevations range from Lake Maggiore affected by subtropical climate to the high Alps affected by subarctic and tundra climate 23 24 Therefore similarly to the rest of Switzerland many different types of ecosystems are found in the region In the lower areas deciduous forests are omnipresent while at high elevations they tend to be replaced by coniferous forests except in the Sottoceneri Lugano Prealps where they are almost absent The treeline is located at around 2 000 metres in the Sopraceneri and 1 600 metres in the Sottoceneri 25 The Basodino Ticino s second highest mountain is covered by the largest glacier of the canton In winter skiing is popular in the highest locations notably in Airolo and Bosco Gurin In the lower regions especially around Lake Maggiore and Lake Lugano vineyards olive trees 26 and other fruits common to southern Europe are grown 27 Several types of cold hardy palm trees and other subtropical species may be grown here and although none are native their presence in the ecosystem is increasing 28 Numerous gardens especially near the lakes such as the Brissago Islands and the Scherrer Park are renowned for their exotic plants Diocese edit The Diocese of Lugano is co extensive to the canton Wine region edit Main article Ticino wine region Ticino is one of the wine regions for Swiss wine The defined region encompasses all of the canton plus the neighbouring Italian speaking district of Moesa Misox and Calanca valleys in the canton of the Grisons Government edit nbsp nbsp Palazzo delle Orsoline and nearby Piazza Indipendenza with commemorative obelisk in Bellinzona The current Constitution of the Republic and Canton of Ticino originating from a draft approved on 18 August 1801 during the Helvetic Republic 29 was approved on 14 December 1997 30 In its preamble it states that it was created by the Ticinese people popolo in order to guaranty peaceful life together with respect for the dignity of man fundamental liberties and social justice faithful to its historic task to interpret Italian culture within the Helvetic Confederation 30 The Grand Council Gran Consiglio is the legislative authority of the canton exercising sovereignty over any matter not explicitly delegated by the constitution to another authority 30 The Gran Consiglio has 90 members called deputati deputies elected in a single constituency using the proportional representation system 30 Deputies serve four year terms and annually nominate a President and two vice presidents The five member Council of State Italian Consiglio di Stato not to be confused with the federal Council of States is the executive authority of the canton and it directs cantonal affairs according to law and the constitution It is elected in a single constituency using the proportional representation system Currently the five members of the Government are Claudio Zali Raffaele De Rosa Manuele Bertoli Norman Gobbi and Christian Vitta Each year the Council of State nominates its president 30 The current president of the Council of State is Norman Gobbi 31 The most recent elections were held in April 2019 the next elections will be on 2 April 2023 32 The cantonal capital is Bellinzona The Palazzo delle Orsoline on Piazza Governo is the meeting place for both the Grand Council and the Council of State 30 Nearby Piazza Governo is Piazza Indipendenza which commemorates the independence of the canton Politics editFederal election results edit Percentage of the total vote per party in the canton in the National Council Elections 1971 2019 33 34 Party Ideology 1971 1975 1979 1983 1987 1991 1995 1999 2003 2007 2011 2015 2019FDP The Liberalsa Classical liberalism 38 4 39 1 36 3 37 9 34 8 29 4 30 5 27 7 29 8 28 1 24 8 23 7 20 5CVP PDC PPD PCD Christian democracy 34 8 35 7 34 1 34 0 38 2 26 9 28 4 25 9 24 6 24 1 20 0 20 1 18 2SP PS Social democracy 13 1 13 9 15 2 13 8 9 3 6 7 17 1 18 8 25 8 18 1 16 6 15 9 14 1SVP UDC Conservatism 2 4 b 2 3 2 1 1 3 1 0 1 5 5 3 7 6 8 7 9 7 11 3 11 7EVP PEV Christian democracy 0 2 GLP PVL Green liberalism 0 8 1 0PdA PST POP PC PSL Socialism 2 8 3 6 2 7 1 2 0 7 1 3 1 3 1 3 1 2 0 5 0 8PSA Socialism 6 7 7 6 9 4 10 6 11 0 10 0 c GPS PES Green politics 1 9 1 0 1 7 1 4 3 0 4 8 6 7 3 5 12 1FGA Feminist 0 9 SD DS National conservatism 1 8 Ticino League Right wing populism 23 5 18 6 18 5 8 0 14 0 17 5 21 7 16 9Other 0 2 1 8 1 4 0 8 1 0 0 9 1 3 0 8 3 4 2 4 4 7Voter participation 60 6 64 7 59 6 61 6 60 2 67 5 52 8 49 7 48 6 47 4 54 3 54 4 49 8 a FDP before 2009 FDP The Liberals after 2009 b indicates that the party was not on the ballot in this canton c Part of the SP PSReferendum decisions edit Since a referendum in September 2013 Ticino is the only Swiss canton where wearing full face veils is illegal 35 Supporters of the ban cited the case of a 20 year old Pakistani woman from Bellinzona who was killed by her husband for refusing to wear a headscarf 36 37 The Burqa ban was later approved by the Grand Council in November 2015 38 In September 2016 Ticino voters approved a Swiss People s Party sponsored referendum that gives precedence to Swiss workers as opposed to foreign workers defying freedom of movement agreements between Switzerland and the EU 39 40 Political subdivisions editMain article Subdivisions of the canton of Ticino Districts edit nbsp Districts of Ticino cantonThe canton is divided into eight districts 41 Bellinzona with capital Bellinzona Blenio with capital Acquarossa Leventina with capital Faido Locarno with capital Locarno Lugano with capital Lugano Mendrisio with capital Mendrisio Riviera with capital Osogna Vallemaggia with capital CevioHistory of the districts edit Leventina was a subject of the canton of Uri until 1798 the year the Helvetic Republic was founded when it became part of the new canton of Bellinzona along with the Swiss condominiums of Bellinzona Riviera and Blenio The condominiums of Locarno Lugano Mendrisio and Vallemaggia became part of the new canton of Lugano in 1798 These two cantons formed into one canton Ticino in 1803 when it joined the restored Swiss Confederation as a member canton The former condominiums and Leventina became the eight districts of the canton of Ticino which exist to the present day and are provided for by the cantonal constitution Municipalities and circles edit Main article Municipalities of the canton of Ticino There are 108 municipalities in the canton as of June 2021 update These municipalities comuni are grouped in 38 circoli circles or sub districts which are in turn grouped into the eight districts distretti 42 The mayor sindaco is the president of the municipal government municipio which comprises at least three members a council also exists The members of the council and the municipio are elected every four years by the citizens resident in the comune the next elections are scheduled for April 2024 32 Since the late 1990s there has been an ongoing project to aggregate some municipalities with the constitution of the canton allowing for the Grand Council of Ticino to promote and lead in deciding on mergers 41 This has resulted in changes to some of the circles with many circles now consisting of just one or two municipalities The most populous municipality Lugano having merged with numerous other municipalities is subdivided into quartieri quarters citation needed which are grouped into three cantonal circles In the modern day the circle serves only as a territorial unit with limited public functions most notably the local judiciary Demographics edit nbsp The canton is predominantly Catholic here the Madonna del Sasso sanctuary in Orselina Religion in canton of Ticino age 15 2012 43 Catholic 70 Swiss Reformed Church 4 Other Christian Churches 5 Islam 2 Other religion 1 Unaffiliated 16 Undetermined 2 Ticino has a population as of 31 December 2020 of 350 986 2 As of 2013 update the population included 94 366 foreigners or about 27 2 of the total population The largest groups of foreign population were Italians 46 2 followed by Croats 6 5 and Portuguese 5 9 43 The population density in 2005 is 114 6 persons per km2 17 As of 2000 83 1 of the population spoke Italian 8 3 spoke German and 1 7 spoke Serbo Croatian 17 As of 2019 70 0 of the total population was Catholic 44 According to a 2012 survey the population aged 15 years and older was mostly Catholic 70 further Christian denominations accounted for 10 of the population including Swiss Reformed 4 2 were Muslim and 1 of the population adhered to another religion including Jews 0 1 43 The official language and the one used for most written communication is Swiss Italian Despite being very similar to standard Italian Swiss Italian presents some differences to the Italian spoken in Italy due to the influence of French and German from which it assimilates words Dialects of the Lombard language such as Ticinese are still spoken especially in the valleys but they are not used for official purposes Despite the dominance of Italian speakers fluency in Standard or Swiss German is sometimes taken to be an important prerequisite for employment regardless of sector or sphere of work 45 better source needed In 2016 Ticino was the European region with the second highest life expectancy at 85 0 years and the highest male life expectancy at 82 7 years 46 Historical population edit The historical population is given in the following table Historic Population Data 47 Year Total Population Swiss Non Swiss Population share of total country1850 117 759 109 952 7 807 4 9 1880 130 394 110 306 20 088 4 6 1900 138 638 108 181 30 457 4 2 1950 175 055 144 909 30 146 3 7 1970 245 458 177 954 67 504 3 9 2000 306 846 228 057 78 789 4 2 2020 350 986 4 1 Economy edit nbsp The bay of Lugano the largest Italian speaking city of SwitzerlandTertiary sector workers make up 76 5 of the Ticinese workforce compared to the Swiss average of 67 1 Commerce 23 1 tourism 10 1 and financial activities 3 9 are all important for the local economy while the contribution from agriculture and fishing is marginal employing 6 5 of the workforce on a Swiss average of 15 4 48 The median gross private sector monthly salary in 2012 was 5 091 francs US 5 580 below the national average of 6 118 francs US 6 703 49 However due to lesser cost of living and lower taxation compared to most other cantons the overall disposable mean income is high 50 The GDP per capita at 82 438 francs in 2014 was seventh highest in Switzerland 51 Ticino is counted among the most prosperous regions of Switzerland and of Europe 52 Lugano is Switzerland s third largest financial centre after Zurich and Geneva 53 The banking industry alone has 8 400 employees and generates 17 of the gross cantonal product 54 Because of Ticino s shared language and culture its financial industry has very close ties to Italy 54 In 2017 Ticino had an unemployment rate of 4 higher than the Switzerland average which was estimated at 3 7 55 Frontalieri commuter workers living in Italy mostly in the provinces of Varese and Como but working regularly in Ticino form a large part over 20 of the workforce far larger than in the rest of Switzerland where the rate is below 5 Foreigners in general hold 44 3 of all the jobs again a much higher rate than elsewhere in the Confederation 27 56 Frontalieri are usually paid less than Swiss workers for their jobs and tend to serve as low cost labour 57 nbsp Hikers above Lake Maggiore Ticino is a popular tourist destination for its climate and sceneryItaly is by far Ticino s most important foreign trading partner but there s a huge trade deficit between imports 5 billion CHF and exports 1 9 billion 58 By 2013 Germany had become the canton s main export market receiving 23 1 of the total compared to 15 8 for Italy and 9 9 for the United States 59 Many Italian companies relocate to Ticino either temporarily or permanently seeking lower taxes and an efficient bureaucracy 60 just as many Ticinese entrepreneurs doing business in Italy complain of red tape and widespread protectionism 61 The region has been attracting multinational companies particularly from the fashion industry due to its closeness to Milan Hugo Boss Gucci VF Corporation and other popular brands are located there Because the international fashion business has become a significant employer for Swiss and Italians alike the region has also been termed the Fashion Valley 62 Three of the world s largest gold refineries are based in Ticino 63 including the Pamp refinery in Castel San Pietro the leading manufacturer of minted gold bars 64 Large companies based in the canton include Bally Hupac The opening of the Gotthard Railway in 1882 led to the establishment of a sizeable tourist industry mostly catering to German speakers 65 although since the early 2000s the industry has suffered from the competition of more distant destinations In 2011 1 728 888 overnight stays were recorded 66 The mild climate throughout the year makes the canton a popular destination for hikers 67 The high Alps of Ticino include numerous tourist facilities such as the Monte Generoso Railway the Ritom Funicular and the Cardada Cableway Among other tourist attractions are the Verzasca Dam popular with bungee jumpers 67 and Swissminiatur in Melide a miniature park featuring scale models of over 120 Swiss monuments 68 The Brissago Islands on Lake Maggiore are the only Swiss islands south of the Alps and house botanical gardens with 1 600 different plant species from five continents 69 Transport edit nbsp Leventina Valley Leading to Central Switzerland the Gotthard axis consists of several railways and highways here the A2 motorway and south portal of the Gotthard Base Tunnel The Gotthard is a strategic mountain pass of Central Switzerland and Ticino since the 13th century Several tunnels underneath the Gotthard connect the canton to northern Switzerland the first to open was the 15 kilometres 9 3 mi long Gotthard Rail Tunnel in 1882 replacing the pass road connecting Airolo with Goschenen in the canton of Uri 70 A 17 km 11 mi motorway tunnel the Gotthard Road Tunnel opened in 1980 71 A second rail tunnel through the pass the Gotthard Base Tunnel was opened on 1 June 2016 The new tunnel is the longest tunnel in the world 72 reducing travel time between Zurich and Lugano to 1 hour 40 minutes 72 It is the first flat route through the Alps and provides for the first time a low level route to the cities of the Swiss Plateau The Ceneri Base Tunnel inaugurated in 2020 constitutes another revolution in the canton by providing fast links to both Locarno and Bellinzona from Lugano and making the latter city an important railway node The base tunnel bypasses the old Monte Ceneri axis nbsp Treno Gottardo at BellinzonaTreni Regionali Ticino Lombardia TiLo a joint venture between the Italian Ferrovie dello Stato and the Swiss Federal Railways launched in 2004 manages the traffic between the regional railways of Lombardy and the Ticino railway network via a S Bahn system 73 The canton is also served by the Treno Gottardo from northern Switzerland operated by the Sudostbahn SOB The Regional Bus and Rail Company of Ticino provides the urban and suburban bus network of Locarno operates the cable cars between Verdasio and Rasa and between Intragna Pila Costa on behalf of the owning companies and together with an Italian company the Centovalli and Vigezzina Railway which connects the Gotthard trans Alpine rail route at Locarno with the Simplon trans Alpine route at Domodossola with further connections with Brig in Valais The canton has a higher than average incidence of traffic accidents recording 16 deaths or serious injuries per 100 million km in the 2004 2006 period compared to a Swiss average of 6 74 Lugano Airport is the busiest airport in southeast Switzerland serving some 200 000 passengers a year 75 Education and science editThere are two major centres of education and research located in the canton of Ticino University of Italian Switzerland USI Universita della Svizzera Italiana in Lugano is the only Swiss university teaching primarily in Italian The University of Applied Sciences and Arts of Southern Switzerland SUPSI Scuola Universitaria Professionale della Svizzera Italiana in Manno is a professional training college focused on a practical method of teaching in the areas of applied art economy social work technology and production science 54 There is also a small American and Swiss accredited private college Franklin University Switzerland located above Lugano 76 as well as The American School in Switzerland in Collina d Oro a K 13 international school accepting day and boarding students Following Google Scholar several scientists working in Ticino have received more than 100 000 scientific citations and have an h index greater than 100 for example Michele Parrinello in chemistry Profile Jurgen Schmidhuber in artificial intelligence Profile and Antonio Lanzavecchia in immunology Profile Culture editSee also List of cultural property of national significance in Switzerland Ticino and List of museums in Ticino nbsp People gathering on Piazza Grande during the Locarno FestivalAs the only predominantly Italian speaking canton Ticino notably distinguishes itself from the rest of the country by its meridional or Mediterranean culture 77 Cultural identity of Ticino is complex and is marked by its long history as a bailiwick of the Swiss Confederacy until its independence of 1803 78 Ticinese identity was gradually forged in the 19th century partly thanks to the efforts of major intellectual figures such as Stefano Franscini and Carlo Cattaneo 79 Cantonal patriotism is particularly strong in Ticino this is reflected by the use of the term repubblica in official documents 80 81 Ticino is particularly known for its rich architectural heritage ranging from the anonymous rock architecture of grottos and splui over Romanesque and baroque to contemporary styles The birthplace of Francesco Borromini the canton is home to internationally recognized architects such as Mario Botta Aurelio Galfetti Luigi Snozzi and Livio Vacchini 82 As early as the 18th century aristocrats from Russia and Italy employed numerous architects from Ticino 83 More recently the region became a centre of the Neo Rationalist Tendenza movement 84 nbsp Rustic stone houses in Foroglio Val Bavona Maggia Valley Ticino hosts two World Heritage Sites the Three Castles of Bellinzona and Monte San Giorgio 82 The city of Locarno is host to the Locarno International Film Festival Switzerland s most prestigious film festival held during the second week of August 85 Estival Jazz a free open air jazz festival is held in Lugano and Mendrisio in late June and July 86 87 Another jazz festival is held in Ascona Rabadan is the major carnival festival of the canton It has been ongoing now for more than 150 years 88 Traditional folk music of Ticino also distinguishes itself from that of northern Switzerland 89 Among traditional instruments are the accordion the guitar and since the 19th century the mandolin Duos and trios with mandolin and guitar typically accompany regional folk songs 90 However like most of Switzerland Ticino has a long brass band tradition A regional reduced version is the bandella an ensemble consisting of brass instruments and clarinets 91 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Specialities from Ticino Salami polenta rice and olive oil Polenta along with chestnuts and potatoes was for centuries one of the staple foods in Ticino and it remains a mainstay of local cuisine 92 Nowadays the most typical dishes are polenta often served with meat such as rabbit and gravy sauce and risotto often with saffron 93 Local products of Ticino called Nostrani include a large variety of cheeses meat specialities such as salami and prosciutto 94 and wines especially red merlot Olive oil is produced in small quantities but olive cultivation is growing in the canton 95 Sweet products of Ticino notably include the Torta di Pane a cake made with stale bread softened in milk and containing dried and candied fruits 96 and Panettone a yeast leavened bread containing candied fruits 97 98 Gazzosa ticinese a soft drink available in lemon and a number of other flavours is one of the most popular beverages from Ticino and is also common in other regions of Switzerland It usually comes in flip top bottles 99 The estimate for the production of gazzosa in Ticino is 7 8 million bottles a year 100 Food and wine were historically conserved in grottos which were ubiquitous stone structures built in shadowy and fresh areas They have become rustic family run open air restaurants in the latter part of the 20th century They serve traditional food and local wine usually Merlot or similar often in a little ceramic jug known as boccalino which is also a popular souvenir for tourists 101 Newspapers and magazines published in Ticino include Corriere del Ticino LaRegione Ticino Giornale del Popolo Il Mattino della Domenica Il Caffe L Informatore and the German language Tessiner Zeitung 102 103 In Lugano is based Radiotelevisione svizzera RSI a radio and television broadcasting branch of the national Swiss Broadcasting Corporation Bocce is a folk game that was once a popular pastime locally but by the early 21st century it was seldom played by younger people 104 Notable sports teams include HC Lugano HC Ambri Piotta ice hockey FC Lugano association football and Lugano Tigers basketball Lugano has hosted the Italy Belgium match at the 1954 FIFA World Cup the 1953 and 1996 UCI Road World Championships the 18th Chess Olympiad and the annual BSI Challenger Lugano tennis tournament and Gran Premio Citta di Lugano Memorial Albisetti 20 km racewalk Notable people edit nbsp Ignazio Cassis 2022 nbsp Clay Regazzoni 1971See also Category People from Ticino The Bernasconi family of stuccoists architects and sculptors Francesco Borromini 1599 in Bissone 1667 architect Mario Botta born 1943 in Mendrisio a Swiss architect Ignazio Cassis born 1961 in Sessa a Swiss physician and politician President of the Swiss Confederation for 2022 Flavio Cotti 1939 in Muralto 2020 a Swiss politician on the Federal Council 1986 to 1999 Carla Del Ponte born 1947 in Bignasco international jurist Carlo Fontana ca 1634 1714 amp Domenico Fontana 1543 1607 architects Aurelio Galfetti 1936 in Biasca 2021 a Swiss architect Lara Gut Behrami born 1991 in Sorengo ski racer gold medallist at the 2022 Winter Olympics Carlo Maderno 1556 in Capolago 1629 architect Giovanni Pietro Magni 1655 in Bruzella ca 1722 stuccoist 105 Clay Regazzoni 1939 in Mendrisio 2006 a Swiss Formula One racing driver Flora Ruchat Roncati 1937 2012 architect Elly Schlein born 1985 in Lugano Italian politician and leader of the Democratic Party Luigi Snozzi 1932 in Mendrisio 2020 architect Livio Vacchini 1933 in Locarno 2007 architectNotes edit Italian Repubblica e Cantone Ticino informally Canton Ticino kanˈton tiˈtʃiːno Lombard Canton Teṡin kanˈtoŋ teˈziŋ German Kanton Tessin ˈkantɔn tɛˈsiːn French Canton du Tessin kɑ tɔ dy tɛsɛ Romansh Chantun dal Tessin tɕɐnˈtun dɐl teˈsin References edit Arealstatistik Land Cover Kantone und Grossregionen nach 6 Hauptbereichen accessed 27 October 2017 a b c Standige und nichtstandige Wohnbevolkerung nach institutionellen Gliederungen Geburtsort und Staatsangehorigkeit bfs admin ch in German Swiss Federal Statistical Office STAT TAB 31 December 2020 Retrieved 21 September 2021 Statistik Bundesamt fur 21 January 2021 Bruttoinlandsprodukt BIP nach Grossregion und Kanton 2008 2018 Tabelle Bundesamt fur Statistik in German Retrieved 1 July 2023 Il Ticino in breve ti ch official website of the canton Retrieved 2021 01 25 Ticino is officially called the Republic and Canton of Ticino its official language is Italian and its capital is Bellinzona Lo scorrere del fiume l opera dell uomo Azienda elettrica ticinese Archived from the original on 28 October 2014 Retrieved 28 October 2014 Roberto Rampoldi 1901 Intorno all origine e al significato del nome Ticino Internet Archive Retrieved 28 October 2014 a b c d Coolidge 1911 p 934 Coolidge 1911 p 933 Luigi Lorenzetti 2007 Emigrazione imprenditorialita e rischi i cioccolatieri bleniesi XVIII XIX secc Il cioccolato Industria mercato e societa in Italia e Svizzera XVIII XX sec FrancoAngeli pp 39 52 Ainardi Mauro Silvio 2008 Le fabbriche da cioccolata nascita e sviluppo di un industria lungo i canali di Torino Umberto Allemandi p 51 ISBN 9788842215639 Dall elenco dei nominativi emerge come la produzione artigianale della cioccolata a Torino nei primi decenni del XIX secolo sia appannaggio di alcune famiglie originarie del Canton Ticino From the list of names it emerges how the artisanal production of chocolate in Turin in the first decades of the 19th century was the prerogative of some families originating from the Canton of Ticino Goldstein Leslie Friedman 21 August 2001 Constituting Federal Sovereignty The European Union in Comparative Context JHU Press p 132 ISBN 9780801866630 via Internet Archive The Constitution of Ticino Ti ch Archived from the original on 19 May 2006 Retrieved 28 January 2012 Mergoscia Corippo Agenzia turistica ticinese Retrieved 24 October 2023 Da Mergoscia centro geografico del Ticino seguendo il sentiero sopra il lago di Vogorno fino a Corippo a b c Ticino on the Swiss National Map Federal Office of Topography Retrieved 14 March 2022 Sopraceneri Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Retrieved 14 March 2022 Il S comprende i distr di Bellinzona Riviera Blenio Leventina Locarno e Vallemaggia che si estendono su ca 2379 km2 pari all 85 ca del territorio cant e contano 142 627 ab 2008 ossia il 43 della pop ticinese Sottoceneri Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Retrieved 14 March 2022 Costituito dagli attuali distr di Lugano e Mendrisio il S di ca 432 km2 di estensione e con 189 123 ab 2008 comprende ca il 15 del territorio cant ma il 57 della pop ed e quindi caratterizzato da una densita demografica gia nel passato piuttosto elevata oltre 100 ab per km2 nel 1808 a b c Federal Department of Statistics 2008 Regional Statistics for Ticino Archived from the original on 25 June 2008 Retrieved 23 November 2008 Lucy J Sheppard 2013 Forest Growth Responses to the Pollution Climate of the 21st Century Springer Science Business Media ISBN 9789401715782 The Ticino region situated to the south of the Swiss Alps generally experiences a Mediterranean climate with hot but relatively moist summer seasons The Alps form an arc around the plain of the Po valley acting as a barrier against central European weather P Lionello 2006 Mediterranean Climate Variability Elsevier p 346 ISBN 9780080460796 The heaviest rain events take place when the cyclone path is in such a position that it produces the local convergence of moist Mediterranean air In the Western Mediterranean this feeding flow is southerly for northern Italy and Ticino Jurg Steiner Manuschak Karnusian Omar Gisler 28 March 2014 MARCO POLO Reisefuhrer Tessin Mair Dumont Marco Polo p 23 ISBN 978 3 8297 7172 6 Luganese fulminato bersaglio prediletto di Zeus Swissinfo 7 August 2009 Retrieved 2 March 2022 I dati raccolti da MeteoSvizzera sono impressionanti nel 2008 in un raggio di trenta chilometri attorno a Lugano sono stati registrati piu di 13 mila fulmini mentre in localita analoghe come quota a nord delle Alpi ne sono stati registrati fra 3 mila e 6 mila The data collected by MeteoSwiss are impressive in 2008 in a radius of thirty kilometres around Lugano more than 13 000 lightning strikes were recorded while in locations north of the Alps with a similar elevation between 3 000 and 6 000 were recorded M Masellis 2012 The Management of Burns and Fire Disasters Perspectives 2000 Springer Science Business Media p 520 ISBN 9789400903616 The Ticino is the canton most affected by forest fires in all Switzerland Its geographical position at the southern foot of the Alps determines a climate that is extremely favourable to the development and spread of forest fires Isole di Brissago Bosco Gurin Agenzia turistica ticinese SA Retrieved 14 March 2022 The Trekking dei fiori a new 5 day experience within the local nature and culture spans the entire region of the Locarnese National Park Project going from a subtropical climate to the alpine climate Reynard Emmanuel 2020 Landscapes and Landforms of Switzerland Springer Nature p 325 ISBN 9783030432034 For its geographical location and its particular morphological configurations the Upper Ticino is located between the harsh Alpine climate and the more temperate Mediterranean climate Christiane M A De Micheli Schulthess 2001 Aspects of Roman Pottery in Canton Ticino Switzerland PDF PhD University of Nottingham In the alpine region Sopraceneri the upper limit of the forests reaches 1900 2000m asl This limit reaches 1600m asl in the subalpine region Sottoceneri characterized by the almost exclusive presence of hardwood forests Irene Solari 16 October 2021 Alla scoperta dell olio ticinese Un patrimonio di cui dovremmo essere fieri Corriere del Ticino Archived from the original on 15 April 2022 Retrieved 20 February 2022 Il mese scorso l olio d oliva ticinese e stato inserito nel patrimonio culinario svizzero annoverato tra i prodotti d eccellenza del nostro Paese Last month Ticino olive oil was included in the Swiss culinary heritage counted among the products of excellence of our country James Redfern 1971 A Lexical Study of Raeto Romance and Contiguous Italian Dialect Areas Mouton Publishers p 38 ISBN 9783110824841 The canton of the Ticino marks the geographic descent from high Alps to plain and is therefore a land of climatic as well as linguistic transition where heat and abundant moisture favour almonds figs and all the fruits common to southern Europe except the olive Palm trees go wild in Ticino Swissinfo February 15 2001 Palm trees and other exotic species have become so common in the forests of Switzerland s southern canton of Ticino they must now be considered as native Il Canton Ticino si appresta a festeggiare i suoi 200 anni in Italian swissinfo 20 August 2001 Retrieved 9 July 2009 a b c d e f Constitution of the Republic and Canton of Ticino in Italian Federal Authorities of the Swiss Confederation 14 December 1997 Retrieved 9 July 2009 Consiglio di Stato CDS Cantone Ticino Archived from the original on 29 August 2014 Retrieved 8 July 2014 a b Ecco le date delle elezioni cantonali 2023 e delle comunali 2024 www cdt ch in Italian 1 October 2021 Retrieved 12 December 2021 Nationalratswahlen Starke der Parteien nach Kantonen Schweiz 100 Report Swiss Federal Statistical Office 2015 Archived from the original on 2 August 2016 Retrieved 8 August 2016 Wahlen 2019 Kanton Tessin laufend aktualisierte Ergebnisse www elections admin ch Retrieved 30 October 2021 Squires Nick Burkas and niqabs banned from Swiss canton Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 29 October 2013 Swiss charge Pakistani over honour killing of wife Daily Times Archived from the original on 6 November 2014 Retrieved 6 November 2014 Giorgio Ghiringhelli Divieto di indossare negli spazi pubblici e nei luoghi privati aperti al pubblico indumenti che nascondano totalmente o parzialmente il volto ad esempio il burqa e il niqab PDF Corriere del Ticino Archived from the original PDF on 7 November 2014 Retrieved 6 November 2014 MPs in Swiss canton of Ticino Back Burqa Ban The Local 24 November 2015 Retrieved 12 December 2016 Ticino Votes to Favour Local Workers Over Foreigners The Local 26 September 2016 Retrieved 12 December 2016 Atkins Ralph 25 September 2016 Swiss Canton Votes for Tougher Controls on Foreign Workers Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Retrieved 12 December 2016 a b RS 131 229 Costituzione della Repubblica e Cantone Ticino del 14 dicembre 1997 Admin ch Retrieved 4 September 2019 CAN Raccolta delle leggi del Cantone Ticino www3 ti ch a b c Annuario Statistico Ticinese 2015 in Italian Ufficio di Statistica del Cantone Ticino Retrieved 4 April 2019 Diocese of Lugano Statistics Retrieved 11 April 2021 Mackey William Ornstein Jacob 22 July 2011 Sociolinguistic Studies in Language Contact Methods and Cases Walter de Gruyter ISBN 9783110810752 via Google Books Eurostat Life expectancy at birth by sex and NUTS 2 region Ec europa eu Retrieved 18 December 2018 Tessin Kanton Historisches Lexikon der Schweiz in German Retrieved 25 January 2022 Aziende per settore e sezione di attivita economica PDF in Italian Ufficio di statistica 15 January 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 8 July 2009 Monatlicher Bruttolohn nach Grossregionen Privater Sektor Schweiz Bundesamt fur Statistik Retrieved 14 November 2014 exchange rate of 0 9126 on 31 December 2012 Survey pinpoints least expensive places to live Swissinfo ch 13 December 2016 Retrieved 4 September 2019 Cantonal gross domestic product GDP per capita 2008 2014 Table Federal Statistical Office 28 October 2016 Retrieved 4 September 2019 6 Swiss regions in Europe s 10 most prosperous Le News 12 May 2017 Retrieved 4 September 2019 Povoledo Elisabetta 13 October 2010 Far Right Party s Ad Campaign Draws Criticism in Switzerland The New York Times Retrieved 13 November 2014 a b c Ticino United States Commercial Service 14 March 2007 Archived from the original on 12 October 2008 Retrieved 6 November 2008 Swiss unemployment rises French speaking cantons worst affected Le News 15 February 2017 Retrieved 4 September 2019 Occupati stranieri e frontalieri PDF in Italian Ufficio di statistica 1 July 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 8 July 2009 Frontalieri in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Commercio estero PDF Ufficio di statistica 1 July 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 8 July 2009 Esportazioni secondo il paese di destinazione dal Ticino dal 2006 USTAT Archived from the original on 11 December 2014 Retrieved 6 December 2014 Seicento ditte italiane in fuga verso il Ticino in Italian Il caffe 5 July 2009 Archived from the original on 12 February 2010 Retrieved 8 July 2009 In Italia c e ancora troppa burocrazia in Italian Il Caffe 5 July 2009 Archived from the original on 12 February 2010 Retrieved 8 July 2009 N Rutti amp A Ramp May 2017 Zwischen dem Tessin und Italien Nirgendwo in Mitteleuropa zeigt sich deutlicher was der Wegfall von Grenzen bedeutet in German Neue Zurcher Zeitung Wirtschaft Retrieved 30 May 2017 Gold refineries another Swiss money spinner BBC News Retrieved 13 November 2014 La Pamp SA si espande in India CdT ch Archived from the original on 13 November 2014 Retrieved 13 November 2014 Die Sonnenstube der Schweiz Das Paradies ist hier NZZ ch Retrieved 27 November 2014 Tessiner Tourismuszahlen Im Allzeittief NZZ ch Retrieved 27 November 2014 a b Ticino s warmer climate attracts hikers year round The Guardian Retrieved 5 December 2014 Nicola Williams Damien Simonis Kerry Walker 2009 Switzerland Lonely Planet p 334 ISBN 978 1 74220 381 2 Floral paradise blossoms on Brissago islands swissinfo ch 10 June 2003 Retrieved 5 December 2014 Hans Peter Bartschi Gotthardbahn in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland 29 July 2004 Gotthard Pass The traffics from the late 19th century to the present in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland a b Alp Transit 2016 verso nuovi equilibri territoriali PDF in Italian Portal of canton of Ticino 20 October 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 8 July 2009 Tilo un primo bilancio positivo PDF Portal of canton of Ticino Archived from the original PDF on 10 October 2007 Retrieved 8 July 2009 Regional differences in traffic accidents bfu report no 62 bfu 2 041 08 bfu report no 62 Regional differences in traffic accidents PDF Bureau de prevention des accidents p 71 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 3 December 2014 Airport traffic statistics PDF Airports Council International 6 December 2005 Archived from the original PDF on 20 November 2008 Retrieved 8 July 2009 About Franklin the International Imperative Franklin College Archived from the original on 20 April 2012 Retrieved 15 April 2012 Kincaid John Alan Tarr George 2005 Constitutional Origins Structure and Change in Federal Countries McGill Queen s Press p 349 ISBN 9780773528499 On the south side of the Alps the Canton of Ticino and parts of the Engadine Valley enjoy certain characteristics of Mediterranean culture Cenobio rivista trimestrale di cultura della Svizzera italiana Cenobio 103 2002 I diversi ingredienti dell appartenenza nazionale e del sentimento patrio dei ticinesi rivelano un apparente ambivalenza incomprensibile se non si considera la natura duplice e complessa dell identita ticinese Durante i tre secoli di dominazione elvetica nei baliaggi meridionali anche se perdura l identita dei ticinesi con la stirpe italica grazie soprattutto ai tradizionali scambi commerciali e umani con la Lombardia il loro carattere di italianita si amalgama progressivamente risultato delle strette consuetudini statuali politiche e amministrative con quello insorgente di svizzerita elvetismo The different ingredients of national belonging and the homeland sentiment of the Ticinese reveal an apparent ambivalence incomprehensible if one does not consider the dual and complex nature of the Ticinese identity During the three centuries of Swiss domination in the southern bailiwicks even if the identity of the Ticinese with the Italic lineage persists thanks above all to the traditional commercial and human exchanges with Lombardy their Italian character gradually amalgamates the result of strict state political and administrative customs with the rising one of Swissness Atti di Convegno internazionale di studi L umanesimo latino in Svizzera Fondazione Cassamarca 2002 p 64 Retrieved 11 April 2022 importante ricordare che all inizio del Novecento il Ticino aveva appena un secolo di esistenza autonoma che l identita ticinese si era formata a poco a poco nell Ottocento grazie agli sforzi di personalita come Carlo Cattaneo e Stefano Franscini it is important to remember that at the beginning of the twentieth century Ticino had barely a century of autonomous existence that the Ticinese identity was gradually formed in the nineteenth century thanks to the efforts of personalities such as Carlo Cattaneo and Stefano Franscini Lepori Pierre 2008 Il teatro nella Svizzera italiana la generazione dei fondatori 1932 1987 Casagrande p 24 ISBN 9788877135155 Francesco Chiesa che pure aveva attribuito al Ticino l epiteto di Repubblica dell iperbole su La Voce 18 dicembre 1912 afferma I Ticinesi hanno generalmente un concetto altissimo del loro paese delle loro istituzioni dei loro uomini Un critico rigido potrebbe in alcuni casi trovare esagerate le lodi e un tantino eroicomico il tono Ma e bello e quasi commovente che in un paese di tenaci odi politici e di cosi voluttuosi pettegolezzi tutti rossi e neri campagnuoli e cittadini siano tanto concordi in questo sentimento di esaltata stima Republique in French Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Retrieved 1 February 2021 Les nouveaux cantons de la Suisse latine choisirent le titre de republique qui soulignait leur independance alors que canton met l accent sur l appartenance a la Confederation Geneve Neuchatel et le Tessin l ont conserve jusqu a nos jours The new cantons of Latin Switzerland chose the title of republic which underlined their independence while canton emphasizes membership of the Confederation Geneva Neuchatel and Ticino have kept it to this day a b Canton Ticino a taste PDF Swissnews ch Archived from the original PDF on 7 December 2014 Retrieved 5 December 2014 The Architecture of Ticino Tendenza a case of the past PDF BTU Cottbus Archived from the original PDF on 10 December 2014 Retrieved 5 December 2014 K Michael Hays 2000 Architecture Theory Since 1968 MIT Press p 246 ISBN 978 0 262 58188 2 Max Oettli 2011 CultureShock Switzerland Marshall Cavendish p 189 ISBN 978 981 4435 93 2 Nicola Williams Damien Simonis Kerry Walker 2009 Switzerland Lonely Planet p 330 ISBN 978 1 74220 381 2 Joanne Lane 1 July 2007 Adventure Guide to Sicily Hunter Publishing Inc p 165 ISBN 978 1 58843 627 6 150 anni di Rabadan vuoi rivederlo Radiotelevisione svizzera 9 February 2018 Retrieved 18 April 2022 Gentile Gianni 1991 La vita quotidiana in Svizzera dal 1300 Armando Dado Editore p 275 ISBN 9788885115293 Sono fioriti pero anche differenti generi di musica popolare nella Svizzera tedesca i Landler e le sonorita del corno delle Alpi e degli Jodler L arte del coro e stata coltivata nella Svizzera romanda e nel Grigioni romancio grazie a una preesistente ricca tradizione Nel Ticino e in Italia invece fu soprattutto l opera di stile veristico a diventare patrimonio popolare I garzoni panettieri e macellai mentre pedalavano sulle loro biciclette per fare le consegne zufolavano le arie piu famose di Verdi Puccini e Mascagni However different genres of popular music also flourished in German speaking Switzerland the Landler and the sounds of the Alphorn and the Jodlers Choir art was cultivated in French speaking Switzerland and Romansh Grisons thanks to a pre existing rich tradition In Ticino and Italy on the other hand it was above all the veristic style work that became popular heritage The bakers and butchers while pedaling on their bicycles to make deliveries whistled the most famous arias of Verdi Puccini and Mascagni Aonzo Carlo 2015 Northern Italian amp Ticino Region Folk Songs for Mandolin Mel Bay Publications p 5 ISBN 9781610659406 il mandolino e arrivato in Ticino e qui ha messo delle importanti radici essendo tra i principali rappresentanti del patrimonio culturale locale the mandolin arrived in Ticino and here it has taken roots being among the main representatives of the local cultural heritage Rice Timothy 2017 Switzerland The Italian speaking part The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music Europe Routledge ISBN 9781351544269 Tessiner Polenta TicinoTopTen Retrieved 27 November 2014 Oettli Max 2011 CultureShock Switzerland Marshall Cavendish p 158 ISBN 9789814435932 Salumi Prodotti tipici Retrieved 18 April 2022 Olio d oliva ticinese Culinary Heritage of Switzerland Retrieved 9 March 2022 Nel 1494 1600 e 1709 gli oliveti vennero quasi completamente distrutti dal gelo Anni dopo furono accantonati in favore dei gelsi cosi da promuovere l allevamento dei bachi da seta Verso la fine degli anni 80 del secolo scorso la coltivazione dell olivo e stata ripresa In 1494 1600 and 1709 frost destroyed almost all the olive trees Later they were replaced by mulberry trees to promote the breeding of silkworms Olive cultivation in Ticino was revived at the end of the 1980s Torta di Pane Culinary Heritage of Switzerland Retrieved 18 April 2022 Panettone Culinary Heritage of Switzerland Retrieved 18 April 2022 Panettone al cioccolato un ticinese batte tutti Chocolate panettone a Ticinese beats everyone Radiotelevisione svizzera 21 December 2021 Retrieved 18 April 2022 Gazosa die Kultlimonade aus dem Tessin Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen Retrieved 26 November 2014 La gazzosa ticinese sfonda il Gottardo PDF Il Caffe Retrieved 26 November 2014 What is a Boccalino Boccalino Grotto Archived from the original on 5 December 2014 Retrieved 27 November 2014 Presse les titres participants PDF REMP Archived from the original PDF on 7 December 2014 Retrieved 3 December 2014 REMP bulletin des tirages 2014 PDF REMP Archived from the original PDF on 7 December 2014 Retrieved 3 December 2014 Boccia vom Zeitvertreib zum Leistungssport Kommen die Kugelschieber zu olympischen Ehren NZZ ch Retrieved 27 November 2014 Nicht Christoph Pietro Magno und die italienischen Stukkateurtrupps PDF Frankenland franconica uni wuerzburg de Retrieved 4 September 2019 Bibliography edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Coolidge William Augustus Brevoort 1911 Ticino In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 26 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 933 934 Marcello Sorce Keller Canton Ticino una identita musicale Cenobio LII 2003 April June pp 171 184 also later published in Bulletin Schweizerische Gesellschaft fur Musikethnologie und Gesellschaft fur die Volksmusik in der Schweiz October 2005 pp 30 37 External links edit nbsp Media related to Canton of Ticino at Wikimedia Commons Cantone Ticino in Italian official site Ticino Tourism official website of tourism office Official statistics Ticino in a nutshell PDF Repubblica e Cantone Ticino Dipartimento delle istituzioni Residenza governativa 2012 Retrieved 9 December 2019 Portal nbsp Switzerland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ticino amp oldid 1206136397, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.