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Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol

Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol[5] (US: /trɛnˌtn ˌɑːlt ˈɑːd/,[6] UK: /-dɪ-, - ˌælt ˈædɪ/;[7][8] Italian: Trentino-Alto Adige [trenˈtiːno ˈalto ˈaːdidʒe]; Austrian German: Trentino-Südtirol;[9] Ladin: Trentin-Südtirol)[10] is an autonomous region of Italy, located in the northern part of the country. The region has a population of 1.1 million, of whom 62% speak Italian as their mother tongue, 30% speak South Tyrolean German and several foreign languages are spoken by immigrant communities.[11] Since the 1970s, most legislative and administrative powers have been transferred to the two self-governing provinces that make up the region: the province of Trento, commonly known as Trentino, and the province of Bolzano, commonly known as South Tyrol (Alto Adige in Italian). In South Tyrol, German remains the sizeable majority language.

Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol
Trentino-Alto Adige (Italian)
Trentino-Südtirol (Austrian German)
Trentin-Südtirol (Ladin)
CountryItaly
CapitalTrento
Government
 • PresidentMaurizio Fugatti (Lega TrentinoLega)
Area
 • Total13,606.87 km2 (5,253.64 sq mi)
Population
 (2019-01-01)
 • Total1,072,276
 • Density79/km2 (200/sq mi)
 • Official languages[1]
Italian
German (South Tyrolean dialect)
 • Other languages
in some municipalities:
Ladin
Mocheno
Cimbrian
Demonym(s)English: Trentino-Alto Adigan or Trentino-South Tyrolean
Italian: Trentino (man)
Italian: Trentina (woman) or
Italian: Altoatesino (man)
Italian: Altoatesina (woman) or
Italian: Sudtirolese
German: Südtiroler (man)
German: Südtirolerin (woman)
Citizenship
 • Italian93%
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
ISO 3166 codeIT-32
GDP (nominal)€41.7 billion (2017)[3]
GDP per capita€39,200 (2017)[4]
NUTS RegionITD
WebsiteRegione.taa.it

From the 9th century until 1801, the region was part of the Holy Roman Empire. After being part of the short-lived Napoleonic Republic of Italy and Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy, the region was part of the Austrian Empire and its successor Austria-Hungary from 1815 until its 1919 transfer to Italy in the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye at the end of World War I. Together with the Austrian state of Tyrol, it is part of the Euroregion Tyrol-South Tyrol-Trentino.

In English language, the region is known as Trentino-South Tyrol[12] or by its Italian name Trentino-Alto Adige.[13]

History edit

 
The Prince-Bishops of Trent ruled from Buonconsiglio Castle from the 13th until the 19th century

The Romans conquered the region in 15 BC. After the end of the Western Roman Empire, it was divided between the invading Germanic tribes in the Lombard Duchy of Tridentum (today's Trentino), the Alamannic Vinschgau, and the Bavarians (who took the remaining part). After the creation of the Kingdom of Italy under Charlemagne, the Marquisate of Verona included the areas south of Bolzano, while the Duchy of Bavaria received the remaining part.[14]

From the 11th century onwards, part of the region was governed by the prince-bishops of Trent and Brixen, to whom the Holy Roman Emperors had given extensive temporal powers over their bishoprics. Soon, they were overruled by the Counts of Tyrol and Counts of Görz, who also controlled the Puster Valley: in 1363 its last titular, Margarete, Countess of Tyrol ceded the region to the House of Habsburg. The regions north of Salorno were largely Germanized in the early Middle Ages, and important German poets like Arbeo of Freising and Oswald von Wolkenstein were born and lived in the southern part of Tyrol.[15]

The two bishoprics were secularized by the Treaty of Lunéville of 1803 and given to the Habsburgs. Two years later, following the Austrian defeat at Austerlitz, the region was given to Napoleon's ally Bavaria (Treaty of Pressburg, 1805). The new rulers provoked a popular rebellion in 1809, led by Andreas Hofer, a landlord from St. Leonhard in Passeier; this rebellion was crushed the same year. At the resulting Treaty of Paris (28 February 1810), Bavaria ceded the southern part of Tyrol (Trentino and the city of Bolzano) to the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy.[16][17] During French control of the region, it was called officially Haut Adige (literally "High Adige", Italian: "Alto Adige"; German: "Hochetsch") in order to avoid any reference to the historical County of Tyrol.[18] After Napoleon's defeat, in 1815, the region returned to Austria.

Under Austrian rule the territory of today's province of South Tyrol was called südliches Tirol or Deutschsüdtirol,[19] but was occasionally also referred to as Mitteltirol, i.e. Middle Tyrol, due to its geographic position,[20] while Südtirol (Italian: Tirolo meridionale), i.e. South Tyrol, indicated mostly today's province of Trentino.[21] Trentino was also called Welschtirol ("Romance Tyrol", Italian: Tirolo italiano) or Welschsüdtirol ("Romance South Tyrol", Italian: Tirolo meridionale italiano). Sometimes Südtirol also indicated the whole of the Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol region.

During the First World War, major battles were fought high in the Alps and Dolomites between Austro-Hungarian Kaiserjäger and Italian Alpini, for whom control of the region was a key strategic objective. The collapse of the Austro-Hungarian war effort enabled Italian troops to occupy the region in 1918 and its annexation was confirmed in the post-war treaties, which awarded the region to Italy under the terms of the Treaty of Saint-Germain.

 
Cathedral Maria Himmelfahrt in Bolzano/Bozen, capital of South Tyrol
 
View of the Rosengarten group in South Tyrol

Under the dictatorship of Benito Mussolini, the Fascist dictator of Italy (ruled 1922–1943), the German population was subjected to an increased forced programme of Italianization: all references to old Tyrol were banned and the region was referred to as Venezia Tridentina between 1919 and 1947, in an attempt to justify the Italian claims to the area by historically linking the region to one of the Roman Regions of Italy (Regio X Venetia et Histria).[22] Hitler and Mussolini agreed in 1938 that the German-speaking population would be transferred to German-ruled territory or dispersed around Italy, but the outbreak of the Second World War prevented them from fully carrying out the relocation. Nevertheless, thousands of people were relocated to Nazi Germany and only with great difficulties managed to return to their ancestral land after the end of the war.[23]

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

Italy and Austria negotiated the Gruber-De Gasperi Agreement in 1946, put into effect in 1947 when the new republican Italian constitution was promulgated, that the region would be granted considerable autonomy. German and Italian were both made official languages, and German-language education was permitted once more. The region was called Trentino-Alto Adige/Tiroler Etschland between 1947 and 1972.

However, the implementation of the agreement was not seen as satisfactory by neither the German-speaking population nor the Austrian government. The issue became the cause of significant friction between the two countries and was taken up by the United Nations in 1960. A fresh round of negotiations took place in 1961 but proved unsuccessful, partly because of popular discontent and a campaign of terrorism and bombings by German-speaking autonomists and separatists led by the South Tyrolean Liberation Committee.[24][25][26]

The issue was resolved in 1971, when a new Austro-Italian treaty was signed and ratified. It stipulated that disputes in South Tyrol would be submitted for settlement to the International Court of Justice in The Hague, that the province would receive greater autonomy within Italy, and that Austria would not interfere in South Tyrol's internal affairs. The new agreement proved broadly satisfactory to the parties involved and the separatist tensions soon eased. Matters were helped further by Austria's accession to the European Union in 1995, which has helped to improve cross-border cooperation.[18]

In May 2006, senator-for-life Francesco Cossiga introduced a bill that would allow the region to hold a referendum, in which the local electorate could decide whether to stay within the Italian Republic, become fully independent or return to Austria. All parties, including the separatists, rejected this measure as potentially causing a revival of ethnic tensions.

Geography edit

 
Alpine landscape near the village of Stilfs, South Tyrol
 
Lakeside promenade in Riva del Garda, Trentino

The region is bordered by East and North Tyrol (Austria) to the north-east and north respectively, by Graubünden (Switzerland) to the north-west, and by the Italian regions of Lombardy to the west and Veneto to the south and southeast. It covers 13,607 km2 (5,254 sq mi). It is extremely mountainous, covering a large part of the Dolomites and the southern Alps.

The region is composed of two provinces, Trentino in the south and South Tyrol in the north.

Trentino has an area of 6,207 km2 (2,397 sq mi), most of it mountainous land (20% is over 2,000 m (6,600 ft) and 70% over 1,000 m) and covered by vast forests (50% of the territory). The climate is various through the province, from an alpine climate to subcontinental one, with warm and variable summers and cold and quite snowy winters. The region has always been a favourite destination for tourists, both in winter for skiing in the high mountains and in summer to visit the wide valleys and many lakes (the largest being Lake Garda).[27]

South Tyrol has an area of 7,398 square kilometres (2,856 square miles), all of it mountainous land and covered by vast forests. The climate is of the continental type, owing to the influence of the many mountain ranges which stand at well over 3,000 metres (9,800 feet) above sea level and the wide valleys through which flow the main river, the Adige, from north to south and its numerous tributaries. In the city of Bolzano, capital of the province, the average air temperature stands at 12.2 °C (54.0 °F) and the average rainfall at 717.7 mm (28.3 in). The lowest pass across the Alps, the Brenner Pass, is located at the far north of the region on the border with Austria.[28]

Politics edit

 
Map of the two autonomous provinces of the region

The region is divided into two autonomous provinces: Trentino (Autonomous Province of Trento) and South Tyrol (Autonomous Province of Bolzano). The Italian Republic recognised a certain degree of autonomy for the region and its two constituent provinces, which was the result of the Gruber–De Gasperi Agreement of 1946, as well as of the special status of autonomy approved by constitutional law in 1948. This statute gave the region the right to initiate its own laws on a wide range of subjects and to carry out respective administrative functions.

In 1972, the introduction of the second Statute of Autonomy, which was in the centre of the discussions between the Italian and Austrian governments, meant the transfer of the main competencies from the region to the two provinces. The autonomy recognized by the special statute covers the political, legislative, administrative, and fiscal institutions. The second statute turned the region de facto into a loose commonwealth with devolved powers to the two autonomous provinces, with very limited legislative or executive competencies left.

The capital city is Trento, although the two provincial capitals alternate biennially (the other being Bolzano) as the site of the regional assembly.[28]

Administration edit

Province Area (km2) Population Density (inh./km2)
Trentino 6,207.12 541,418 86.56
South Tyrol 7,398.38 532,318 70.14

Economy edit

 
Vineyards at the municipality of Tirol

The region's fertile valleys produce wine, fruit, dairy products, and timber, while its industries include paper, chemical and metal production. The region is a major exporter of hydroelectric power. The most important features of the region's economic structure are the strength of tourism and the special system of co-operation between agriculture and industry. In the last decade, tourism became a very important component of the province's economy. The region, which is a staging-post between the countries of northern Europe and central and southern Italy, has found its true vocation in this leading branch of the services sector with all its spin-offs. The region has a higher concentration of hotels than any other region (6,178 establishments in 2001 with 236,864 hotel beds). The total accommodation capacity of the region counts for 651,426 beds available in hotels and other establishments.[29]

Demographics edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1921 661,000—    
1931 666,000+0.8%
1936 669,000+0.5%
1951 729,000+9.0%
1961 786,000+7.8%
1971 842,000+7.1%
1981 873,000+3.7%
1991 890,000+1.9%
2001 940,000+5.6%
2011 1,037,000+10.3%
2019 1,072,276+3.4%
Source: ISTAT 2011

The region has a population of about 1,072,276 people (541,098 in Trentino and 531,178 in South Tyrol). The population density in the region is low compared to Italy as a whole. In 2008, it equalled to 77.62 inhabitants per square kilometre (201.0/sq mi), whereas the average figure for Italy was 201.50 per square kilometre (521.9/sq mi). The population density in Trentino was 86.56 inhabitants per square kilometre (224.2/sq mi), slightly higher than the one registered in South Tyrol that was equal to 70.14 per square kilometre (181.7/sq mi). As of 2011, the Italian national institute of statistics ISTAT estimated that 90,321 foreigners lived in the region altogether, equal to 8.55% of the total regional population.

Languages edit

 
2011 linguistic census:
  Italian majority
  German majority
  Ladin majority
  Mòcheno majority (Upper German variety)
  Cimbrian majority (Upper German variety)

The main language groups are Italian and German, with small minorities speaking Ladin, Lombard, Mòcheno and Cimbrian.[30] The latter two of which are varieties of the Upper German Bavarian dialect.[31]

In Trentino the majority language is Italian, although there are Cimbrian minorities in the municipality of Luserna and four Mòcheno municipalities in the Mòcheni Valley. There are also Ladin-speaking minorities living in the Fassa Valley and in Non Valley (3.5% of the population). While in Fassa Valley Ladin already enjoys official status, in Non Valley it still does not, despite there being more Ladin speakers in the latter than in the former. Sole Valley also historically belongs to the Ladin area.

In South Tyrol the majority language is German (62% of the population), although in the capital city Bolzano 73% of the population speaks Italian as its maternal language due to internal immigration from other regions of Italy.[32] Italian speakers are also a significant component in other major urban centres of the province, such as in Merano (49% Italian as the mother language) and Brixen (26% mother language).[33] More than 90% of the 120,000 Italian speakers live in Bozen/Bolzano, Merano, Leifers and Brixen, and the greater part of the rest in the small towns south of the capital just north of the border with Trentino or scattered about in very small numbers throughout the rest of the province. The Italian language is a majority in 5 of 116 municipalities. Italian is the first language of 26% of the population (down from 35% in 1960) of the population of 453,000 recorded in the 2011 census, not counting the 51,000 who listed Language as 'Other' who are immigrants. Ladin is the additional official language in some municipalities and a majority in 8. According to the census of 2001, 103 out of 116 communes have a majority of German native speakers, eight of Ladin speakers and five of Italian. Today both German and Italian have the status of co-official languages in South Tyrol.

Heraldry edit

The coat of arms quarters the arms of Trentino (black eagle) and the arms of South Tyrol (red eagle).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Sonderstatut für Trentino-Südtirol, Article 99, Title IX. Region Trentino-Südtirol.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 2 October 2009.
  3. ^ "Eurostat – Tables, Graphs and Maps Interface (TGM) table". Epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu. 12 August 2011. Retrieved 2 September 2019.
  4. ^ "Regional GDP per capita ranged from 31% to 626% of the EU average in 2017" (Press release). European Commission. Retrieved 2 September 2019.
  5. ^ Constitution of Italy, Part II: Organisation of the Republic (Art. 116)
  6. ^ "Trentino-Alto Adige". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  7. ^ "Trentino-Alto Adige". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  8. ^ "Trentino-Alto Adige". Oxford Dictionaries UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.[dead link]
  9. ^ "Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol Region" (PDF). Official website of the Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol Region. 2009. Retrieved 20 February 2009.
  10. ^ Vibrations, Zeppelin Group – Good. "L'Istitut per la pension d'enjonta – Pensplan". Retrieved 8 April 2017.
  11. ^ "Popolazione residente al 1° gennaio". Istituto Nazionale di Statistica. Retrieved 22 June 2021.
  12. ^ "Province of Bolzano/Bozen". Official website of the Autonomous Province of Bolzano/Bozen. 2009. Archived from the original on 20 December 2002. Retrieved 20 February 2009.
  13. ^ "Special Statute of the Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol Region" (PDF). Official website of the Autonomous Province of Bolzano/Bozen. 2009. Retrieved 20 February 2009.
  14. ^ Allgemeiner historischer Handatlas, Gustav Droysen.
  15. ^ Ich Wolkenstein, Dieter Kühn. ISBN 3-458-32197-7, p. 21
  16. ^ Eberhard Weis (1998). "Montgelas und Tirol (1806–1814)" (PDF). Veröffentlichungen des Tiroler Landesmuseums Ferdinandeum (in German). 78: 225.
  17. ^ "Karte: Bayern 1810" (in German). Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  18. ^ a b Prof. Dr. Rolf Steininger (2011). "Die Südtirolfrage". ZIS Zeitgeschichte Informationssystem. Institute of Contemporary History, University of Innsbruck. Retrieved 15 April 2011.
  19. ^ Karl Höffinger (1887). Gries-Bozen in Deutsch-Südtirol, als klimatischer, Terrain-Kurort und Touristenstation – Vademecum für Einheimische, Reisende und Touristen in Gries-Bozen und im Etsch- und Eisack-Gebiete. Innsbruck, Wagner.
  20. ^ e.g. Theodor Trautwein (1868). Wegweiser durch Süd-Baiern, Nord- und Mittel-Tirol und die angrenzenden Theile von Salzburg. Mit den Städten München, Augsburg, Salzburg, Innsbruck, Bozen und Meran. Munich, Lindauer.
  21. ^ Karl Müller (1916). An der Kampffront in Südtirol: Kriegsbriefe eines neutralen Offiziers. Velhagen & Klasing.
  22. ^ On Bolzano's fascist policies cf. Andrea Bonoldi, Hannes Obermair (2006). Tra Roma e Bolzano. Nazione e provincia nel ventennio fascista—Zwischen Rom und Bozen: Staat und Provinz im italienischen Faschismus. Bozen-Bolzano: Città di Bolzano. ISBN 88-901870-9-3
  23. ^ Helmut Alexander, Adolf Leidlmair, Stefan Lechner (1993). Heimatlos: die Umsiedlung der Südtiroler. Vienna: Deuticke. ISBN 3-216-07832-9
  24. ^ "Il movimento terroristico negli anni '60 - DNA Trentino". Dna.trentino.it. 22 June 1967. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  25. ^ fab (27 August 2017). "Vittime del terrorismo in Alto Adige 1965-1967 – Piantiamolamemoria". Piantiamolamemoria.org. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  26. ^ "Sessant'anni fa la "Notte dei fuochi": l'analisi e il racconto nel blog di Luigi Sardi - Blog | l'Adige.it". Ladige.it. 15 March 2021. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  27. ^ . Circa.europa.eu. Archived from the original on 5 August 2007. Retrieved 6 May 2009.
  28. ^ a b . Circa.europa.eu. Archived from the original on 5 August 2007. Retrieved 6 May 2009.
  29. ^ . Circa.europa.eu. Archived from the original on 1 February 2009. Retrieved 6 May 2009.
  30. ^ "Lombard".
  31. ^ Anthony R. Rowley. "'Mocheno e Cimbro'. Von Dialek(ten) zu Sprache(n)?" In: Dieter Stellmacher, Dialektologie zwischen Tradition und Neuansätzen, Steiner, Stuttgart 2000, p. 213-221
  32. ^ SPA, Südtiroler Informatik AG | Informatica Alto Adige. "Landesinstitut für Statistik – Autonome Provinz Bozen – Südtirol" (PDF). Retrieved 8 April 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  33. ^ Statistisches Jahrbuch für Südtirol 2014 / Annuario statistico della Provincia di Bolzano 2014 | work = Table 3.18, page 118

External links edit

  •   Media related to Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Geographic data related to Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol at OpenStreetMap
  • Official site of Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol (in German and Italian)

46°04′N 11°07′E / 46.067°N 11.117°E / 46.067; 11.117

trentino, alto, adige, südtirol, ɑː, ɑː, italian, trentino, alto, adige, trenˈtiːno, ˈalto, ˈaːdidʒe, austrian, german, trentino, südtirol, ladin, trentin, südtirol, autonomous, region, italy, located, northern, part, country, region, population, million, whom. Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol 5 US t r ɛ n ˌ t iː n oʊ ˌ ɑː l t oʊ ˈ ɑː d iː dʒ eɪ 6 UK d ɪ dʒ ˌ ae l t oʊ ˈ ae d ɪ dʒ eɪ 7 8 Italian Trentino Alto Adige trenˈtiːno ˈalto ˈaːdidʒe Austrian German Trentino Sudtirol 9 Ladin Trentin Sudtirol 10 is an autonomous region of Italy located in the northern part of the country The region has a population of 1 1 million of whom 62 speak Italian as their mother tongue 30 speak South Tyrolean German and several foreign languages are spoken by immigrant communities 11 Since the 1970s most legislative and administrative powers have been transferred to the two self governing provinces that make up the region the province of Trento commonly known as Trentino and the province of Bolzano commonly known as South Tyrol Alto Adige in Italian In South Tyrol German remains the sizeable majority language Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol Trentino Alto Adige Italian Trentino Sudtirol Austrian German Trentin Sudtirol Ladin Autonomous regionFlagCoat of armsCountryItalyCapitalTrentoGovernment PresidentMaurizio Fugatti Lega Trentino Lega Area Total13 606 87 km2 5 253 64 sq mi Population 2019 01 01 Total1 072 276 Density79 km2 200 sq mi Official languages 1 ItalianGerman South Tyrolean dialect Other languagesin some municipalities LadinMochenoCimbrianDemonym s English Trentino Alto Adigan or Trentino South Tyrolean Italian Trentino man Italian Trentina woman orItalian Altoatesino man Italian Altoatesina woman orItalian SudtiroleseGerman Sudtiroler man German Sudtirolerin woman Citizenship 2 Italian93 Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST ISO 3166 codeIT 32GDP nominal 41 7 billion 2017 3 GDP per capita 39 200 2017 4 NUTS RegionITDWebsiteRegione taa itFrom the 9th century until 1801 the region was part of the Holy Roman Empire After being part of the short lived Napoleonic Republic of Italy and Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy the region was part of the Austrian Empire and its successor Austria Hungary from 1815 until its 1919 transfer to Italy in the Treaty of Saint Germain en Laye at the end of World War I Together with the Austrian state of Tyrol it is part of the Euroregion Tyrol South Tyrol Trentino In English language the region is known as Trentino South Tyrol 12 or by its Italian name Trentino Alto Adige 13 Contents 1 History 2 Geography 3 Politics 3 1 Administration 4 Economy 5 Demographics 5 1 Languages 6 Heraldry 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory editMain articles History of Trentino and History of South Tyrol nbsp The Prince Bishops of Trent ruled from Buonconsiglio Castle from the 13th until the 19th centuryThe Romans conquered the region in 15 BC After the end of the Western Roman Empire it was divided between the invading Germanic tribes in the Lombard Duchy of Tridentum today s Trentino the Alamannic Vinschgau and the Bavarians who took the remaining part After the creation of the Kingdom of Italy under Charlemagne the Marquisate of Verona included the areas south of Bolzano while the Duchy of Bavaria received the remaining part 14 From the 11th century onwards part of the region was governed by the prince bishops of Trent and Brixen to whom the Holy Roman Emperors had given extensive temporal powers over their bishoprics Soon they were overruled by the Counts of Tyrol and Counts of Gorz who also controlled the Puster Valley in 1363 its last titular Margarete Countess of Tyrol ceded the region to the House of Habsburg The regions north of Salorno were largely Germanized in the early Middle Ages and important German poets like Arbeo of Freising and Oswald von Wolkenstein were born and lived in the southern part of Tyrol 15 The two bishoprics were secularized by the Treaty of Luneville of 1803 and given to the Habsburgs Two years later following the Austrian defeat at Austerlitz the region was given to Napoleon s ally Bavaria Treaty of Pressburg 1805 The new rulers provoked a popular rebellion in 1809 led by Andreas Hofer a landlord from St Leonhard in Passeier this rebellion was crushed the same year At the resulting Treaty of Paris 28 February 1810 Bavaria ceded the southern part of Tyrol Trentino and the city of Bolzano to the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy 16 17 During French control of the region it was called officially Haut Adige literally High Adige Italian Alto Adige German Hochetsch in order to avoid any reference to the historical County of Tyrol 18 After Napoleon s defeat in 1815 the region returned to Austria Under Austrian rule the territory of today s province of South Tyrol was called sudliches Tirol or Deutschsudtirol 19 but was occasionally also referred to as Mitteltirol i e Middle Tyrol due to its geographic position 20 while Sudtirol Italian Tirolo meridionale i e South Tyrol indicated mostly today s province of Trentino 21 Trentino was also called Welschtirol Romance Tyrol Italian Tirolo italiano or Welschsudtirol Romance South Tyrol Italian Tirolo meridionale italiano Sometimes Sudtirol also indicated the whole of the Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol region During the First World War major battles were fought high in the Alps and Dolomites between Austro Hungarian Kaiserjager and Italian Alpini for whom control of the region was a key strategic objective The collapse of the Austro Hungarian war effort enabled Italian troops to occupy the region in 1918 and its annexation was confirmed in the post war treaties which awarded the region to Italy under the terms of the Treaty of Saint Germain nbsp Cathedral Maria Himmelfahrt in Bolzano Bozen capital of South Tyrol nbsp View of the Rosengarten group in South TyrolUnder the dictatorship of Benito Mussolini the Fascist dictator of Italy ruled 1922 1943 the German population was subjected to an increased forced programme of Italianization all references to old Tyrol were banned and the region was referred to as Venezia Tridentina between 1919 and 1947 in an attempt to justify the Italian claims to the area by historically linking the region to one of the Roman Regions of Italy Regio X Venetia et Histria 22 Hitler and Mussolini agreed in 1938 that the German speaking population would be transferred to German ruled territory or dispersed around Italy but the outbreak of the Second World War prevented them from fully carrying out the relocation Nevertheless thousands of people were relocated to Nazi Germany and only with great difficulties managed to return to their ancestral land after the end of the war 23 In 1943 when the Italian government signed an armistice with the Allies the region was occupied by Germany which reorganised it as the Operation Zone of the Alpine Foothills and put it under the administration of Gauleiter Franz Hofer The region was de facto annexed to the German Reich with the addition of the province of Belluno until the end of the war This status ended along with the Nazi regime and Italian rule was restored in 1945 Italy and Austria negotiated the Gruber De Gasperi Agreement in 1946 put into effect in 1947 when the new republican Italian constitution was promulgated that the region would be granted considerable autonomy German and Italian were both made official languages and German language education was permitted once more The region was called Trentino Alto Adige Tiroler Etschland between 1947 and 1972 However the implementation of the agreement was not seen as satisfactory by neither the German speaking population nor the Austrian government The issue became the cause of significant friction between the two countries and was taken up by the United Nations in 1960 A fresh round of negotiations took place in 1961 but proved unsuccessful partly because of popular discontent and a campaign of terrorism and bombings by German speaking autonomists and separatists led by the South Tyrolean Liberation Committee 24 25 26 The issue was resolved in 1971 when a new Austro Italian treaty was signed and ratified It stipulated that disputes in South Tyrol would be submitted for settlement to the International Court of Justice in The Hague that the province would receive greater autonomy within Italy and that Austria would not interfere in South Tyrol s internal affairs The new agreement proved broadly satisfactory to the parties involved and the separatist tensions soon eased Matters were helped further by Austria s accession to the European Union in 1995 which has helped to improve cross border cooperation 18 In May 2006 senator for life Francesco Cossiga introduced a bill that would allow the region to hold a referendum in which the local electorate could decide whether to stay within the Italian Republic become fully independent or return to Austria All parties including the separatists rejected this measure as potentially causing a revival of ethnic tensions Geography edit nbsp Alpine landscape near the village of Stilfs South Tyrol nbsp Lakeside promenade in Riva del Garda TrentinoThe region is bordered by East and North Tyrol Austria to the north east and north respectively by Graubunden Switzerland to the north west and by the Italian regions of Lombardy to the west and Veneto to the south and southeast It covers 13 607 km2 5 254 sq mi It is extremely mountainous covering a large part of the Dolomites and the southern Alps The region is composed of two provinces Trentino in the south and South Tyrol in the north Trentino has an area of 6 207 km2 2 397 sq mi most of it mountainous land 20 is over 2 000 m 6 600 ft and 70 over 1 000 m and covered by vast forests 50 of the territory The climate is various through the province from an alpine climate to subcontinental one with warm and variable summers and cold and quite snowy winters The region has always been a favourite destination for tourists both in winter for skiing in the high mountains and in summer to visit the wide valleys and many lakes the largest being Lake Garda 27 South Tyrol has an area of 7 398 square kilometres 2 856 square miles all of it mountainous land and covered by vast forests The climate is of the continental type owing to the influence of the many mountain ranges which stand at well over 3 000 metres 9 800 feet above sea level and the wide valleys through which flow the main river the Adige from north to south and its numerous tributaries In the city of Bolzano capital of the province the average air temperature stands at 12 2 C 54 0 F and the average rainfall at 717 7 mm 28 3 in The lowest pass across the Alps the Brenner Pass is located at the far north of the region on the border with Austria 28 Politics editMain article Politics of Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol nbsp Map of the two autonomous provinces of the regionThe region is divided into two autonomous provinces Trentino Autonomous Province of Trento and South Tyrol Autonomous Province of Bolzano The Italian Republic recognised a certain degree of autonomy for the region and its two constituent provinces which was the result of the Gruber De Gasperi Agreement of 1946 as well as of the special status of autonomy approved by constitutional law in 1948 This statute gave the region the right to initiate its own laws on a wide range of subjects and to carry out respective administrative functions In 1972 the introduction of the second Statute of Autonomy which was in the centre of the discussions between the Italian and Austrian governments meant the transfer of the main competencies from the region to the two provinces The autonomy recognized by the special statute covers the political legislative administrative and fiscal institutions The second statute turned the region de facto into a loose commonwealth with devolved powers to the two autonomous provinces with very limited legislative or executive competencies left The capital city is Trento although the two provincial capitals alternate biennially the other being Bolzano as the site of the regional assembly 28 Administration edit Province Area km2 Population Density inh km2 Trentino 6 207 12 541 418 86 56South Tyrol 7 398 38 532 318 70 14Economy edit nbsp Vineyards at the municipality of TirolSee also Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol wine The region s fertile valleys produce wine fruit dairy products and timber while its industries include paper chemical and metal production The region is a major exporter of hydroelectric power The most important features of the region s economic structure are the strength of tourism and the special system of co operation between agriculture and industry In the last decade tourism became a very important component of the province s economy The region which is a staging post between the countries of northern Europe and central and southern Italy has found its true vocation in this leading branch of the services sector with all its spin offs The region has a higher concentration of hotels than any other region 6 178 establishments in 2001 with 236 864 hotel beds The total accommodation capacity of the region counts for 651 426 beds available in hotels and other establishments 29 Demographics editHistorical populationYearPop 1921661 000 1931666 000 0 8 1936669 000 0 5 1951729 000 9 0 1961786 000 7 8 1971842 000 7 1 1981873 000 3 7 1991890 000 1 9 2001940 000 5 6 20111 037 000 10 3 20191 072 276 3 4 Source ISTAT 2011The region has a population of about 1 072 276 people 541 098 in Trentino and 531 178 in South Tyrol The population density in the region is low compared to Italy as a whole In 2008 it equalled to 77 62 inhabitants per square kilometre 201 0 sq mi whereas the average figure for Italy was 201 50 per square kilometre 521 9 sq mi The population density in Trentino was 86 56 inhabitants per square kilometre 224 2 sq mi slightly higher than the one registered in South Tyrol that was equal to 70 14 per square kilometre 181 7 sq mi As of 2011 update the Italian national institute of statistics ISTAT estimated that 90 321 foreigners lived in the region altogether equal to 8 55 of the total regional population Languages edit nbsp 2011 linguistic census Italian majority German majority Ladin majority Mocheno majority Upper German variety Cimbrian majority Upper German variety The main language groups are Italian and German with small minorities speaking Ladin Lombard Mocheno and Cimbrian 30 The latter two of which are varieties of the Upper German Bavarian dialect 31 In Trentino the majority language is Italian although there are Cimbrian minorities in the municipality of Luserna and four Mocheno municipalities in the Mocheni Valley There are also Ladin speaking minorities living in the Fassa Valley and in Non Valley 3 5 of the population While in Fassa Valley Ladin already enjoys official status in Non Valley it still does not despite there being more Ladin speakers in the latter than in the former Sole Valley also historically belongs to the Ladin area In South Tyrol the majority language is German 62 of the population although in the capital city Bolzano 73 of the population speaks Italian as its maternal language due to internal immigration from other regions of Italy 32 Italian speakers are also a significant component in other major urban centres of the province such as in Merano 49 Italian as the mother language and Brixen 26 mother language 33 More than 90 of the 120 000 Italian speakers live in Bozen Bolzano Merano Leifers and Brixen and the greater part of the rest in the small towns south of the capital just north of the border with Trentino or scattered about in very small numbers throughout the rest of the province The Italian language is a majority in 5 of 116 municipalities Italian is the first language of 26 of the population down from 35 in 1960 of the population of 453 000 recorded in the 2011 census not counting the 51 000 who listed Language as Other who are immigrants Ladin is the additional official language in some municipalities and a majority in 8 According to the census of 2001 103 out of 116 communes have a majority of German native speakers eight of Ladin speakers and five of Italian Today both German and Italian have the status of co official languages in South Tyrol Heraldry editThe coat of arms quarters the arms of Trentino black eagle and the arms of South Tyrol red eagle nbsp Coat of arms of Trentino South TyrolSee also editTyrol Trentino South Tyrol Districts of Trentino Alto Adige SudtirolReferences edit Sonderstatut fur Trentino Sudtirol Article 99 Title IX Region Trentino Sudtirol Statistiche demografiche ISTAT Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 2 October 2009 Eurostat Tables Graphs and Maps Interface TGM table Epp eurostat ec europa eu 12 August 2011 Retrieved 2 September 2019 Regional GDP per capita ranged from 31 to 626 of the EU average in 2017 Press release European Commission Retrieved 2 September 2019 Constitution of Italy Part II Organisation of the Republic Art 116 Trentino Alto Adige Merriam Webster com Dictionary Retrieved 6 May 2019 Trentino Alto Adige Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 6 May 2019 Trentino Alto Adige Oxford Dictionaries UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press dead link Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol Region PDF Official website of the Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol Region 2009 Retrieved 20 February 2009 Vibrations Zeppelin Group Good L Istitut per la pension d enjonta Pensplan Retrieved 8 April 2017 Popolazione residente al 1 gennaio Istituto Nazionale di Statistica Retrieved 22 June 2021 Province of Bolzano Bozen Official website of the Autonomous Province of Bolzano Bozen 2009 Archived from the original on 20 December 2002 Retrieved 20 February 2009 Special Statute of the Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol Region PDF Official website of the Autonomous Province of Bolzano Bozen 2009 Retrieved 20 February 2009 Allgemeiner historischer Handatlas Gustav Droysen Ich Wolkenstein Dieter Kuhn ISBN 3 458 32197 7 p 21 Eberhard Weis 1998 Montgelas und Tirol 1806 1814 PDF Veroffentlichungen des Tiroler Landesmuseums Ferdinandeum in German 78 225 Karte Bayern 1810 in German Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte Retrieved 3 March 2020 a b Prof Dr Rolf Steininger 2011 Die Sudtirolfrage ZIS Zeitgeschichte Informationssystem Institute of Contemporary History University of Innsbruck Retrieved 15 April 2011 Karl Hoffinger 1887 Gries Bozen in Deutsch Sudtirol als klimatischer Terrain Kurort und Touristenstation Vademecum fur Einheimische Reisende und Touristen in Gries Bozen und im Etsch und Eisack Gebiete Innsbruck Wagner e g Theodor Trautwein 1868 Wegweiser durch Sud Baiern Nord und Mittel Tirol und die angrenzenden Theile von Salzburg Mit den Stadten Munchen Augsburg Salzburg Innsbruck Bozen und Meran Munich Lindauer Karl Muller 1916 An der Kampffront in Sudtirol Kriegsbriefe eines neutralen Offiziers Velhagen amp Klasing On Bolzano s fascist policies cf Andrea Bonoldi Hannes Obermair 2006 Tra Roma e Bolzano Nazione e provincia nel ventennio fascista Zwischen Rom und Bozen Staat und Provinz im italienischen Faschismus Bozen Bolzano Citta di Bolzano ISBN 88 901870 9 3 Helmut Alexander Adolf Leidlmair Stefan Lechner 1993 Heimatlos die Umsiedlung der Sudtiroler Vienna Deuticke ISBN 3 216 07832 9 Il movimento terroristico negli anni 60 DNA Trentino Dna trentino it 22 June 1967 Retrieved 16 March 2022 fab 27 August 2017 Vittime del terrorismo in Alto Adige 1965 1967 Piantiamolamemoria Piantiamolamemoria org Retrieved 16 March 2022 Sessant anni fa la Notte dei fuochi l analisi e il racconto nel blog di Luigi Sardi Blog l Adige it Ladige it 15 March 2021 Retrieved 16 March 2022 Eurostat Circa europa eu Archived from the original on 5 August 2007 Retrieved 6 May 2009 a b Eurostat Circa europa eu Archived from the original on 5 August 2007 Retrieved 6 May 2009 Eurostat Circa europa eu Archived from the original on 1 February 2009 Retrieved 6 May 2009 Lombard Anthony R Rowley Mocheno e Cimbro Von Dialek ten zu Sprache n In Dieter Stellmacher Dialektologie zwischen Tradition und Neuansatzen Steiner Stuttgart 2000 p 213 221 SPA Sudtiroler Informatik AG Informatica Alto Adige Landesinstitut fur Statistik Autonome Provinz Bozen Sudtirol PDF Retrieved 8 April 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Statistisches Jahrbuch fur Sudtirol 2014 Annuario statistico della Provincia di Bolzano 2014 work Table 3 18 page 118External links edit nbsp Media related to Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Geographic data related to Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol at OpenStreetMap Official site of Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol in German and Italian 46 04 N 11 07 E 46 067 N 11 117 E 46 067 11 117 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol amp oldid 1184158931, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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