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Umbria

Umbria (/ˈʌmbriə/ UM-bree-ə, Italian: [ˈumbrja]) is a region of central Italy. It includes Lake Trasimeno and Marmore Falls, and is crossed by the River Tiber. It is the only landlocked region on the Apennine Peninsula. The regional capital is Perugia.

Umbria
CountryItaly
CapitalPerugia
Government
 • PresidentDonatella Tesei (LN)
Area
 • Total8,456 km2 (3,265 sq mi)
Population
 (2016-05-31)
 • Total889,001
 • Density110/km2 (270/sq mi)
Demonym(s)English: Umbrian
Italian: Umbro (man)
Italian: Umbra (woman)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
ISO 3166 codeIT-55
GDP (nominal)€22.5 billion (2018)[1]
GDP per capita€25,400 (2018)[2]
HDI (2021)0.900[3]
very high · 12th of 21
NUTS RegionITE
Websitewww.regione.umbria.it

The region is characterized by hills, mountains, valleys and historical towns such as the university centre of Perugia, Assisi (a World Heritage Site associated with St. Francis of Assisi), Terni, Norcia, Città di Castello, Gubbio, Spoleto, Orvieto, Todi, Castiglione del Lago, Narni, Amelia, Spello and other small cities.

Geography

Umbria is bordered by Tuscany to the west and the north, Marche to the east and Lazio to the south. Partly hilly and mountainous, and partly flat and fertile owing to the valley of the Tiber, its topography includes part of the central Apennines, with the highest point in the region at Monte Vettore on the border of the Marche, at 2,476 metres (8,123 feet); the lowest point is Attigliano, 96 metres (315 feet). It is the only Italian region having neither a coastline nor a common border with other countries. The comune of Città di Castello has an exclave named Monte Ruperto within Marche. Contained within Umbria is the hamlet of Cospaia, which was a tiny republic from 1440 to 1826, created by accident.

Umbria is crossed by two valleys: the Umbrian valley ("Valle Umbra"), stretching from Perugia to Spoleto, and the Tiber Valley ("Val Tiberina"), north and west of the first one, from Città di Castello to the border with Lazio. The Tiber River forms the approximate border with Lazio, although its source is just over the Tuscan border. The Tiber's three principal tributaries flow southward through Umbria. The Chiascio basin is relatively uninhabited as far as Bastia Umbra. About 10 kilometres (6 miles) farther on, it joins the Tiber at Torgiano. The Topino, cleaving the Apennines with passes that the Via Flaminia and successor roads follow, makes a sharp turn at Foligno to flow NW for a few kilometres before joining the Chiascio below Bettona. The third river is the Nera, flowing into the Tiber further south, at Terni; its valley is called the Valnerina. The upper Nera cuts ravines in the mountains; the lower, in the Tiber basin, has created a wide floodplain.

In antiquity, the plain was covered by a pair of shallow, interlocking lakes, the Lacus Clitorius and the Lacus Umber. They were drained by the Romans over several hundred years. An earthquake in the 4th century and the political collapse of the Roman Empire resulted in the refilling of the basin. It was drained a second time, almost a thousand years later, during a 500-year period: Benedictine monks started the process in the 13th century, and the draining was completed by an engineer from Foligno in the 18th century.

The eastern part of the region, being crossed by many faults, has been often hit by earthquakes: the last ones have been that of 1997 (which hit Nocera Umbra, Gualdo Tadino, Assisi and Foligno) and those of 2016 (which struck Norcia and the Valnerina).[4]

In literature, Umbria is referred to as Il cuore verde d'Italia or The green heart of Italy. The phrase is taken from a poem by Giosuè Carducci, the subject of which is the source of the Clitunno River in Umbria.

History

 
Cityscape of the capital Perugia
 
A typical landscape of the Umbrian countryside
 
View of Assisi
 
View of Norcia
 
View of the medieval town of Gubbio
 
East side of Carbonana Castle

Antiquity

The region is named for the Umbri people, an Italic people which was absorbed by the expansion of the Romans. The Umbri, unlike the Etruscans, with few exceptions did not live in an urban society, but occupied small dwellings located in the Apennines.[5] Pliny the Elder recounted a fanciful derivation for the tribal name from the Greek ὄμβρος (ombros, "a shower"), which led to the idea that they had survived the Deluge familiar from Greek mythology, allowing them to claim to be the most ancient race in Italy.[6] In fact, they belonged to a broader family of neighbouring peoples with similar roots. Their language was Umbrian, one of the Italic languages, related to Latin and Oscan. The town of Gubbio houses today the longest and most important document of any of the Osco-Umbrian group of languages, the Iguvine Tablets, written in Umbrian at the turn of the 2nd and 1st centuries BC.[7] The northern part of the region was occupied by Gallic tribes.

The Umbri probably sprang, like neighbouring peoples, from the creators of the Terramara, and Proto-Villanovan culture in northern and central Italy, who entered north-eastern Italy at the beginning of the Bronze Age.[8]

The Etruscans were the chief enemies of the Umbri. The Etruscan invasion extended from the western seaboard towards the north and east from about 700 to 500 BC. They eventually drove the Umbrians towards the Apennine uplands and captured 300 Umbrian towns. Nevertheless, the Umbrian population does not seem to have been eradicated in the conquered districts.[8] The border between Etruria and Umbria was the Tiber river,[9] as testified by the ancient name of Todi, Tular ("border").[10]

After the downfall of the Etruscans, Umbrians aided the Samnites in their struggle against Rome (308 BC). Later communications with Samnium were impeded by the Roman fortress of Narnia (founded 229 BC on the place of the umbrian Nequinum, conquered in 299 BC).[11][12][8] Romans defeated the Samnites and their Gallic allies in the battle of Sentinum (295 BC).[12] Allied Umbrians and Etruscans had to return home and defend each of their territories against simultaneous Roman attacks, leaving the Samnites without their help at Sentinum.

The Roman victory at Sentinum initiated a period of integration under the Roman rulers, who established some colonies, such as Spoletium, and built the via Flaminia (219 BC).[12] The via Flaminia became a principal vector for Roman development in Umbria.[12] During Hannibal's invasion during the second Punic war, the battle of Lake Trasimene was fought inside the borders of today's Umbria,[12] but the local people did not aid the invader.

During the Roman civil war between Mark Antony and Octavian (40 BC), the city of Perugia supported Antony and was almost completely destroyed by Octavian. In Pliny the Elder's time, 49 independent communities still existed in Umbria, and the abundance of inscriptions and the high proportion of recruits in the imperial army attest to its population.[8] Under Augustus, Umbria became the Regio VI of Roman Italy.[12]

Modern Umbria is different from Roman Umbria. Roman Umbria extended through most of what is now the northern Marche to Ravenna, but excluded the west bank of the Tiber, which belonged to Etruria.[12] Thus Perugia was an Etruscan city and the area around Norcia was in the Sabine territory.[13]

After the collapse of the Roman empire, Ostrogoths and Byzantines struggled for supremacy in the region, and the decisive battle of the war between these two peoples took place near modern Gualdo Tadino.[14]

Middle Ages

Soon after the end of the Gothic war, the Lombards invaded Italy and founded the duchy of Spoleto, covering much of today's southern Umbria, but the Byzantine were able to keep in the region a corridor along the Via Flaminia linking Rome with the Exarchate of Ravenna and the Pentapolis.[12] The Lombard king controlled also the northern part of the region ruled directly by Pavia. When Charlemagne conquered most of the Lombard kingdoms, some Umbrian territories were given to the Pope, who established temporal power over them.[15] Some cities acquired a form of autonomy named comune.[15] These cities were frequently at war with each other, often in a context of more general conflicts, either between the Papacy and the Holy Roman Empire or between the Guelphs and the Ghibellines.

In the early 14th century, the signorie arose and the most important of them were those of the Vitelli in Città di Castello,[16] of the Baglioni in Perugia[17] and of the Trinci in Foligno,[18] but the region was subsumed by the middle of the same century into the Papal States by Cardinal Albornoz,[19] who in this way prepared the return of the pope from Avignon to Rome. Città di Castello was subsumed later into the Papal States by Cesare Borgia.[16] During the 15th century Renaissance spread in the northern part of the region. It was in this period that humanists started to use again the ancient denomination of "Umbria" to name the area,[20] which until then had been named "Ducato", after the Duchy of Spoleto in the southern part of it. The supremacy of the pope on Umbria was reinforced in 16th century through the erection of a fortress in Perugia by Pope Paul III, named after him Rocca Paolina.[19] The Papacy ruled the region uncontested until the end of the 18th century.[19]

Modern history

After the French Revolution and the French conquest of Italy, Umbria became part of the ephemeral Roman Republic (1798–1799) and later, part of the Napoleonic Empire (1809–1814) under the name of department of Trasimène.[19]

After Napoleon's defeat, the Pope regained Umbria and ruled it until 1860.[21] In that year, during Italian Risorgimento, Umbria with Marche and part of Emilia Romagna were annexed by Piedmontese King Victor Emmanuel II, and the people of Perugia destroyed in the same year the Rocca Paolina, symbol of the papal oppression.[21] The region of Umbria, with capital Perugia, became part of the Kingdom of Italy in the following year.[21] The region, whose economy was mainly based on agriculture, experienced a dramatic economic shift at the end of the 19th century with the founding of the Acciaierie di Terni, a major steelwork placed in Terni because of its abundance of electric power due to the Marmore waterfall and its secluded position.[22]

The region of Umbria at the time was somewhat larger than today, comprising Rieti to the south, now part of Lazio.[21] Rieti was detached and added to the Province of Rome (Lazio) in 1923.[21] In 1927, the region of Umbria was divided into the provinces of Perugia and Terni.[21]

During WWII, the industrial centers of the region like Terni and Foligno were heavily bombed and in 1944 became a battlefield between the allied forces and the Germans retreating towards the Gothic Line.[23] In 1946, Umbria was incorporated into the Italian Republic as a region, comprising the two provinces of Perugia and Terni.[23]

Economy

The present economic structure emerged from a series of transformations which took place mainly in the 1970s and 1980s. During this period, there was rapid expansion among small and medium-sized firms and a gradual retrenchment among the large firms which had hitherto characterised the region's industrial base. This process of structural adjustment is still going on.[24]

Economically the most important region is the upper Tiber valley with Città di Castello. Terni steelworks (stainless steel, titanium, alloy steel) and processing companies (automotive, stainless steel tubes, industrial food facility) account for 20 to 25% of Umbria's GDP. In Terni there are also many multinational companies in the fields of chemistry, hydroelectric power, renewable sources of energy, and textiles (Alcantara, Cashmere). In the rest of the region the ornamental ceramics industry is much esteemed.[24]

Umbrian agriculture is noted for its tobacco, olive oil and vineyards, which produce excellent wines. Regional varietals include the white Orvieto, which draws agri-tourists to the vineyards in the area surrounding the medieval town of the same name.[25] A notable wine is the Grechetto[26] of Todi. Other noted wines produced in Umbria are Torgiano and Rosso di Montefalco. The Umbrian wineries are at the center of the "Cantine Aperte" or "Open Cellars" event, when local wine makers open their wineries to the public.[27] Another typical Umbrian product is the black truffle found in Valnerina, an area that produces 45% of this product in Italy.[24]

The food industry in Umbria produces processed pork-meats, confectionery, pasta and the traditional products of Valnerina in preserved form (truffles, lentils, cheese).

The unemployment rate stood at 8.2% in 2020.[28]

Umber

Umber
 
      Color coordinates
Hex triplet#635147
sRGBB (r, g, b)(99, 81, 71)
HSV (h, s, v)(21°, 28%, 39%)
CIELChuv (L, C, h)(36, 15, 39°)
Source
ISCC–NBS descriptorDark grayish yellowish brown
B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte)

Umbria is the region where the Umber pigment was originally extracted.[29] The name comes from terra d'ombra, or earth of Umbria, the Italian name of the pigment. The word also may be related to the Latin word umbra, meaning "shadow".[30] Umber is a natural brown or reddish-brown earth pigment that contains iron oxide and manganese oxide.[29]

In the 20th century, natural umber pigments began to be replaced by pigments made with synthetic iron oxide and manganese oxide. Natural umber pigments are still being made, with Cyprus as a prominent source.

Government and politics

Umbria was a former stronghold of the Italian Communist Party, forming with Tuscany, Emilia-Romagna and Marche what was then known as Italy's "Red Regions".[31] Umbria was considered a stronghold of the Democratic Party and left-leaning parties for over 50 years, however in 2019 the candidate of the centre-right coalition Donatella Tesei won the region's presidential election against her centre-left rival Vincenzo Bianconi, garnering 57.5% of the vote.[32]

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1861 442,000—    
1871 479,000+8.4%
1881 497,000+3.8%
1901 579,000+16.5%
1911 614,000+6.0%
1921 658,000+7.2%
1931 696,000+5.8%
1941 723,000+3.9%
1951 804,000+11.2%
1961 795,000−1.1%
1971 776,000−2.4%
1981 808,000+4.1%
1991 812,000+0.5%
2001 826,000+1.7%
2011 883,000+6.9%
2017 888,908+0.7%
Source: ISTAT 2001

As of 2008, the Italian national institute of statistics ISTAT estimated that 75,631 foreign-born immigrants live in Umbria, equal to 8.5% of the total population of the region.

Administrative divisions

Umbria is divided into two provinces:

Province Area (km2) Area (sq mi) Population Density (per km2) Density (per sq mi)
Province of Perugia 6,334 2,446 660,466 104 270
Province of Terni 2,122 819 228,535 109 280

Festivals

 
In Gubbio each year takes place the Corsa dei Ceri, or race of the "candles", which are symbolized by these tall wooden poles

One of the most important festivals in Umbria is "the festival of the Ceri (Candles)", also known as Saint Ubaldo Day in Gubbio. The race has been held every year since 1160, on the 15th day of May. The festival is focused around a race consisting of three teams of cerioli, carrying large symbolic "candles" topped by saints, including St. Ubald (the patron saint of Gubbio), S. Giorgio (St. George), and S. Antonio (Anthony the Great), and run through throngs of cheering supporters. The cerioli are clad in the distinctive colors of yellow, blue or black, according to the saint they support, with white trousers and red belts and neckbands. They travel up much of the mountain from the main square in front of the Palazzo dei Consoli to the basilica of St. Ubaldo, each team carrying a statue of their saint mounted on a wooden octagonal prism, similar to an hour-glass shape 4 metres tall and weighing about 280 kg (617 lb).

The race has strong devotional, civic, and historical overtones and is one of the best-known folklore manifestations in Italy, and therefore the Ceri were chosen as the heraldic emblem on the coat of arms of Umbria as a modern administrative region.[citation needed]

Umbria is not only known for its historical recollections such as the festival of the Ceri, Calendimaggio in Assisi and the giostra della Quintana in Foligno, but also for one of the biggest jazz music festivals called Umbria Jazz. Umbria Jazz was born as a festival in 1973 and since 2003 has been held in the Umbrian capital "Perugia" in July; it has become the fixed appointment of all jazz and good music lovers. Another important festival is the Festival dei Due Mondi (Festival of the Two Worlds), an annual summer music and opera festival which is held each June to early July in Spoleto.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "Eurostat – Tables, Graphs and Maps Interface (TGM) table". Ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
  2. ^ "Regional GDP per capita ranged from 30% to 263% of the EU average in 2018" (Press release). ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 1 September 2020.
  3. ^ "Sub-national HDI – Area Database – Global Data Lab". Hdi.globaldatalab.org. Retrieved 5 March 2023.
  4. ^ Casalini, Simona (30 October 2016). "Terremoto in Centro Italia". Repubblica (in Italian). Retrieved 30 October 2016.
  5. ^ Roncalli (1988), p.397
  6. ^ Pliny the Elder, The Natural History, 3.6; 3.19.
  7. ^ AA. VV. (2004), p. 243
  8. ^ a b c d   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Umbria". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  9. ^ AA. VV. (2004), p. 44
  10. ^ AA. VV. (2004), p. 493
  11. ^ AA. VV. (2004), p. 550
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h AA. VV. (2004), p. 34
  13. ^ AA. VV. (2004), p. 464
  14. ^ AA. VV. (2004), p. 405
  15. ^ a b AA. VV. (2004), p. 35
  16. ^ a b AA. VV. (2004), p. 218
  17. ^ AA. VV. (2004), p. 108
  18. ^ AA. VV. (2004), p. 380
  19. ^ a b c d AA. VV. (2004), p. 39
  20. ^ AA. VV. (2004), p. 37
  21. ^ a b c d e f AA. VV. (2004), p. 41
  22. ^ AA. VV. (2004), p. 522
  23. ^ a b AA. VV. (2004), p. 43
  24. ^ a b c . Circa.europa.eu. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 24 April 2010.
  25. ^ "Sagrantino di Montefalco: From Umbria Comes The Best Red Wine You Never Tasted!". IntoWine.com. 2 July 2007.
  26. ^ "Grechetto di Todi". umbriatourism.it. Retrieved 29 July 2019.
  27. ^ "Open Wineries Umbria 2019 – May 25th/26th". stradadeivinidelcantico.it. Retrieved 29 July 2019.
  28. ^ "Unemployment NUTS 2 regions Eurostat".
  29. ^ a b Trumble, William R.; Stevenson, Angus; Brown, Lesley; Judith Siefring (2002). Shorter Oxford English dictionary on historical principles. Internet Archive. Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-860457-0.
  30. ^ St. Clair, Kassia (2016). The secret lives of colour. ISBN 978-1-4736-3081-9. OCLC 936144129.
  31. ^ "Green, White And Lots of Red: How Italy Got The West's Biggest Communist Party". International Business Times. 26 July 2013. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
  32. ^ October 29th; 2019|current-affairs; Albertazzi, Daniele; Elections; Politics, Party; Europe, government across; Comments, featured|0 (29 October 2019). "The Italian right sweeps to victory in Umbria: What now for the second Conte government?". EUROPP. Retrieved 22 July 2020.

Bibliography

  • Francesco Roncalli (1988). Giovanni Pugliese Carratelli (ed.). Gli Umbri. Italia: omnium terrarum alumna (in Italian). Milano: Scheiwiller.
  • AA.VV. (2004). Umbria. Guida d'Italia (in Italian). Milano: Touring Club Italiano.

External links

  •   Geographic data related to Umbria at OpenStreetMap
  • Thayer, William P. (2010). "Umbria: the 92 Comuni". University of Chicago. Retrieved 24 August 2010.

Coordinates: 43°06′43.56″N 12°23′19.68″E / 43.1121000°N 12.3888000°E / 43.1121000; 12.3888000

umbria, other, uses, disambiguation, bree, italian, ˈumbrja, region, central, italy, includes, lake, trasimeno, marmore, falls, crossed, river, tiber, only, landlocked, region, apennine, peninsula, regional, capital, perugia, regionflagcoat, armscountryitalyca. For other uses see Umbria disambiguation Umbria ˈ ʌ m b r i e UM bree e Italian ˈumbrja is a region of central Italy It includes Lake Trasimeno and Marmore Falls and is crossed by the River Tiber It is the only landlocked region on the Apennine Peninsula The regional capital is Perugia UmbriaRegionFlagCoat of armsCountryItalyCapitalPerugiaGovernment PresidentDonatella Tesei LN Area Total8 456 km2 3 265 sq mi Population 2016 05 31 Total889 001 Density110 km2 270 sq mi Demonym s English Umbrian Italian Umbro man Italian Umbra woman Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST ISO 3166 codeIT 55GDP nominal 22 5 billion 2018 1 GDP per capita 25 400 2018 2 HDI 2021 0 900 3 very high 12th of 21NUTS RegionITEWebsitewww wbr regione wbr umbria wbr itThe region is characterized by hills mountains valleys and historical towns such as the university centre of Perugia Assisi a World Heritage Site associated with St Francis of Assisi Terni Norcia Citta di Castello Gubbio Spoleto Orvieto Todi Castiglione del Lago Narni Amelia Spello and other small cities Contents 1 Geography 2 History 2 1 Antiquity 2 2 Middle Ages 2 3 Modern history 3 Economy 3 1 Umber 4 Government and politics 5 Demographics 6 Administrative divisions 7 Festivals 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksGeography EditUmbria is bordered by Tuscany to the west and the north Marche to the east and Lazio to the south Partly hilly and mountainous and partly flat and fertile owing to the valley of the Tiber its topography includes part of the central Apennines with the highest point in the region at Monte Vettore on the border of the Marche at 2 476 metres 8 123 feet the lowest point is Attigliano 96 metres 315 feet It is the only Italian region having neither a coastline nor a common border with other countries The comune of Citta di Castello has an exclave named Monte Ruperto within Marche Contained within Umbria is the hamlet of Cospaia which was a tiny republic from 1440 to 1826 created by accident Umbria is crossed by two valleys the Umbrian valley Valle Umbra stretching from Perugia to Spoleto and the Tiber Valley Val Tiberina north and west of the first one from Citta di Castello to the border with Lazio The Tiber River forms the approximate border with Lazio although its source is just over the Tuscan border The Tiber s three principal tributaries flow southward through Umbria The Chiascio basin is relatively uninhabited as far as Bastia Umbra About 10 kilometres 6 miles farther on it joins the Tiber at Torgiano The Topino cleaving the Apennines with passes that the Via Flaminia and successor roads follow makes a sharp turn at Foligno to flow NW for a few kilometres before joining the Chiascio below Bettona The third river is the Nera flowing into the Tiber further south at Terni its valley is called the Valnerina The upper Nera cuts ravines in the mountains the lower in the Tiber basin has created a wide floodplain In antiquity the plain was covered by a pair of shallow interlocking lakes the Lacus Clitorius and the Lacus Umber They were drained by the Romans over several hundred years An earthquake in the 4th century and the political collapse of the Roman Empire resulted in the refilling of the basin It was drained a second time almost a thousand years later during a 500 year period Benedictine monks started the process in the 13th century and the draining was completed by an engineer from Foligno in the 18th century The eastern part of the region being crossed by many faults has been often hit by earthquakes the last ones have been that of 1997 which hit Nocera Umbra Gualdo Tadino Assisi and Foligno and those of 2016 which struck Norcia and the Valnerina 4 In literature Umbria is referred to as Il cuore verde d Italia or The green heart of Italy The phrase is taken from a poem by Giosue Carducci the subject of which is the source of the Clitunno River in Umbria History EditSee also List of museums in Umbria Cityscape of the capital Perugia A typical landscape of the Umbrian countryside View of Assisi View of Norcia View of the medieval town of Gubbio The Orvieto Cathedral East side of Carbonana Castle Antiquity Edit The region is named for the Umbri people an Italic people which was absorbed by the expansion of the Romans The Umbri unlike the Etruscans with few exceptions did not live in an urban society but occupied small dwellings located in the Apennines 5 Pliny the Elder recounted a fanciful derivation for the tribal name from the Greek ὄmbros ombros a shower which led to the idea that they had survived the Deluge familiar from Greek mythology allowing them to claim to be the most ancient race in Italy 6 In fact they belonged to a broader family of neighbouring peoples with similar roots Their language was Umbrian one of the Italic languages related to Latin and Oscan The town of Gubbio houses today the longest and most important document of any of the Osco Umbrian group of languages the Iguvine Tablets written in Umbrian at the turn of the 2nd and 1st centuries BC 7 The northern part of the region was occupied by Gallic tribes The Umbri probably sprang like neighbouring peoples from the creators of the Terramara and Proto Villanovan culture in northern and central Italy who entered north eastern Italy at the beginning of the Bronze Age 8 The Etruscans were the chief enemies of the Umbri The Etruscan invasion extended from the western seaboard towards the north and east from about 700 to 500 BC They eventually drove the Umbrians towards the Apennine uplands and captured 300 Umbrian towns Nevertheless the Umbrian population does not seem to have been eradicated in the conquered districts 8 The border between Etruria and Umbria was the Tiber river 9 as testified by the ancient name of Todi Tular border 10 After the downfall of the Etruscans Umbrians aided the Samnites in their struggle against Rome 308 BC Later communications with Samnium were impeded by the Roman fortress of Narnia founded 229 BC on the place of the umbrian Nequinum conquered in 299 BC 11 12 8 Romans defeated the Samnites and their Gallic allies in the battle of Sentinum 295 BC 12 Allied Umbrians and Etruscans had to return home and defend each of their territories against simultaneous Roman attacks leaving the Samnites without their help at Sentinum The Roman victory at Sentinum initiated a period of integration under the Roman rulers who established some colonies such as Spoletium and built the via Flaminia 219 BC 12 The via Flaminia became a principal vector for Roman development in Umbria 12 During Hannibal s invasion during the second Punic war the battle of Lake Trasimene was fought inside the borders of today s Umbria 12 but the local people did not aid the invader During the Roman civil war between Mark Antony and Octavian 40 BC the city of Perugia supported Antony and was almost completely destroyed by Octavian In Pliny the Elder s time 49 independent communities still existed in Umbria and the abundance of inscriptions and the high proportion of recruits in the imperial army attest to its population 8 Under Augustus Umbria became the Regio VI of Roman Italy 12 Modern Umbria is different from Roman Umbria Roman Umbria extended through most of what is now the northern Marche to Ravenna but excluded the west bank of the Tiber which belonged to Etruria 12 Thus Perugia was an Etruscan city and the area around Norcia was in the Sabine territory 13 After the collapse of the Roman empire Ostrogoths and Byzantines struggled for supremacy in the region and the decisive battle of the war between these two peoples took place near modern Gualdo Tadino 14 Middle Ages Edit Soon after the end of the Gothic war the Lombards invaded Italy and founded the duchy of Spoleto covering much of today s southern Umbria but the Byzantine were able to keep in the region a corridor along the Via Flaminia linking Rome with the Exarchate of Ravenna and the Pentapolis 12 The Lombard king controlled also the northern part of the region ruled directly by Pavia When Charlemagne conquered most of the Lombard kingdoms some Umbrian territories were given to the Pope who established temporal power over them 15 Some cities acquired a form of autonomy named comune 15 These cities were frequently at war with each other often in a context of more general conflicts either between the Papacy and the Holy Roman Empire or between the Guelphs and the Ghibellines In the early 14th century the signorie arose and the most important of them were those of the Vitelli in Citta di Castello 16 of the Baglioni in Perugia 17 and of the Trinci in Foligno 18 but the region was subsumed by the middle of the same century into the Papal States by Cardinal Albornoz 19 who in this way prepared the return of the pope from Avignon to Rome Citta di Castello was subsumed later into the Papal States by Cesare Borgia 16 During the 15th century Renaissance spread in the northern part of the region It was in this period that humanists started to use again the ancient denomination of Umbria to name the area 20 which until then had been named Ducato after the Duchy of Spoleto in the southern part of it The supremacy of the pope on Umbria was reinforced in 16th century through the erection of a fortress in Perugia by Pope Paul III named after him Rocca Paolina 19 The Papacy ruled the region uncontested until the end of the 18th century 19 Modern history Edit After the French Revolution and the French conquest of Italy Umbria became part of the ephemeral Roman Republic 1798 1799 and later part of the Napoleonic Empire 1809 1814 under the name of department of Trasimene 19 After Napoleon s defeat the Pope regained Umbria and ruled it until 1860 21 In that year during Italian Risorgimento Umbria with Marche and part of Emilia Romagna were annexed by Piedmontese King Victor Emmanuel II and the people of Perugia destroyed in the same year the Rocca Paolina symbol of the papal oppression 21 The region of Umbria with capital Perugia became part of the Kingdom of Italy in the following year 21 The region whose economy was mainly based on agriculture experienced a dramatic economic shift at the end of the 19th century with the founding of the Acciaierie di Terni a major steelwork placed in Terni because of its abundance of electric power due to the Marmore waterfall and its secluded position 22 The region of Umbria at the time was somewhat larger than today comprising Rieti to the south now part of Lazio 21 Rieti was detached and added to the Province of Rome Lazio in 1923 21 In 1927 the region of Umbria was divided into the provinces of Perugia and Terni 21 During WWII the industrial centers of the region like Terni and Foligno were heavily bombed and in 1944 became a battlefield between the allied forces and the Germans retreating towards the Gothic Line 23 In 1946 Umbria was incorporated into the Italian Republic as a region comprising the two provinces of Perugia and Terni 23 Economy EditThe present economic structure emerged from a series of transformations which took place mainly in the 1970s and 1980s During this period there was rapid expansion among small and medium sized firms and a gradual retrenchment among the large firms which had hitherto characterised the region s industrial base This process of structural adjustment is still going on 24 Economically the most important region is the upper Tiber valley with Citta di Castello Terni steelworks stainless steel titanium alloy steel and processing companies automotive stainless steel tubes industrial food facility account for 20 to 25 of Umbria s GDP In Terni there are also many multinational companies in the fields of chemistry hydroelectric power renewable sources of energy and textiles Alcantara Cashmere In the rest of the region the ornamental ceramics industry is much esteemed 24 Umbrian agriculture is noted for its tobacco olive oil and vineyards which produce excellent wines Regional varietals include the white Orvieto which draws agri tourists to the vineyards in the area surrounding the medieval town of the same name 25 A notable wine is the Grechetto 26 of Todi Other noted wines produced in Umbria are Torgiano and Rosso di Montefalco The Umbrian wineries are at the center of the Cantine Aperte or Open Cellars event when local wine makers open their wineries to the public 27 Another typical Umbrian product is the black truffle found in Valnerina an area that produces 45 of this product in Italy 24 The food industry in Umbria produces processed pork meats confectionery pasta and the traditional products of Valnerina in preserved form truffles lentils cheese The unemployment rate stood at 8 2 in 2020 28 Umber Edit Umber Color coordinatesHex triplet 635147sRGBB r g b 99 81 71 HSV h s v 21 28 39 CIELChuv L C h 36 15 39 SourceISCC NBSISCC NBS descriptorDark grayish yellowish brownB Normalized to 0 255 byte Main article Umber Umbria is the region where the Umber pigment was originally extracted 29 The name comes from terra d ombra or earth of Umbria the Italian name of the pigment The word also may be related to the Latin word umbra meaning shadow 30 Umber is a natural brown or reddish brown earth pigment that contains iron oxide and manganese oxide 29 In the 20th century natural umber pigments began to be replaced by pigments made with synthetic iron oxide and manganese oxide Natural umber pigments are still being made with Cyprus as a prominent source Government and politics EditMain article Politics of Umbria Umbria was a former stronghold of the Italian Communist Party forming with Tuscany Emilia Romagna and Marche what was then known as Italy s Red Regions 31 Umbria was considered a stronghold of the Democratic Party and left leaning parties for over 50 years however in 2019 the candidate of the centre right coalition Donatella Tesei won the region s presidential election against her centre left rival Vincenzo Bianconi garnering 57 5 of the vote 32 Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 1861442 000 1871479 000 8 4 1881497 000 3 8 1901579 000 16 5 1911614 000 6 0 1921658 000 7 2 1931696 000 5 8 1941723 000 3 9 1951804 000 11 2 1961795 000 1 1 1971776 000 2 4 1981808 000 4 1 1991812 000 0 5 2001826 000 1 7 2011883 000 6 9 2017888 908 0 7 Source ISTAT 2001As of 2008 update the Italian national institute of statistics ISTAT estimated that 75 631 foreign born immigrants live in Umbria equal to 8 5 of the total population of the region Administrative divisions EditUmbria is divided into two provinces Perugia Terni Province Area km2 Area sq mi Population Density per km2 Density per sq mi Province of Perugia 6 334 2 446 660 466 104 270Province of Terni 2 122 819 228 535 109 280Festivals Edit In Gubbio each year takes place the Corsa dei Ceri or race of the candles which are symbolized by these tall wooden poles One of the most important festivals in Umbria is the festival of the Ceri Candles also known as Saint Ubaldo Day in Gubbio The race has been held every year since 1160 on the 15th day of May The festival is focused around a race consisting of three teams of cerioli carrying large symbolic candles topped by saints including St Ubald the patron saint of Gubbio S Giorgio St George and S Antonio Anthony the Great and run through throngs of cheering supporters The cerioli are clad in the distinctive colors of yellow blue or black according to the saint they support with white trousers and red belts and neckbands They travel up much of the mountain from the main square in front of the Palazzo dei Consoli to the basilica of St Ubaldo each team carrying a statue of their saint mounted on a wooden octagonal prism similar to an hour glass shape 4 metres tall and weighing about 280 kg 617 lb The race has strong devotional civic and historical overtones and is one of the best known folklore manifestations in Italy and therefore the Ceri were chosen as the heraldic emblem on the coat of arms of Umbria as a modern administrative region citation needed Umbria is not only known for its historical recollections such as the festival of the Ceri Calendimaggio in Assisi and the giostra della Quintana in Foligno but also for one of the biggest jazz music festivals called Umbria Jazz Umbria Jazz was born as a festival in 1973 and since 2003 has been held in the Umbrian capital Perugia in July it has become the fixed appointment of all jazz and good music lovers Another important festival is the Festival dei Due Mondi Festival of the Two Worlds an annual summer music and opera festival which is held each June to early July in Spoleto citation needed References Edit Eurostat Tables Graphs and Maps Interface TGM table Ec europa eu Retrieved 11 May 2019 Regional GDP per capita ranged from 30 to 263 of the EU average in 2018 Press release ec europa eu Retrieved 1 September 2020 Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab Hdi globaldatalab org Retrieved 5 March 2023 Casalini Simona 30 October 2016 Terremoto in Centro Italia Repubblica in Italian Retrieved 30 October 2016 Roncalli 1988 p 397 Pliny the Elder The Natural History 3 6 3 19 AA VV 2004 p 243 a b c d One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Umbria Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press AA VV 2004 p 44 AA VV 2004 p 493 AA VV 2004 p 550 a b c d e f g h AA VV 2004 p 34 AA VV 2004 p 464 AA VV 2004 p 405 a b AA VV 2004 p 35 a b AA VV 2004 p 218 AA VV 2004 p 108 AA VV 2004 p 380 a b c d AA VV 2004 p 39 AA VV 2004 p 37 a b c d e f AA VV 2004 p 41 AA VV 2004 p 522 a b AA VV 2004 p 43 a b c Eurostat Circa europa eu Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 24 April 2010 Sagrantino di Montefalco From Umbria Comes The Best Red Wine You Never Tasted IntoWine com 2 July 2007 Grechetto di Todi umbriatourism it Retrieved 29 July 2019 Open Wineries Umbria 2019 May 25th 26th stradadeivinidelcantico it Retrieved 29 July 2019 Unemployment NUTS 2 regions Eurostat a b Trumble William R Stevenson Angus Brown Lesley Judith Siefring 2002 Shorter Oxford English dictionary on historical principles Internet Archive Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 860457 0 St Clair Kassia 2016 The secret lives of colour ISBN 978 1 4736 3081 9 OCLC 936144129 Green White And Lots of Red How Italy Got The West s Biggest Communist Party International Business Times 26 July 2013 Retrieved 22 July 2020 October 29th 2019 current affairs Albertazzi Daniele Elections Politics Party Europe government across Comments featured 0 29 October 2019 The Italian right sweeps to victory in Umbria What now for the second Conte government EUROPP Retrieved 22 July 2020 Bibliography EditFrancesco Roncalli 1988 Giovanni Pugliese Carratelli ed Gli Umbri Italia omnium terrarum alumna in Italian Milano Scheiwiller AA VV 2004 Umbria Guida d Italia in Italian Milano Touring Club Italiano External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Umbria Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Umbria Geographic data related to Umbria at OpenStreetMap Thayer William P 2010 Umbria the 92 Comuni University of Chicago Retrieved 24 August 2010 Coordinates 43 06 43 56 N 12 23 19 68 E 43 1121000 N 12 3888000 E 43 1121000 12 3888000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Umbria amp oldid 1144171032, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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