Bolzano

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For other uses of Bolzano, including the mathematician Bernard Bolzano, see Bolzano (disambiguation).
Città di Bolzano
Cité da Bulsan
Stadt Bozen
Coat of arms of Città di Bolzano  Cité da Bulsan  Stadt Bozen
Municipal coat of arms
Country Italy Italy
Region Trentino-South Tyrol
Province Bolzano (BZ)
Mayor Luigi Spagnoli
Elevation 262 m
Area 52,34 km²
Population
 - Total (as of March 31, 2006) 99.229
 - Density 1,882/km²
Time zone CET, UTC+1
Coordinates 46°30′N 11°21′E
Gentilic Italian: Bolzanini, German: Bozner (dialect: Boazner)
Dialing code 0471
Postal code 39100
Website: www.comune.bolzano.it (in Italian)

www.gemeinde.bozen.it (in German)

Bolzano (Italian: Bolzano, German: Bozen, Ladin: Bulsan, ; Note that many of the Italian dialects and Rhaeto-Romance languages in the area use Bulsan) is a city in the Trentino-South Tyrol region of Italy. It is the capital of the Autonomous Province of Bolzano. The Museum of Archeology in Bolzano is where the ice-mummy "Ötzi" is kept.

The city is also the home of the Italian Army's Alpini High Command- COMALP and some of its combat and support units.

Contents

[edit] History

Initially inhabited by the Rhaetians, the area was settled by the Romans in 15 BC, by general Nero Claudius Drusus, who gave the original town its Roman name, Pons Drusi. The city name later became Bauzanum. Bolzano has been a trading point since its foundation and elevation to a city over 800 years ago, due to its location in between the two major cities of Venice and Augsburg. Four times a year a market was held and traders came from the south and the north. The mercantile magistrate was therefore founded in 1635. Every market season two Italian and two German officers (appointed from the traders who operated there) worked in this office. The city was a cultural crosspoint at that time.

In 1918, at the end of World War I the region of Trentino, also known as the Welsch-Tirol (or Italian Tyrol), and the southern part of the primarily German-speaking Tyrol were occupied by the Italian Army and thereafter annexed. The region was assigned to Italy according to the Treaty of London of 1915, that gave to Italy all the territories included in the Italian Region (as definded by the Alpine water divide), regardless of the ethnic majorities.

After the rise of fascism, starting from 1926, ethnic Germans were subjected to a policy of Italianisation. This involved the use of Italian as the official language. German schools were closed, Italian-only toponyms were imposed, many person names were translated (i.e. Franz became Franco); in some cases also family names were Italianized (i.e. Gruber became Della Fossa; Perathoner became Pietrantoni). Many ethnic Italians moved to the city from other parts of Italy (primarily from Northern Italy). Ethnic-German South Tyroleans turned inward and thanks to the local clergy preserved their cultural identity by organizing secret German schools (so-called Katakombenschule or catacomb schools).

Location of Bolzano
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Location of Bolzano
Aerial view.
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Aerial view.
A view of Bolzano. The Cathedral is on the right.
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A view of Bolzano. The Cathedral is on the right.

After 1938, as a consquence of the approaching of Nazist Germany to Fascist Italy, an agreement was reached to "solve" the problem. Nazi Germany accepted to host in the Reich of all those South Tyroleans who refused the assimilation. Local Fascists expected the elites to go and the bulk of the population to stay. However, they miscalculated and allowed Nazi agents to infiltrate the South Tyrol who pushed the German population to opt for emmigration in large numbers. The majority of the inhabitants who spoke German had to choose between moving to Germany or assimilation (the so-called Opzione or "Option"). Almost 80 per cent chose to go to Germany. Nazis officials meanwhile planned to resettle ethnic south Tyroleans in German-occupied territories such as Luxembourg or Crimea. However, when Fascism collapsed in 1943, emigration came to a standstill. This period was very traumatic for the German-speaking population, and rivalries and tensions emerged between those who had chosen emigration to Germany (the Optanten) and those who had stayed (the Dableiber). Altogether only a third of the 75,000 who actually made the trek northward came back after 1945.

[edit] Society and economy

After World War II Italy, then led by Prime Minister Alcide De Gasperi (a Trentino native and a former member of the Reichsrat Parliament in Vienna before 1914) and Austrian Chancellor Gruber signed an agreement that would have guaranteed the province a substantial degree of autonomy. However, Bolzano was incorportad in the larger Trentino-South Tyrol region that had an overall Italian-speaking majority. However, the implementation of the UN-brokered treaty between Italy and Austria fell short of local expectations. Ethnic tensions resurfaced, culminating in a wave of bombings and acts of sabotage during the 1960s by South Tyrolean activists. Apparently some cooperated with neo-Nazi groups in Austria and Germany. Only after a new autonomy package was negotiated in 1969-1972 and the province of Bolzano was given a greater autonomy from the Italian central government, did ethnic clashes subside. The autonomy package took 20 years before it was fully implemented. This, and the determined defense of their culture and language, has allowed the German speaking population to avoid assimilation. Instead, Italian-speaking Alto Atesini or Upper Atesins began complaining of discrimination.

As part of the autonomy package, the province of South Tyrol became autonomous and Italian, German, and Ladin became official languages. The city changed its official name to Bolzano in order to reflect the multicultural status. Other towns and villages throughout South Tyrol also received double-names.

Lauben, Bolzano main street.
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Lauben, Bolzano main street.

According to the 2001 census, 73% of the city inhabitants were Italian speakers. Of the remainder, 23% speak German and 1% Ladin as their first language. Outside of the city of Bolzano the majority of inhabitants speak German as first language (according to 2001 census, there are approx. 330,000 German-speaking South Tyroleans among 475,000 inhabitants of South Tyrol). There are many bilingual people. A small minority of people speak Ladin.

South Tyrolean society is still to some extent segmented across ethnic lines. Because of its special autonomy and the unique industrious and collaborative culture, Bolzano is one of the richest cities in Italy. It enjoyes a very high standard of living, ranking consistently among the top cities nationwide. See the article on South Tyrol for more information.

The city thrives on a mix of old and new—high-quality intensive agriculture (including wine, fruit and dairy products), tourism, traditional handicraft (wood, ceramics) and advanced services. Heavy industry (machinery, automotive, steel) installed during the 1930's has now been mostly dismanteled. On the downside, the local economy is very dependent on the public sector, and especially the autonomous province government.

Cathedral of Bolzano
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Cathedral of Bolzano
The controversial Victory Monument
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The controversial Victory Monument

[edit] Main sights

The city's Italian-Austrian character, enhanced by the narrow cobblestone streets, Habsburg-era churches and pervasive bilingual signage give it the unique flavour of a city at crossroads between Italian and Austrian cultures. This, and its natural and cultural attractions make it a renowned tourist destination.

Among the major monuments and sights are:

  • Walther von der Vogelweide Platz, with a statue of the minstrel with the same name (Minnesänger in German);
  • the South Tyrol Archeological Museum, which hosts the Ötzi mummy;
  • the Gothic Cathedral, started in 1184, probably on the foundations of a Roman villa and rebuilt in the 14th Century by architects Martin and Peter Schiche (completed 1382);
  • various castles, including Schloss Maretsch, Schloss Runkelstein and Sigmundskron;
  • the First World War Victory Monument, a controversial monument built by Mussolini in 1928.
  • the Messner Mountain Museum Firmian

For more historical and geographical information, see South Tyrol.

[edit] City districts and neighboring communities

City districts:

  • Centro-Piani-Rencio / Zentrum-Bozner Boden-Rentsch
  • Don Bosco
  • Europa-Novacella / Europa-Neustift
  • Gries-San Quirino / Gries-Quirein
  • Oltrisarco-Aslago / Oberau-Haslach

Neighbouring communities are: Eppan, Karneid, Laives, Deutschnofen, Ritten, Jenesien, Terlan, and Vadena.

Other important nearby towns are Brixen, Bruneck and Merano.

[edit] Twin cities

[edit] Transportation

Highway A22-E45 to Trento and Verona and to Innsbruck and Munich. Railway (main line between Italy and Germany).

[edit] Sport

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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