Province of Trento
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nation | Italy |
Region | Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol |
Capital | Trento |
Area | 6,214 km² |
Population (2001) | 477,359 |
Density | 77 |
Comuni | 223 |
Vehicle Registration | TN |
Postal Code | 38100 |
Telephone Prefix | 0461, 0462, 0463, 0464, 0465 |
ISTAT | 022 |
President | Lorenzo Dellai |
Map highlighting the location of the province of Trento in Italy |
The Autonomous Province of Trento (Italian: Provincia Autonoma di Trento, also Trentino; German: Autonome Provinz Trient, also Welschtirol) is an autonomous province in the autonomous Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol region of Italy. The territory of the province equals to southern part of historic Trentino region. Its capital is the city of Trento.
Contents |
[edit] Geography and administration
Trentino is an almost entirely mountainous province with a main valley crossing it in its center. This valley is called Valle dell'Adige (Adige Valley), named after the Adige river flowing within it. The principal towns of Trentino lay on the Adige Valley as it is the largest one and has been a historical passage connecting Italy with Northern Europe. Among other important valleys are Val di Non, known for its apple production, Val di Sole, Val Giudicarie, which has been historically contended by Trento and Brescia, Val di Fiemme and many others.
The province has an area of 6,214 km², and a total population of 477,017 (2001). There are 223 comuni (singular: comune), in the province[1].
Administratively, the province enjoys a large autonomy in the following sectors: health, school, welfare, infrastructures. The provincial council is formed by 35 members, one of which belonging by statute to the Ladin minority. The president of the provincial council alternates with the President of the province of Bolzano-Bozen as president of the Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol region.
Due the high fractionization of the territory, comprising 223 comuni, often of small or even tiny size, in the late 1970s a subdivision called comprensori ("communities") was introduced. The council of each comprensorio is elected by the comuni forming it. However, this subdivision has raised criticism, and a reform is underway, aiming to the creation of 16 more omogenous "Valley Communities".
The current comprensori are the following (population data as of December 31, 2004):
Comprensorio | Capital | Area | Population | Location |
C1 Val di Fiemme | Cavalese | 415 km² | 18.990 | Eastern Trentino, Avisio Valley |
C2 Primiero | Fiera di Primiero | 413 km² | 9,959 | Eastern Trentino, Cismon and Vanoi Valleys |
C3 Bassa Valsugana e Tesino | Borgo Valsugana | 578 km² | 26,167 | Eastern Trentino, Brenta Valley and Tesino |
C4 Alta Valsugana | Pergine Valsugana | 394 km² | 48,342 | Eastern Trentino, Brenta and Fersina valleys |
C5 Valle dell'Adige | Trento | 656 km² | 166,394 | Central Trentino |
C6 Val di Non | Cles | 596 km² | 37,832 | Western Trentino, Noce Valley |
C7 Val di Sole | Malè | 609 km² | 15,235 | Western Trentino, Noce Valley |
C8 Valli Giudicarie | Tione | 1,176 km² | 36,282 | Western Trentino, Sarca and Chiese Valleys |
C9 Alto Garda e Ledro | Riva del Garda | 353 km² | 44,288 | Southern Trentino |
C10 Vallagarina | Rovereto | 694 km² | 84,781 | Southern Trentino meridionale, Adige Valley |
C11 Ladino di Fassa | Vigo di Fassa | 318 km² | 9,276 | Eastern Trentino, Avisio valley |
As of May 31, 2005, the main comuni by population are:
Comune | Population |
---|---|
Trento | 110,666 |
Rovereto | 35,231 |
Pergine Valsugana | 18,012 |
Arco | 15,649 |
Riva del Garda | 15,157 |
Mori | 8,833 |
Lavis | 8,157 |
Ala | 8,071 |
Levico Terme | 6,767 |
Cles | 6,714 |
Borgo Valsugana | 6,570 |
Mezzolombardo | 6,339 |
[edit] History
[edit] Prehistory
In the mid-Stone Age the valleys of what is now Trentino were already inhabited by man, the main settlements being in the valley of the Adige River, thanks for its milder climate. Scholars have supposed the first settlers (probably hunters) came from the Padana Plain and the Venetian Prealps, after the first glaciers started to melt at the end of the Pleistocene glaciations.
Findings (in particular, sepultures) from the Mesolithic, have been discovered in several part of the province. These include the comuni of Zambana and Mezzocorona. A large area of a hunting-based settlement from the Neolithic has been found out near the lakes of Colbricòn, not far from the Passo Rolle.
[edit] Ancient history
Around 500 BCE, the Raetians appeared in the Trentine territory, coming from the Central and Eastern Alps area. They settled in several valleys and improved and introduced new activities along with the traditional hunting: agriculture (wine, vegetables, cereals), breeding (ovines, goats, bovines and horses). From the Roman Age, the entire territory of current Trentino-South Tyrol was known as Raetia.
This region was conquered by the Romans only in the 1st century BCE. The definitive defeat of the Rhaetians, near Bolzano, occurred during the military campaigns in the Alps of Drusus and Tiberius (16-17 BCE). Trento became a Roman municipium between in the 40s BEE. During the reign of Emperor Claudius (41-54 CE) the Trentino was integrated in the Imperial roadnet with the construction of the Via Claudia Augusta Padana (from Ostiglia to the Resia Pass) and the Via Augusta Altinate (from Treviso to Trento, passing through the Valsugana).
[edit] Middle Ages
During the Late Antiquity, in the 5th century CE, the Trentino was invaded several times, from North and East: first by the Ostrogoths, then by the Bavarians and Byzantines and finally by the Lombards. With the latter's domination an idea of territorial identity of the province began to shape (Tridentinum territorium). In the same century the region became largely Christianized. In 774 the Trentino was conquered by the Franks and became part of the Kingdom of Italy, a sometimes vague entity included in what was to become the Holy Roman Empire.
The first territorial unity of Trentino dates back to 1027, when emperor Conrad II officially gave the rule of the area to the Bishopric of Trent. This entity survived for some eight centuries and granted Trentino a certain autonomy, first from the Holy Roman Empire and then from the Austrian Empire.
[edit] Modern age
In the early 19th century the Trentine people participated actively to the resistance against the French invasion led by the Tyrolese Andreas Hofer. After the end of the Napoleonic era (1815), the Bishopric of Trent was dissolved and Trentino became part of the County of Tyrol, in which the majority of the population was German speaking. Though relatively well administered, and despite the presence of Trentine representants in the Diets of Innsbruck and Vienna, in the second half of the 19th century a movement (part of the general movement called Italian Irredentism) rose with aims to annex for the Kingdom of Italy: this, however, was largely put forward by intellectuals like Cesare Battisti and Fabio Filzi, and met little support by the predominantly rural population.
The Trentine territory was one of the main fronts of the conflict (1915-1918) between Italy and Austria-Hungary, and suffered heavy destruction. After the call to arms summoned by Emperor Francis Joseph I of Austria on July 31, 1914, more than 60,000 Trentine fought for Austria, first against Russia and Serbia and, starting from 1915, also against other Italians. More than 10,000 of them died, and many others were wounded or made prisoners. Further, hundreds of thousands of civilians were forced to abandon their native area when they were too near to the front lines. Many of them, captured by the Italian Army, were later transferred to Southern Italy as colonists.
With the Treaty of Versailles (1919), the Trentino was annexed to Italy, together with the new Province of Bolzano (South Tyrol), firstly as part of Venezia Tridentina. The centralization process brought on by the Fascists reduced the autonomy that cities like Trento or Rovereto had enjoyed under
the precedent Liberal governments, while many of the smaller comuni were united, reducing their number from the 366 under the Habsburg to 127. An economic crisis also followed, mainly due to the stagnation of agriculture and to the absorption of much of the investments by the "to-be-Italianized" South Tyrol.
After World War II, the treaty signed by the Italian and Austrian Ministers of Foreign affairs, the Trentine Alcide De Gasperi and Karl Gruber, the autonomous Region of Trentino-South Tyrol was constituted (see Gruber-De Gasperi Agreement).
In the following decades the main partite in Trentino was Christian Democracy, while autonomistic instances found their voice in the Partito Popolare Trentino Tirolese (Trentine-Tyrolese Popular Party). In 1957 strife between Trentino and the largely German-speaking South Tyrol led to the diffusion of the slogan Los von Trient ("Away from Trento"). In 1972, finally, the regional autorities was largely handed over to the two provinces.
In the 1960s and 1970s Trentino witnessed strong economic development, spurred mainly by the tourism sector and by the new autonomy. It is currently one of the richest and best developed Italian provinces.
[edit] Economy
Despite the prevalent mountainous nature of the territory, the agricultural sector is relevant. The farms are often united in a wide net of cooperatives. The main productions include: apples (50% of national production, together with South Tyrol) and other fruit, vegetables (mainly in the Val di Gresta) and grape: important especially for its quality, the latter is used for the production of renowned wines and sparkling wines.
The main industries, often small- and medium-sized, are concentrated in Valsugana, Vallagarina and the Adige Valleys. Sectors include textiles, mechanics, wood and paper productions. Also important is the production of hydro-electric energy.
Tourism is the mainstay of the provincial economy. The main resorts include: Madonna di Campiglio, San Martino di Castrozza, Fiera di Primiero, Canazei, Moena, Cavalese, Folgaria, Folgarida-Marilleva, Riva del Garda and Levico Terme, Comano Terme and Roncegno, these last three being renowned thermal stations.
[edit] Transportation
The Trentino is crossed by the main transportation connections between Italy and Germany. These include the Brennero A22 highway and roadline, passing through the Adige Valley. A regional project of switching much of the road traffic to railways is current under study, including the construction of a tunnel under the Brennero Pass.
The province has two more railways: the Valsugana Railroad, connecting Trento to Venezia and the Trento-Malè-Marilleva.
[edit] Linguistic minorities
The province of Trento is home to three linguistic minorities, protected by the regional and provincial statutes. The most numerous is the Ladin minority in the Val di Fassa-Val de Fascia (comuni of Campitello di Fassa-Ciampedel, Canazei-Cianacei, Mazzin-Mazin, Moena, Pozza di Fassa-Poza, Soraga, Vigo di Fassa-Vich).
The German Mócheno language is spoken in the comuni of Frassilongo-Garait, Fierozzo-Gamoà Va Vlarotz and Palù del Fersina-Palae en Bersntol, while the Cimbrian language is spoken in Luserna-Lusern.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- (English) Tourism board homepage
- (Italian) Province homepage
- (English) Val di Fassa
- (Italian) Partita Autonomista Trentino Tirolese (Regional political party)
Europe | Italy | Trentino-South Tyrol | |
South Tyrol | Trento |