Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol

Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol
—  Autonomous region of Italy  —

Flag

Coat of arms
Pais Italia
Capital Trento
Government
 • Presidente Lorenzo Dellai (Upt)
Area
 • Total 13,607 km2 (5,253.7 sq mi)
Population (1 January 2011)
 • Total 1,037,114
 • Density 76.2/km2 (197.4/sq mi)
 • Official languages[1] German, Italian, Ladin (in some municipalities)
Citizenship[2]
 • Italian 93%
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
GDP/ Nominal € 37.2[3] billion (2008)
GDP per capita € 30,800[4] (2008)
NUTS Region ITD
Website www.regione.taa.it

Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol[5] (German: Trentino-Südtirol;[6] Italian: Trentino-Alto Adige, pronounced [trenˈtiːno ˈalto ˈaːdidʒe], Trentino-Sud Tirol[7] or Trentino-Sudtirolo;[8] Ladin: Trentin-Südtirol[9]), is an autonomous region in Northern Italy. Since the 1970s most legislative and administrative competencies have been transferred to the two autonomous provinces which make up the region: Trentino and South Tyrol.

The region was part of Austria-Hungary and its predecessors, the Austrian Empire and the Holy Roman Empire from the 8th century until its annexation by Italy in 1919. Together with the Austrian state of Tyrol it is represented by the Euroregion Tyrol-South Tyrol-Trentino.

In English, the region is also known as Trentino-South Tyrol[10] or by its Italian name Trentino-Alto Adige.[11]

Contents

History

The region was conquered by the Romans in 15 BC. After the end of the Western Roman Empire, it was divided between the invading German tribes in the Lombard Duchy of Tridentum (today's Trentino), the Alamannic Vinschgau and the Bavarians taking 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.[12]

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. The rest was part of the County of Tyrol and County of Görz, which controlled the Pustertal: in 1363 its last titular, Margarete, Countess of Tyrol ceded it to the House of Habsburg. The regions north of Salorno were largely Germanized in the early Middle Ages, and important German poets like Oswald von Wolkenstein were born and lived in the southern part of Tyrol.[13]

The Italian term Tirolo meridionale, which stems from the Latin Tirolo meridionalis, is a term that was historically used to describe the wider southern part of the County of Tyrol, specifically Trentino and sometimes also today's South Tyrol.[14][15][16]

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, led by Andreas Hofer a landlord from St. Leonhard in Passeier, in 1809 which was crushed the same year; the Treaty of Paris of February 1810 split the area between Austria and the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy. After Napoleon's defeat, in 1815, the region returned to Austria. During French control of the region, it was called officially Haut Adige (literally "High Adige", Italian: "Alto Adige"; German: "Hoch Etsch") in order to avoid any reference to the historical County of Tyrol.[17]

During the First World War, major battles were fought high in the Alps and Dolomites between Austro-Hungarian 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.

Under the dictatorship of Benito Mussolini, the Fascist dictator of Italy (ruled 1922–1943), South Tyrol 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). 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 the Third Reich and only with great difficulties managed to return to their ancestral land after the end of the war.

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 either the German-speaking population or 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 sabotage and bombings by German-speaking autonomists and separatists led by the South Tyrolean Liberation Committee.

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 Tyrols 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.[17]

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, return to Austria, or become a part of Germany. All parties, including the separatists, rejected this measure as potentially causing a revival of ethnic tensions.

Geography

The region is bordered by Tyrol (Austria) to the north, by Graubünden (Switzerland) to the north-west and by the Italian regions of Lombardy and Veneto to the west and south, respectively. It covers 13,607 km² (5,253 sq mi). It is extremely mountainous, covering a large part of the Dolomites and the southern Alps.

Trentino has an area of 6,207 km2, most of it mountainous land (20% is over 2,000 m (6,561.68 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) can be found.[18]

South Tyrol has an area of 7,400 km2, all of it mountainous land and covered by vast forests. In Italy, the province borders on Lombardy in the west, Trento in the south and Veneto in the east. The climate is of the continental type, owing to the influence of the many mountain ranges which stand at well over 3,000 metres 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 °F) and the average rainfall at 717.7 mm. The lowest pass across the Alps, the Brenner Pass, is located at the far north of the region on the border with Austria.[19]

Politics

The region is divided into two autonomous provinces: Trentino (Province of Trento) and South Tyrol (Province of Bolzano). The Italian state 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 as the site of the regional assembly.[19]

Administration

Province Area (km²) Population Density (inh./km²)
Trentino 6,207 518,966 83.6
South Tyrol 7,400 498,280 67.3

Economy

The fertile valleys of the region 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.[20]

Demographics

Historical populations
Year Pop. ±%
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%
Source: ISTAT 2001

The region has a population of about 1,017,000 people (519,000 in Trentino and 498,000 in South Tyrol). The population density in the region is low compared to Italy as a whole. In 2008, it equalled to 74.7 inhabitants per km2, whereas the average figure for Italy was 198.8. The population density in Trentino was 83.6, slightly higher than the one registered in South Tyrol that was equal to 67.3. As of 2008, the Italian national institute of statistics ISTAT estimated that 70,834 foreign-born immigrants lived in the region altogether, equal to 6.9% of the total regional population.

Language

The main language groups are Italian (about 63% of the total) and German (33%), with a small minority speaking the local Ladin language (4%).

In Trentino the majority language is Italian, although there are minorities of German speakers in the municipality of Luserna and four municipalities in the Mocheni Valley. There are also Ladin-speaking minorities living in the Fassa Valley. Unlike in South Tyrol, the protection of minority language groups in Trentino is not covered by the new Statuto d'Autonomia (Autonomy Statute), although it is under current provincial statutes.

In South Tyrol, the majority language is German (69% 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.[21] Italian speakers are also a significant component in other major urban centers of the province, such as in Merano and Brixen. Ladin is the additional official language in some municipalities. According to the census of 2001, 103 out of 116 communes have a majority of German native speakers, 8 of Ladin speakers and 5 of Italian. Today both German and Italian have the status of co-official languages in South Tyrol.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Sonderstatut für Trentino-Südtirol, Article 99, Title IX. Region Trentino-Südtirol. 
  2. ^ Statistiche demografiche ISTAT
  3. ^ "Eurostat – Tables, Graphs and Maps Interface (TGM) table". Epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu. 12 August 2011. http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/tgm/table.do?tab=table&init=1&language=en&pcode=tgs00003&plugin=1. Retrieved 16 September 2011. 
  4. ^ EUROPA – Press Releases – Regional GDP per inhabitant in 2008 GDP per inhabitant ranged from 28% of the EU27 average in Severozapaden in Bulgaria to 343% in Inner London
  5. ^ Constitution of Italy, Part II: Organisation of the Republic (Art. 116)
  6. ^ "Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol Region". Official website of the Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol Region. 2009. http://www.regione.taa.it/normativa/statuto_speciale.pdf. Retrieved 20 February 2009. 
  7. ^ Ciampi, Carlo Azeglio (10 October 2001). "Intervento del Presidente della Repubblica Carlo Azeglio Ciampi in occasione dell'incontro con la comunità degli italiani di Pola e i rappresentanti delle istituzioni e delle comunità della minoranza italiana" (in Italian). I discorsi del presidente Carlo Azeglio Ciampi. Rome: Presidenza della Republica. http://www.quirinale.it/qrnw/statico/ex-presidenti/Ciampi/dinamico/discorso.asp?id=15950. Retrieved 20 April 2011. "Questa è l'esperienza dell'Italia nel Trentino-Sud Tirol: questa è l'esperienza che mettiamo a disposizione dell'Europa e della Croazia." 
  8. ^ Lega Nord (2007). "Devolution..." (in Italian). Lega Nord. http://www.leganord.org/Lega%20Nord%20Flash%20nuovo%20logo/Fl-53%20SUPPLEMENTO%20singole.pdf. Retrieved 20 April 2011. "addirittura in attivo Veneto e Trentino-Sudtirolo, attestati rispettivamente sui 105 e 101." 
  9. ^ PensPlan Project of the Region
  10. ^ "Province of Bolzano/Bozen". Official website of the Autonomous Province of Bolzano/Bozen. 2009. http://www.provinz.bz.it/english/overview/region_trent_tyrol.htm. Retrieved 20 February 2009. 
  11. ^ "Special Statute of the Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol Region". Official website of the Autonomous Province of Bolzano/Bozen. 2009. http://www.provinz.bz.it/downloads/autonomy_statute_eng.pdf. Retrieved 20 February 2009. 
  12. ^ Allgemeiner historischer Handatlas, Gustav Droysen
  13. ^ Ich Wolkenstein, Dieter Kühn ISBN 3-458-32197-7, page. 21
  14. ^ Flora del Tirolo meridionale: ossia descrizione delle specie fanerogame che crescono spontanee sopra il suolo Trentino e nelle terre adjacenti comprese fra la catena delle Alpi Retiche sino al confini del Lombardo-Veneto loro proprietà ec. ec. at Google Books
  15. ^ Erpetologia delle provincie Venete e del Tirolo meridionale at Google Books
  16. ^ Repertorio universale della legislazione pel regno d'Italia dell' anno 1802 at Google Books
  17. ^ a b Prof. Dr. Rolf Steininger (2011). "Die Südtirolfrage". ZIS Zeitgeschichte Informationssystem. Institute of Contemporary History, University of Innsbruck. http://www.uibk.ac.at/zeitgeschichte/zis/stirol.html. Retrieved 15 April 2011. 
  18. ^ "Eurostat". Circa.europa.eu. http://circa.europa.eu/irc/dsis/regportraits/info/data/en/itd2_geo.htm. Retrieved 6 May 2009. 
  19. ^ a b "Eurostat". Circa.europa.eu. http://circa.europa.eu/irc/dsis/regportraits/info/data/en/itd1_geo.htm. Retrieved 6 May 2009. 
  20. ^ "Eurostat". Circa.europa.eu. http://circa.europa.eu/irc/dsis/regportraits/info/data/en/index.htm. Retrieved 6 May 2009. 
  21. ^ 2001 Census of the province of Bolzano

External links

Media related to Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol at Wikimedia Commons