Agriculture in Italy explained

Agriculture in Italy, one of the economic sectors of the country, has developed since the 5th millennium BC. In the 20th century, Italy transformed from a predominantly agricultural country to an industrial country. As a result, the agricultural sector (including silviculture and fishing) has seen employment drop dramatically, from 43% (in 1860) to 3.8% (in 2000) of the total,[1] a minimal percentage in the national economic framework.

According to the last national agricultural census, in 2010 there was 891,000 people employed in agriculture, mostly men (71.3% of the total) and resident in Southern Italy (46.8% of the total). In 2010 the Italian agricultural area was equal to 17800000ha, of which 12700000ha are used, and is concentrated above all in Southern Italy (63%).

Description

According to the last national agricultural census, there were 1.6 million farms in 2010 (−32.4% since 2000) covering 12700000abbr=on0abbr=on (63% of which are located in Southern Italy).[2] The vast majority (99%) are family-operated and small, averaging only 8ha in size.[2] Of the total surface area in agricultural use (forestry excluded), grain fields take up 31%, olive tree orchards 8.2%, vineyards 5.4%, citrus orchards 3.8%, sugar beets 1.7%, and horticulture 2.4%. The remainder is primarily dedicated to pastures (25.9%) and feed grains (11.6%).[2] The northern part of Italy produces primarily Maize corn, rice, sugar beets, soybeans, meat, fruits and dairy products, while the South specializes in wheat and citrus fruits. Livestock includes 6 million head of cattle, 8.6 million head of swine, 6.8 million head of sheep, and 0.9 million head of goats.[2] The total annual production of the fishing industry in Italy from capture and aquaculture, including crustaceans and molluscs, is around 480,000 tons.

Italy is the largest producer of wine in the world, and one of the leading producers of olive oil, fruits (apples, olives, grapes, oranges, lemons, pears, apricots, hazelnuts, peaches, cherries, plums, strawberries, and kiwifruits), and vegetables (especially artichokes and tomatoes). The most famous Italian wines are probably the Tuscan Chianti and the Piedmontese Barolo. Other famous wines are Barbaresco, Barbera d'Asti, Brunello di Montalcino, Frascati, Montepulciano d'Abruzzo, Morellino di Scansano, Amarone della Valpolicella DOCG and the sparkling wines Franciacorta and Prosecco. Quality goods in which Italy specialises, particularly the already mentioned wines and regional cheeses, are often protected under the quality assurance labels DOC/DOP. This geographical indication certificate, which is attributed by the European Union, is considered important to avoid confusion with low-quality mass-produced ersatz products.

In fact, Italian cuisine is one of the most popular and copied around the world.[3] The lack or total unavailability of some of its most characteristic ingredients outside of Italy, also and above all to falsifications (or food fraud), leads to the complete denaturalization of Italian ingredients.[4] This phenomenon, widespread in all continents, is better known as Italian Sounding, consisting in the use of words as well as images, colour combinations (the Italian tricolour), geographical references, brands evocative of Italy to promote and market agri-food products which in reality have nothing to do with Italian cuisine.[5]

History

Prehistory

Several archaeological finds show that the first agricultural settlements began in Italy around the 5th millennium BC. Archaeologists have clearly identified the paths followed by the first Anatolian peasants who spread the Neolithic Revolution across the European continent, primarily on the Mediterranean coast and along the Danube. Initially they arrived in Sicily by sea, where they founded agricultural villages similar to those of the Fertile Crescent (Anatolia, Syria, Palestine, the valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates).[6]

Later, after having crossed the Alpine arc, the peasants who came from the Danube built villages with the same characteristics as those of the Neolithic in the Balkans, which, in the space of a millennium, recorded considerable developments.[7]

Ancient history

In the Bronze Age, the entire Po plain was colonized thanks to the so-called "terramare", dwellings similar to stilts. These inhabitants had perfected the methods of cultivation and breeding adopted in the Neolithic Period, which remained substantially the same until the Middle Ages.[8] Also in Central Italy it is the starting period to a peasant society with increasing agricultural diversity. But locations were dominantly in hilly terrain using a slash-and-burn method. Mediterranean type ploughs with convertible wooden ploughshares were used. In South Italy first evidence of olive cultivation can be observed in this time.

The Iron Age saw the appearance of brick houses in rural areas, breeding of livestock, cultivation of fabaceae, accumulation of bronze objects, craftsmenship, trade and individualism. The time of the Roman Republic was dominated by the revolution of iron: ploughshares, pick-axes on the fields (enabling the cultivation of heavy soils), sickles and axes for deforestation as well as iron material for harvesting and pruning of grapes. It was the origin of a landscape with mixed cultures and systematic planning of the terrain around the cities. There was a great development of agricultural technology including haymaking, laying fallow of grounds and hydraulic works (cunicoli). And the commercial grape-olive-culture evolved.[9] The East had developed great empires based on the cultivation of cereals, mainly wheat and barley: Rome, which established itself at the center of the peninsula, conquered many of the great plains of the then known world, assigning each of them a specific function based on its plans of economic and military domination.[10]

Countries whose borders were not threatened by powerful enemies were exploited to feed the population of Rome, the "womb" of the Empire, where hundreds of thousands of former warrior peasants, stripped of their land by the aristocracy and the mercantile class, claimed their right to receive bread and circuses (panem et circences) as citizens of the state. Countries close to threatened borders, such as the Rhine and the Danube, were responsible for producing the grain needed to feed the legions encamped on the edge, as in the case of France.

To meet the high demand for food from the central areas of the empire, and from Rome itself, especially from the wealthier classes, the first techniques of cultivation, fruit and vegetables, breeding, pigs, sheep, poultry were developed, pre-industrial in nature. Analyzing the characteristics of this agriculture, designed to satisfy the strong demand, both in terms of quantity and quality, the Spaniard Lucio Giunio Moderato Columella, owner of the vineyards between the "Castelli Romani", wrote the first scientific treatise concerning the techniques of agriculture in the western world.[11]

Medieval history

After the end of the Empire, and for almost a thousand years, agriculture and the economy experienced a period of technological regression, closer to that of the Bronze Age both in Greece and in the regions of Roman Italy. Productivity decreased, but the rural population, living in small villages scattered in a territory of woods and swamps, still managed to derive a significant part of their livelihood from natural habitats, such as meadows and swamps: meat, fish, honey, furs, fabrics.[12]

Towards the end of the Middle Ages, when the first craft and trade companies developed in Europe, new agricultural systems appeared in Flanders, in the Po Valley and in the smaller plains of central Italy. In the Po Valley there has been the development of a new system of relations between man and natural resources and of an agriculture based on irrigation.

Of course, in the Middle East, irrigation allowed, thousands of years ago, an enormous production of wheat on land that has since become deserted for climatic reasons. Late medieval Italian agriculture was based on particularly intensive farming, and on the production of textiles, fruit and vegetables on a large scale.[13]

Modern history

Favored by the abundance of food, the Italian cities became the area of greatest export of all the most sought-after products of the moment: wool, weapons, glass, cheese of an inimitable quality, and able to be preserved for long periods. Unfortunately, this extraordinary wealth of the Italian cities was not adequately protected by a political and military force proportionate to their opulence, so it stimulated the envy of the two major powers of the time, France and Spain, who sent their armies.

For two centuries, the fertile fields of the peninsula transformed one of the richest countries on the continent into a land of economic and civil misery, of which the chronicles of the seventeenth century bear witness.[14] During the Enlightenment, Lombard agriculture resumed its growth by increasing the wealth of the countryside surrounding Milan, with products such as cheese and silk, making this city one of the richest in Europe, becoming one of the great cultural capitals of this extraordinary period of European History.[15]

Contemporary history

The 19th century was the period of the "Risorgimento", a movement in which the peasant classes did not take part. This movement resulted in a form of government in which landowners, the beneficiaries of backward agriculture, were the majority, so they took the opportunity to exploit the condition of the peasantry to their advantage to strengthen their privileges. At the end of the century, we can say that offloading the costs of the agrarian crisis on farmers was the only concern of the first unitary parliaments.[16]

The extraordinary period that began at the end of the century, with the governments of Giovanni Giolitti, that opened Italy to new horizons of economic and social progress, progress interrupted too soon by the Great War and followed by a long period of political stagnation. This convinced the ever powerful families of large landowners to resort to fascism, with an agricultural policy aimed at increasing the production of wheat to provide the energy necessary for the resurrection of the splendors of ancient Rome. All other aspects of agricultural progress were completely ignored.[17]

At the end of the Second World War, food production in the country could only count on a more backward agriculture, also hampered by the damage caused by the war. In that period Giuseppe Medici, a famous agronomist and statesman of international standing, became Minister of Agriculture. Also thanks to his interventions, Italy was the first country to host an international conference of agricultural researchers, a conference that allowed the creation of links between research programs capable of increasing interactions and exchanges, to increase the production efficiency in agriculture.

In the thirty years that followed the war there was the birth, in the peninsula, of a generation of great agronomists, scientists engaged in the territory outside the traditional schemes. In Europe, agricultural techniques were completely renewed and the first livestock farms were created on the American model, based on the cultivation of hybrid maize, a completely new production framework was outlined in the fruit and viticulture sector, which will then be able to compete, in the following decades, with French agriculture.

This "golden age" ends abruptly in 1980: the radical changes in the agricultural policy of the European Community were the first blow. Subsequently, half of the agricultural land disappeared, abandoned due to overbuilding, the production potential of one of the most fertile plains on the continent was considerably reduced. More recently, the environmental movement, the most radical in Europe, called on the political class to end cutting edge agricultural research. Italy finds itself forced to produce on a small surface, with increasingly obsolete means. In Rome, the debate on the future of national agriculture became confused and incomprehensible.[18]

Statistics

The data relating to the surface of agricultural holdings for the Italian regions and macroregions are shown below.[19]

Regions

Region1999200320052007
1533894ha1467267ha1459843ha1403893ha
135927ha127458ha159842ha147741ha
1392331ha1235447ha1355039ha1258471ha
184884ha138509ha153851ha135065ha
999714ha991674ha987294ha983005ha
1067788ha1171604ha1170343ha1121386ha
386922ha299603ha392692ha361868ha
1576967ha1368911ha1440156ha1340654ha
1664674ha1495329ha1543548ha1458301ha
588372ha634615ha622100ha585144ha
818809ha686552ha694702ha671481ha
1128164ha1024701ha1020391ha940447ha
753945ha623341ha640545ha657272ha
316797ha261876ha281762ha265463ha
839235ha769198ha822277ha777493ha
1547972ha1377721ha1342587ha1317444ha
748278ha702417ha694127ha715784ha
837877ha781893ha822403ha757943ha
1739829ha1459612ha1426513ha1415233ha
1901397ha1614842ha1586844ha1527457ha
Italy20163776ha18232570ha18616859ha17841544ha

Macroregions

Territory1999200320052007
3247036ha2968681ha3128575ha2945170ha
4031391ha3831791ha3990485ha3806913ha
Central Italy4200019ha3841197ha3880742ha3655373ha
South Italy5044104ha4516447ha4603701ha4491399ha
Insular Italy3641226ha3074455ha3013356ha2942690ha
Italy20163776ha18232570ha18616859ha17841544ha

See also

References

  1. Web site: Il sistema agroalimentare. https://web.archive.org/web/20111012091741/http://economia.unipr.it/DOCENTI/ZUPPIROLI/docs/files/01_SAA.pdf. 12 October 2011. dead. 11 May 2022. it.
  2. Web site: Censimento Agricoltura 2010 . 24 October 2010 . . 11 February 2015.
  3. Web site: How pasta became the world's favourite food . bbc . 15 June 2011 . 28 September 2014.
  4. Web site: I finti prodotti italiani? Anche in Italia!. 30 November 2021. it.
  5. Web site: In cosa consiste l'Italian Sounding. 30 November 2021. it.
  6. Web site: Nanni. Paolo. HISTORY OF ITALIAN AGRICULTURE AND AGRICULTURAL LANDSCAPES. 2 February 2021. http://rsa.storiaagricoltura.it1.
  7. Web site: Curtotti. Michael. 28 September 2018. Ancient Italy: The Arrival of Agriculture and the People from the Sea: 6000BC. 2 February 2021. Beyond Foreignness. en-AU.
  8. Web site: Nanni. Paolo. History of Italian Agriculture and Agricultural Landscapes in the Late Middle Ages. 2 February 2021. ONW.
  9. Web site: Parco Nazionale del Circeo . Joolen . Ester . Parco Nazionale del Circeo . 29 December 2022.
  10. Web site: Nanni. Paolo. 22 January 2016. History of Italian agriculture and agricultural landscapes in the late Middle ages. 2 February 2021. www.georgofili.world. en.
  11. Web site: On Agriculture, Volume I — Columella. 2 February 2021. www.hup.harvard.edu. en.
  12. Web site: Hays. Jeffrey. AGRICULTURE IN ANCIENT ROME Facts and Details. 2 February 2021. factsanddetails.com. en.
  13. Web site: Italy – Agriculture, forestry, and fishing. 2 February 2021. Encyclopedia Britannica. en.
  14. Web site: Corrado. Alessandra. June 2017. Migrant crop pickers in Italy and Spain – Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung. 2 February 2021. www.boell.de.
  15. Caliandro. Angelo. 7 February 2011. Luigi Cavazza Protagonista del progresso delle scienze agrarie. Italian Journal of Agronomy. It. 1. 3s. 10.4081/ija.2006.s417. 2039-6805. free.
  16. Vinciguerra. Salvatore. 2014. Mercantile routes and agriculture transformation in Southern Italy and Sicily between the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Rivista di storia economica. en. 3. 281–324.
  17. Cohen. Jon S.. 1979. Fascism and Agriculture in Italy: Policies and Consequences. The Economic History Review. 32. 1. 70–87. 10.2307/2595966. 2595966 . 0013-0117.
  18. Web site: 2014. Agricultural extension and farm women in the 1980s. 2 February 2021. FAO. Rome.
  19. Web site: Istat. 1 February 2021. siqual.istat.it.

Bibliography

Externals links