Northeast Italy Explained

Northeast Italy
Native Name:
Native Name Lang:it
Map Alt:Map of Italy, highlighting Northeast Italy
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Italy
Parts Type:Regions
Parts Style:list
Parts:List
P1: Emilia-Romagna
P2: Friuli-Venezia Giulia
P3: Veneto
P4: Trentino-Alto Adige
Blank Name:Languages
Blank Info: 
Blank1 Name: – Official language
Blank1 Info:Italian
Blank2 Name: – Official linguistic minorities[1]
Blank3 Name: – Regional languages
Area Total Km2:62310
Population Est:11,532,690
Population Footnotes:[2]
Pop Est As Of:2022

Northeast Italy (Italian: Italia nord-orientale or just Italian: Nord-est) is one of the five official statistical regions of Italy used by the National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT), a first level NUTS region and a European Parliament constituency. Northeast encompasses four of the country's 20 regions:

Historical names

Triveneto (literally "Triple Veneto") is a historical region of Italy. The area is made up of the three smaller historical regions of Italian: Venezia Euganea ("Euganean Venetia"), Italian: Venezia Giulia ("Julian March") and Italian: Venezia Tridentina ("Tridentine Venetia").[3] This territory was named after the Roman region of Latin: [[Venetia et Histria]]. The entire area was under Austrian rule in 1863; Italy annexed Venezia Euganea in 1866,[4] following the Third Italian War of Independence and a controversial plebiscite (see Venetian nationalism); Julian Venetia and Venezia Tridentina passed under the Italian rule in 1919, following the end of World War I.[5] After World War II, Italy retained the most part of Tre Venezie, but lost Slovenian and Croatian majority areas of the upper Isonzo valley (together with the eastern part of Gorizia, today called Nova Gorica), the city of Fiume, most part of Carso region and most part of Istria to Yugoslavia.[6] The areas of Trieste (Zone A) and north-west Istria (Zone B) were formed in the Free Territory of Trieste: in 1954, Italy reannexed Zone A, while Zone B was ceded to Yugoslavia. Nowadays the name Triveneto includes the three administrative regions of Veneto, Friuli-Venezia Giulia and Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol

Venetia et Histria, an old region of Italy at the time of Roman Empire, refers to Veneto, Trentino, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, East Lombardy and Istria; it was named after the people of Veneti, who inhabited that region, and who are still largely the main ethnic group of the Italian area (other main ethnic groups include Friulani in the east, mostly in Udine province; Ladins in the Dolomites are between Veneto and Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol; Germans in South Tyrol; and Slovene minorities on the border with Slovenia and in the city of Trieste); while after 1947 Venetian/Istrian Italians are just a minority in Slovenian and Croatian Istria. Roman Venetia et Histria was originally created by Augustus as the tenth regio in 7 AD alongside the nine other regiones. The region had been one of the last regions of Italy to be incorporated into the Roman Empire.[7] It was later renamed by Diocletian the VIII provincia Venetia et Histria in the third century. Its capital was at Aquileia, and it stretched geographically from the Arsia River in the east in what is now Croatia to the Abdua in the current Italian region of Lombardy and from the Alps to the Adriatic Sea.[8] Venetia, a region which indicated the old land provinces of the Republic of Venice from river Adda to river Isonzo, and is sometimes still used today to indicate this territory together with Trentino and Trieste.

Geography

It borders to the north with Austria and Switzerland, to the east with Slovenia, to the south with Liguria, Tuscany, Marche and the small state of San Marino, to the west with Lombardy and for a very short stretch with Piedmont. Emilia-Romagna, Friuli-Venezia Giulia and Veneto are washed by the Adriatic Sea

Northeastern Italy includes most of the Po Valley, crossed by the Po river, the longest river in Italy, and includes highly industrialized regions with a high tourist activity.

Demography

In 2022, the population resident in north-eastern Italy amounts to 11,532,690 inhabitants.[2]

Regions

Region CapitalInhabitants
Bologna
Trieste
Trento
Venice

Most populous municipalities

Below is the list of the population residing in 2022 in municipalities with more than inhabitants.[2]

MunicipalityRegion Inhabitants
1 Bologna
2 Verona
3 Venice
4 Padua
5 Trieste
6 Parma
7 Modena
8
9 Ravenna
10 Rimini
11 Ferrara
12 Trento
13 Forlì
14 Vicenza
15 Bolzano
16 Piacenza
17 Udine
18 Cesena
19 Treviso
20 Carpi
21 Imola
22 Faenza
23 Pordenone

Languages

Italian is the main language. Other languages include Venetian, widely spoken in Veneto and along the coast to Trieste and Istria, as well as in the towns of Pordenone and Gorizia in Friuli, and in most of Trentino, but only recognised by the Veneto region; Friulian, spoken in most of Friuli and nationally recognized, and Ladin, spoken by a few thousand people in the Dolomites. Other languages are German, the primary language of South Tyrol, where Italian is spoken by about two thirds of the inhabitants, and Slovene, recognized by Italy and spoken on the border of Italy and Istria, where the main language today is Croatian but Italian is recognized as a minority language due to the presence of the Istrian Italians.

Economy

The Gross domestic product (GDP) of the region was 407.9 billion euros in 2018, accounting for 23.1% of Italy's economic output. GDP per capita adjusted for purchasing power was 34,900 euros or 116% of the EU27 average in the same year.[9]

See also

External links

45.5°N 12°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Legge 482 . Webcitation.org . 2015-10-17 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150924042628/http://www.camera.it/parlam/leggi/99482l.htm . 24 September 2015 .
  2. Web site: Bilancio demografico e popolazione residente per sesso al 31 dicembre 2022 . 29 July 2023. it.
  3. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/625132/Venetia Venetia
  4. [Peace of Prague (1866)]
  5. [Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye (1919)]
  6. [Treaty of Peace with Italy, 1947]
  7. BISPHAM . EDWARD . Pliny the Elder's Italy . Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies . 2007 . 100 . 46 . 43767660 . 14 January 2021.
  8. Berto . Luigi . "Venetia (Venice)": Its Formation and Meaning in the Middle Ages . NeMLA Italian Studies . 2013 . 35 . 1–2 . 14 January 2021.
  9. Web site: Regional GDP per capita ranged from 30% to 263% of the EU average in 2018. Eurostat.