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South Tyrol



         


South Tyrol (German Südtirol, Italian Alto Adige or Sudtirolo, Ladin Sudtirol) is an autonomous province of Italy. It should not be confused with the autonomous region of Trentino-South Tyrol, of which it is a subdivison. South Tyrol's extensive autonomy makes it de facto comparable to an autonomous region of Italy.

In the aftermath of World War I part of Austrian Tyrol was occupied by Italy, and subsequently annexed, adding an area of 14,037 km² (5,420 mi²) to Italy. The areas around Trento formed Italian-speaking Trentino. In the north the valleys around Bozen/Bolzano were inhabited by ethnic Germans and Ladins. (Today Ladin is the third official language of South Tyrol, alongside German and Italian.)

After the rise of Fascism in 1922 a policy of de-Germanization was carried on ruthlessly. All places, up to the tiniest hamlet, were given Italian names, and even some family names were translated.

With the Treaty of Gruber-De Gasperi (1946) the German-speaking people were granted special rights.

Today South Tyrol (i.e. the Province of Bozen-Südtirol or Bolzano-Alto Adige) enjoys a high degree of autonomy, and relations with North and East Tyrol - the two portions of the old state retained by Austria - are lively, especially since Austria joined the European Union. There is a South Tyrolean People's Party, or Südtiroler Volkspartei. However, toponymes (names of places) still have two (German/Italian) or three (Ladin/German/Italian) versions.

According to the 2001 census more than two third of the population is German speaking (69.4 %), the second largest language is Italian (26.3 %), followed by Ladin (4.3 %).

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