Piedmont ( , ;
Piedmontese and
Occitan:
Piemont; ) is one of the
20
regions of Italy. It has an area
of 25,399 km
2 and a population of about 4.4
million.
The capital is Turin
. The
main local language (referred to as dialect) is
Piedmontese.
Occitan is also spoken by a minority in the
Occitan Valleys.
Franco-Provençal is also
spoken by another minority in the alpine heights of the
Province of Turin. The name Piemonte is a
contraction of the Italian "ai piedi del monte", meaning "at the
foot of the mountain".
Geography
Piedmont
is surrounded on three sides by the Alps,
including Monviso
(Mont Vis),
where the Po
rises, and Monte Rosa
. It borders France
, Switzerland
and the Italian regions of Lombardy, Liguria, Aosta Valley
and for a very small fragment with Emilia Romagna.The geography of
Piedmont is 43.3% mountainous, along with extensive areas of hills
(30.3%) and plains (26.4%).
Piedmont is the second largest of Italy
's 20
administrative regions, after Sicily.
It is
broadly contiguous with the upper part of the drainage basin of the
river Po
, which rises from the slopes of Monviso in the west
of the region and is Italy’s largest river. The Po collects all
the waters provided within the semicircle of mountains (Alps and Apennines
) which surround the region on three
sides.From the highest peaks the land slopes down to hilly
areas, (not always, though, sometimes there is a brusque transition
from the mountains to the plains) and then to the upper, and then
the lower the great
Padan Plain. The
boundary between the first and the second is characterised by
risorgive, springs typical of the pianura padana which supply fresh
water both to the rivers and to a dense network of irrigation
canals.The countryside, then, is very varied: one passes from the
rugged peaks of the massifs of Monte Rosa and of Gran Paradiso
(national park), to the damp rice paddies of the Vercellese and
Novarese; from the gentle hillsides of the Langhe and of
Montferrat to the plains.The percentage of the
territory which is a
protected area
is 7.6%. There are 56 different national or regional parks.
One such
park is the Gran Paradiso National Park
.
History
See also:
Kingdom of
Piedmont-Sardinia
Piedmont was inhabited in early historic times by
Celtic-
Ligurian tribes such as
the
Taurini and the
Salassi. They were later submitted by the
Romans (c.
220 BC), who founded several colonies there
including Augusta Taurinorum (Turin) and Eporedia
(Ivrea
). After the fall of the
Western Roman Empire, the region was
repeatedly invaded by the
Burgundians,
the
Goths (5th century),
Byzantines,
Lombards (6th
century),
Franks (773). In the 9th-10th
centuries there were further incursions by the
Magyars and
Saracens. At the
time Piedmont, as part of the
Kingdom
of Italy within the
Holy Roman
Empire, was subdivided into several marks and counties.
In 1046,
Oddo of Savoy added Piedmont to
their main territory of Savoy, with a capital
at Chambéry
(now in France
).
Other
areas remained independent, such as the powerful comuni (municipalities) of Asti
and Alessandria
and the marquisates of Saluzzo
and Montferrat. The County of
Savoy was elevated to a duchy in 1416, and Duke
Emanuele Filiberto moved the seat to
Turin in 1563. In 1720, the Duke of Savoy became King of
Sardinia, founding what evolved into the
Kingdom of
Piedmont-Sardinia and increasing Turin's importance as a
European
capital.
The
Republic of Alba was created in
1796 as a
French client
republic in Piedmont before the area was annexed by France in
1801. In June 1802 a new client republic, the
Subalpine Republic, was established in
Piedmont and in September it was also annexed.
In the congress of Vienna, the Kingdom of
Piedmont-Sardinia was restored, and furthermore received the
Republic of Genoa to strengthen it
as a barrier against France
.
Piedmont
was an initial springboard for Italy's unification in 1859-1861,
following earlier unsuccessful wars against the Austrian
Empire
in 1820-1821 and 1848-1849. This process is
sometimes referred to as Piedmontisation. However, the efforts were
later contradicted by efforts of rural farmers. The House of Savoy
became
Kings of Italy, and Turin
briefly became the capital of Italy.
However, the addition
of territory paradoxically reduced Piedmont's importance to the
kingdom, and the capital was moved to Florence
, and then to Rome
. One
remaining recognition of Piedmont's historical role was that the
crown prince of Italy was known as the
Prince of Piedmont.
Economy
Lowland Piedmont is a fertile agricultural region. The main
agricultural products in Piemonte are cereals, including rice,
representing more than 10% of national production, maize, grapes
for wine-making and fruit and milk. With more than 800 000 head of
cattle in 2000, livestock production accounts for half of final
agricultural production in Piedmont. Piedmont is one of the great
winegrowing regions in Italy. More than half of its of vineyards
are registered with
DOC designations.
It
produces prestigious wines as Barolo,
Barbaresco, from the Langhe near Alba
, and the
Moscato d'Asti (as well as the
sparkling Asti Spumante) from the
vineyards around Asti
.
Indigenous grape varieties include
Nebbiolo,
Barbera,
Dolcetto,
Freisa,
Grignolino and
Brachetto.
The
region contains major industrial centres, notably Turin
, home to the
FIAT
automobile works. Biella
produces
tissues and silks. Asti
comune about
55 kilometres east of Turin in the plain of the Tanaro River and
capital of Monferrato one of the most
important wine district of the world. Alba
is the house
of Ferrero's chocolate factories and
some mechanical industries. There are links with neighbouring
France
via the Fréjus
and Colle di Tenda
tunnels and the Montgenèvre Pass, and with Switzerland
over the Simplón
and Great St Bernard
passes. It is possible to get to Switzerland via a
normal road, that crosses the Oriental Piedmont starting from
Arona up to Locarno
, on the borders with Italy. The region's airport,
Turin-Caselle
, caters for domestic and international
flights.The region has the longest motorways network amongst
the Italian regions (about 800 km).
The motorway routes
radiate from Turin
, connecting
it with the other provinces in the Piemonte region, as well as with
the other regions in Italy. In 2001, the number of passenger
cars per 1 000 inhabitants at 623 was above the national average
(575).
The tourism industry in Piedmont employs 75,534 people and
currently comprises 17,367 companies operating in the hospitality
and catering sector, with 1,473 hotels and tourist accommodations.
The sector generates a turnover of €2,671 million Euros, 3.3% of
the €80,196 million which represents the total estimated spending
on tourism in Italy. The region enjoys almost the same level of
popularity among Italians and visitors from overseas. In 2002 there
were 2,651,068 total arrivals; international visitors to Piedmont
in 2002 accounted for 42% of the total number of tourists with
1,124,696 arrivals. The traditional leading areas for tourism in
Piedmont are the Lake District – “Piedmont’s riviera”, which
accounts for 32.84% of total overnight stays, and the metropolitan
area of Turin which accounts for 26.51. In 2006 Turin hosted the
XX Olympic Winter Games and
in 2007 the
XXIII
Universiade.
Alpine tourism tends to concentrate in a few
highly developed stations like Alagna Valsesia
and Sestriere
. Around 1980, the long-distance trail
Grande Traversata delle
Alpi has been created to draw more attention to the manyfold of
remote, sparsely inhabited valleys.
Demographics
The population density in Piemonte is lower than the national
average. In 2008 it was equal to 174 inhabitants per km2, compared
to a national figure of about 200. It rises however to 335
inhabitants per km2 when just the province of Turin is considered,
whereas Verbano-Cusio-Ossola is the less densely populated province
(72 inhabitants per km2).The population of Piedmont followed a
downward trend throughout the 1980s. This drop is the result of the
natural negative balance (of some 3 to 4% per year), while the
migratory balance since 1986 has again become positive because of
an excess of new immigration over a stable figure for
emigration.The population as a whole has remained stable in the
1990s, although this is the result of a negative natural balance
and a positive net migration.
The Turin metro area grew rapidly in the 1950s and 1960s due to an
increase of immigrants from
Southern
Italy, and today it has a population of approximately two
million. As of 2008, the Italian national institute of statistics
(ISTAT) estimated that 310,543 foreign-born immigrants live in
Piedmont, equal to 7.0% of the total regional population.
Government and politics
The Regional Government (
Giunta Regionale) is presided by
the President of the Region (
Presidente della Regione),
who is elected for a five-year term and is composed by the
President and the Ministers, who are currently 14, including a Vice
President (
Vice Presidente).In the last regional election,
which took place on
3-
4
April 2005,
Mercedes Bresso (
Democrats of the Left, then
Democratic Party) defeated
incumbent
Enzo Ghigo (
Forza Italia). However, at the
April 2008 Italian national
election, Piedmont gave 46.8% of its votes to the Centre-Right
coalition led by
Silvio
Berlusconi.
Administrative divisions
Piedmont is divided into eight provinces:
| Province |
Area (km²) |
Population |
Density (inh./km²) |
| Province of
Alessandria |
3,560 |
438,062 |
123.1 |
| Province of Asti |
1,504 |
219,629 |
146.0 |
| Province of Biella |
913 |
187,090 |
204.9 |
| Province of Cuneo |
6,903 |
584,467 |
84.7 |
| Province of Novara |
1,339 |
365,156 |
272.7 |
| Province of Turin |
6,821 |
2,288,614 |
335.5 |
| Province of
Verbano-Cusio-Ossola |
2,255 |
162,618 |
72.1 |
| Province of Vercelli |
2,088 |
179,164 |
85.8 |
|
References
- Valeria Fargion, From the Southern to the Northern Question:
Territorial and Social Politics in Italy, paper presented at
the RC 19 conference 'Welfare state restructuring: processes and
social outcomes', 2-4 September 2004, Sciences-Po Paris, accessed 7
January 2007
- Anna Bull, Regionalism in Italy, Europa 2(4), accessed 7
January 2007
-
http://circa.europa.eu/irc/dsis/regportraits/info/data/en/itc1_eco.htm
-
http://circa.europa.eu/irc/dsis/regportraits/info/data/en/itc1_eco.htm
-
http://circa.europa.eu/irc/dsis/regportraits/info/data/en/itc1_eco.htm
-
http://www.regione.piemonte.it/lingue/english/pagine/cultura/approfondimenti/02_piemontur_en.pdf
-
http://circa.europa.eu/irc/dsis/regportraits/info/data/en/itc1_pop.htm
- Sito Ufficiale della Regione Piemonte: Giunta
regionale
See also
Image gallery
Image:Mondovi Piazza - 18.jpg|
Mondovì
Image:Chiappera1.jpg|
Acceglio
Image:Acqui Terme – the
cathedral.jpg|
Acqui Terme
Image:Asti Cathedral.jpg|
Asti
Image:Biella-Teatro
Sociale-2-bis.jpg|
Biella
Image:Isola San Giulio.jpg|
Isola San Giulio
Image:Macugnaga.JPG|
Macugnaga
Image:Molle.jpg|
Turin
Image:Verbania Pallanza.jpg|
Verbania
Image:Casale Monferrato, Piazza Mazzini
evening (Ian Spackman, Casale winter c 1995–6 -36).jpg|
Casale Monferrato
Image:Novara - Cupola di San
Gaudenzio.jpg|
Novara
Image:Vercelli-Santandrea.jpg|
Vercelli
External links
Specialty sites
Tourism portals