Italian people
From Free net encyclopedia
Template:Ethnic group
Chile:
96,000(1998)
South Africa:
35,000 1998
Croatia:
30,000
[1]
San Marino:
25,000[2]
Luxembourg:
20,000
Monaco:
5,000
Slovenia:
4,000[3]
Mexico:
1,000[4]
|langs=Italian (including dialects), Sardinian, Ladin, Friulian
|rels=Catholicism, some Atheists and Agnostics
|related=• Indo-Europeans
• Latins
• French
• Portuguese
• Romanians
• Spaniards
• Greeks
• Others
}}
The Italians are a Southern European ethnic group found primarily in Italy and in a wide-ranging diaspora throughout Western Europe, the Americas and Australia. Their native language is Italian and their religion is predominantly Roman Catholic.
Speakers of a Romance language, the Italians have some eclectic origins, due to Italy's history of invasions and migrations. The appellation Italian is possibly derived from the Greeks who used the term to describe the Ancient Italic peoples, who pre-date the coming of Indo-European invaders.
There are almost 56 million autochthonous Italians in Italy alone, while around 750,000[5]are found in Switzerland, and around 28,000 in San Marino. Smaller groups can also be found in Slovenia and Croatia. There is a notable Italian diaspora in the United States (Italian-Americans), Brazil (Italian Brazilians), Argentina, Venezuela, Uruguay, Canada (Italian Canadian), Belgium, Australia (Italian Australians), Scotland (Italian-Scots) and France.
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Historical background
The History of Italy is ancient and stretches back millennia to Paleolithic times. With the rise of agriculture by the 6th millennium BC, Italy's population grew. Indo-European invaders reached Italy between 2000 and 1200 BC and mingled with the local Italic tribes. The Bronze Age by the 2nd millennium BC ushered in a new era as Aegean influences permeated the peninsula. Minoan and Mycenaean influences can be seen in archaeological finds in the Lipari islands near Sicily. While, early Latin peoples dominated the north, Greeks settled parts of the south and the islands. The use of iron is seen as evidence of a strong influence from the north as the Latin language developed near the Tiber region.
By the 8th century BC, Greek colonists settled in Sicily and along the coast near modern Naples. These early Greeks formed independent city-states that often fought each other, but mainly prospered as more Greeks arrived due to overpopulation and political struggles in Greece. Around the same time period, Etruscans began to develop a state of their own. The origins of the Etruscans remain a mystery; speculation points towards their early forebears coming from Lydia or Troy in western Anatolia, while other sources contend that they were an indigenous Italian people. Etruscan language remains undeciphered. Trade with the Greeks to the south brought prosperity to Italy.
Etruscans and Greeks began to lose their holdings in Italy as Gauls invaded the north and Romans overthrew their Etruscan rulers to become masters of the peninsula. From 509 to 202 BC, the Romans conquered all of Italy and engaged in the Punic wars to become masters of a new empire the likes of which had not been seen in western Eurasia. Until the death of the emperor Marcus Aurelius, the Roman Empire knew few rivals in the world. It slowly declined due to Germanic invaders from the north, pressures from the Persians in the east and internal decay.
Remnants of the empire surivived and during the reign of Constantine. The Christian faith emerged as the main religion and completely transformed the early Italians. Ostrogoths, Visigoths, Lombards, and other Germanic peoples conquered Italy in the 5th and 6th centuries, but were themselves romanized.
Italy emerged from the Middle Ages as an important center of religion, as the Papacy gave the region significant political clout and authority throughout the Christian world. The Normans conquered southern Italy and Sicily by the 11th century, but over time they were absorbed by the local population. Numerous city-states maintained a high degree of autonomy that led to literally hundreds of dialects that were often unintelligible to other Italians. The age of the Rennaisance can be traced to the creative and commercial activity that began in Italy with the international trade and exchange of ideas coming through the powerful city-states such as Venice.
Much of Italy came to be dominated by Spain and France and Austria until the rise of Italian nationalism. Napoleon's efforts in fusing Italy into a single unit inspired many local nationalists in both the north and south to seek some form of unification. This risorgimento period in the 19th century saw various European powers intervening in Italy to carve out territories for themeselves. Following numerous conflicts in cluding World War I, modern Italy emerged in its modern incarnation with borders that largely corresponded to an Italian majority population.
Origins of Italian people
Italians have some varying physical characteristics, a fact that may result from the ancient settlement of the peninsula by ethnically different peoples. The Etruscans in Tuscany and Umbria and the Greeks in the south preceded the Romans, who in turn "Latinized" the whole country and preserved unity until the 5th century AD. Jewish settlements were established in Italy as early as the Roman Republic and survive to the present day.
After the collapse of the Roman Empire in the West, Italy was subjected to a number of invasions and colonisations, which did little to affect its ethnic composition. Part of the north was invaded by Germanic tribes crossing the Alps, while the south was colonized by Mediterranean peoples arriving by sea. The Byzantine Greeks were an important power in the south for five centuries, fighting for supremacy against the Lombards of Benevento. The Germanic tribes underwent rapid Latinization and were soon inevitably assimilated into the native Latin majority of the peninsula. Native Greek-speakers were dominant in Calabria and eastern Puglia until the 11th century (end of Byzantine rule) and at a small scale survive today. Sicily was invaded by the Saracens in the 9th century, who remained in power until the Norman invasion in the early 11th century. The Normans reigned until 1282, to be succeeded by the Aragonese and the Spanish. In 1720, Sicily came under Austrian rule.
Anthropologically, Italians are a primarily Southern European (Mediterranean) people with other European elements. Overall, Italians are physically and genetically similar to the Iberian peoples, including Castilians and Catalans, as well as other Mediterranean peoples, such as Portuguese and Greeks. Like the Iberians, there is a notable physical difference between the upper northern third of Italy and the southern part of the country. Due to regular population movements, the differences are not stark or pronounced, but do exist and may correspond to the ancient Italo-Celtic and Greco-Etruscan settlements rather than the various later invasions of Germanic tribes.
Italian society and culture
Italians have historically been more loyal to their local regions than to the state. High levels of religiousity and conservative values have gone into relative decline as interaction with the rest of Europe through the European Union, as well as the impact of globalization, has transformed Italy. In addition, the Italian language has increasingly replaced the numerous dialects and other languages once prominent in Italy such as Sicilian, Venetian, Sardinian, and Neapolitan. Thousands of German Bavarian speakers remain in the extreme north mainly in the South Tyrol region, while Albanian can often be heard in the south.
A general north-south divide has persisted over time and the economic disparity between the regions was once so pronounced that millions immigrated to the Americas, northern Italy and in more recent times, to other parts of Western Europe. Economic conditions have improved to the point that Italy now receives immigrants rather than sending immigrants outwards. Italy is predominantly urban, more than many of its neighbors such as France.
Italian Diaspora
Italy became an important country of emigrants after 1870. More than 10 million Italians immigrated from 1870 until 1920. In the beginning (1870-1880), the main destinations of the immigrants were other European countries (France, Switzerland, Germany, Belgium and Luxembourg). Most Italians worked in these countries for some time and then returned to Italy.
From 1880 until the end of the 19th century, the main destinations of Italian immigrants were Brazil and Argentina. Brazil was in need of workers to embrace the vast coffee plantations, and Italian immigrants became the main source of man power in that country, whereas Argentina was attracting immigrants in order to populate the country. Starting in the early 20th century, the United States became the main destination of Italian immigrants, settling mainly in the New York region. Other countries that received large numbers of Italians were Australia, Canada, Uruguay and Venezuela.
Nowadays, there is a very large Italian diaspora. About 70 million people of Italian origin live outside Italy, mainly in South America (namely in Brazil which has 25 million Italian descendants and Argentina with 13 million). North America (mainly the USA and Canada) has over 17 million Italian descendants.
Within Italy
From the end of the Roman Empire until the mid-nineteenth century, Italy was not the nation-state as we know it today. The landmass was fractured into various kingdoms, duchies, and domains. Over the centuries, dialects and customs evolved differently as a result of isolation of the kingdoms from one another, and their being influenced by foreign powers. While all these states were similar in that they retained basic elements of Roman language and culture, each one built upon this ancient culture to develop their own independent culture and ethnic identity. Even to this day, Italians living in their homeland define themselves by their home region, and many speak both local dialect and standard Italian.
See also
es:Italiano(raza) ja:イタリア人 ka:იტალიელები lt:Italai nl:Italianen pt:Italianos sl:Italijani