Slovene minority in Italy
Slovene minority in Italy, also known as Slovenes in Italy is the name given to Italian citizens who belong to the autochthonous Slovene ethnic and linguistic minority living in the Italian autonomous region of Friuli – Venezia Giulia. The vast majority of members of the Slovene ethnic minority live in the Provinces of Trieste, Gorizia, and Udine. Estimates of their number vary significantly; the official figures show 24,706 Slovenian speakers in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, as per the 1971 Census, but Slovenian estimates speak of 83,000 to 100,000 people.
The Slovene minority in Italy enjoys legal protection of its collective rights, guaranteed by the Italian constitution and specific legislation, as well as by international treaties, and bilateral agreements initially stipulated first between Italy and Yugoslavia, and since 1991 between Italy and Slovenia.
Since 1945, the Slovenes in Italy have enjoyed partial cultural autonomy, including an education system in Slovene. They have a wide net of cultural and civic associations. The Slovene language is co-official in many of the municipalities with presence of the Slovene minority, and visual bilingualism is applied in most of the non-urban settlements with traditional Slovene presence. However, the implementation of these rights largely depends on the local administrations; thus, the situation varies significantly from area to area.
Both Italy and Slovenia promote Slovene culture in Friuli–Venezia Giulia through subsidies for Slovene associations and organizations.
Name
The denomination “Slovenes in Italy” is preferred to “Italian Slovenes” or “Slovene Italians” due to historical reasons and reasons of identity. The Slovenes of the Julian March or Venezia Giulia became Italian citizens only with the Treaty of Rapallo of 1920. In the late 1920s and 1930s, many of them supported underground anti-Fascist groups, such as TIGR. During World War II large portions of the population took part in the Yugoslav partisan movement, and between 1945 and 1947, many of them actively supported the annexation to Yugoslavia. In the aftermath of World War II, their integration in the Italian state was slow and difficult: much of the anti-Slav Fascist legislation remained valid, and in the context of the Cold War, the Slovene minority was regarded by many political parties, as well as by segments of State institutions, as a potential Yugoslav Trojan Horse.After 1947, the term zamejski Slovenci started to be used by the Yugoslav press and institutions, especially in Slovenia. Initially, this term referred to all Slovene minorities residing outside Yugoslavia. This is still the way how the term is used by the institutions of the Slovenian State. However, since alternative terms exist for Slovene minorities in Austria and Hungary, the term zamejski Slovenci tends to be used mostly for the Slovenes in Italy. This term is often used also by the Slovenes in Italy themselves, and is considered a neutral and politically correct term.
Geographical extension
The Slovene minority in Italy lives in the autonomous region Friuli – Venezia Giulia, more precisely, in the provinces of Trieste, Gorizia and Udine. Slovene immigrants living in other parts of Italy are not considered as members of the minority.Slovenes live along the border with Slovenia. Their traditional area of settlement includes:
- the hinterland territory of the Province of Trieste ;
- a thin strip of territory along the border with Slovenia in the Province of Gorizia, including the town of Gorizia;
- the mountainous area of north-east Friuli in the Province of Udine, known historically as Venetian Slovenia, comprising the Natisone Valley, the upper Torre Valley, and the Resia Valley;
- the Canale Valley in the north-easternmost part of Italy, on the border with Austria and Slovenia.
Municipalities with significant presence of the autochthonous Slovene minority are as following.
In the Province of Trieste:
In the Province of Gorizia:
- Cormons
- Doberdò del Lago
- Dolegna del Collio
- Gorizia
- Monfalcone
- Ronchi dei Legionari
- San Floriano del Collio
- Savogna d'Isonzo
- Attimis
- Cividale del Friuli
- Drenchia
- Grimacco
- Lusevera
- Montenars
- Nimis
- Pontebba
- Prepotto
- Pulfero
- Resia
- San Leonardo
- San Pietro al Natisone
- Savogna
- Stregna
- Taipana
- Tarcento
- Tarvisio
- Torreano
Ethnic and territorial identity
In cultural-historical terms, three separate groups can be differentiated: the Slovenes of the Julian March, the Slovenes from Venetian Slovenia, and the Slovenes from the Canale Valley. Each of these three groups has had a significantly different history, which resulted in different identities. The Slovenes in the Resia Valley are sometimes considered as a fourth group, due to their specific linguistic features and separate identity; nevertheless, they share a common history, as well as similar cultural and linguistic features with the Slovenes from Venetian Slovenia.
Slovenes of Trieste and Gorizia
The Slovenes living in the Provinces of Trieste and Gorizia shared, until 1918, the same history with most other Slovenes: by the end of the 15th century, they were included in the Habsburg Monarchy, and in the 19th Century they actively participated in the Slovene national revival. Between 1849 and 1918, they were part of the Austrian administrative region known as Austrian Littoral, and were known as Littoral Slovenes. After 1918, they came under Italian administration and were included in the region known as the Julian March. They shared the same fate as other Slovenes in the Julian March: they were subjected to Fascist Italianization, which gave rise to pro-Yugoslav irredentism. In 1947, after World War II, a new border between Italy and Yugoslavia was drawn, dividing the Julian March between the two states. The border was artificial, insofar as it was not based on any significant historical or geographical divides. In many cases, the border separated families and ran through fields and estates. All these reasons contributed to the strong connection between the Slovenes who remained in Italy with their counterparts that were annexed to Yugoslavia.Until the 1950s and 1960s, the Slovenes from the Provinces of Gorizia and Trieste frequently referred to themselves as Littoral Slovenes. Since the 1960s, this identification with the Slovenian Littoral has faded, but it can still be traced in the names of certain institutions, most notably in the title of the Slovene daily newspaper of Trieste, called Primorski dnevnik which means “The Littoral Daily”. Between the 1940s and 1960s, the Slovenes from the Provinces of Gorizia and Trieste established the infrastructure of minority organizations that now serve the needs of the whole minority. They have enjoyed a certain degree of cultural autonomy since 1945, and they have maintained strong relations with Slovenia, especially with the neighboring border areas of the Slovenian Littoral.
In 1986 the Slovenian community founded the football club Kras Repen, which locates its fan base among the Slovenes in Italy.
Venetian Slovenia
Venetian Slovenia is the traditional name for Slovene-speaking areas in the valleys of upper Natisone and Torre rivers in eastern Friuli. The history of these areas has been strongly linked to the history of Friuli. Unlike most other ethnic Slovene territories, this region was part of the Venetian Republic for around 350 years. During that period, they enjoyed a large degree of autonomy.The Slovenes in this area were annexed to Italy together with the rest of the Venetia region in 1866, that is, half a century before the Slovenes of Gorizia and Trieste, who remained under Austrian rule until after World War I.
For long, the identity of the local Slovenes was mostly a linguistic and, to an extent, an ethnic one, but not a national one. The Slovenes of these areas lacked any form of collective minority or linguistic rights until the year 2000, when the Law for the Defense of the Slovene-Speaking Minority was passed by the Italian Parliament.
Canale Valley Slovenes
Around 3,000 Slovenes live in the Canale Valley in the north-easternmost part of the Province of Udine. The valley is currently divided among three municipalities: Tarvisio, Malborghetto Valbruna, and Pontebba. Most of the local Slovenes live in the first two, representing around half of the population in Malborghetto Valbruna and a lower percentage in Tarvisio.Until 1918, the Canale Valley was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Since the Middle Ages, it was a part of the Duchy of Carinthia. The local Slovene speakers shared the same history, traditions and linguistic features with other Carinthian Slovenes. According to the last Austrian census of 1910, the valley had around 9,000 inhabitants, among whom around a third were Slovene speakers, with the remainder German speakers. In 1918, after the end of World War I, the valley was occupied by the Italian Army, and in 1919 it was officially annexed to Italy. In the 1920s and 1930s, many Italians were settled in this area, which bordered both Austria and Yugoslavia. In 1939, the South Tyrol Option Agreement between Italy and Nazi Germany was also applied to ethnic Germans in the area; as a consequence, most of the German-speaking population was resettled to neighboring Carinthia. New settlers from other parts of Italy gradually took their place, which significantly altered the ethnic composition of the valley.
Nowadays, Slovene is still spoken in several villages in the valley, especially Valbruna, Camporosso in Valcanale, Ugovizza, and San Leopoldo. There has been a revival of Slovene language in these villages after 1990, with a focus on the younger generations.
Resia Valley
The inhabitants of the Resia Valley in north-western Friuli speak a specific dialect of Slovene, known as Resian. Due to its specific phonetic features and archaic grammar, Resian is not mutually intelligible with standard Slovene and with most other Slovene dialects. Historically and culturally, Resia could be considered a part of Venetian Slovenia. According to Italian and regional legislation, Resians are considered as part of the Slovene minority in Italy; however, there are strong local movements that oppose identification with Slovenes and Slovene language, and defend a separate Resian identity.Notable Slovenes in Italy
Notable Slovenes, who were either born in what is today Italy, or who spent a considerable part of their lives in these area, include:Actors, directors and showmen
- Miranda Caharija, actress from Trieste
- Ferdo Delak, Slovenian-Croatian theatre director
- George Dolenz, US actor
- Boris Kobal, comedian and director from Trieste
- Andro Merkù, comedian
Architects and designers
- Franko Luin, Slovene-Swedish graphic designer from Trieste
- Boris Podrecca, Slovene-Austrian architect from Trieste
- Viktor Sulčič, Slovene Argentine architect, born in Santa Croce near Trieste
Authors
- Vladimir Bartol, writer
- France Bevk, writer
- Andrej Budal, writer and translator
- Igo Gruden, poet
- Dušan Jelinčič, writer and mountaineer from Trieste
- Jovan Vesel Koseski, poet
- Miroslav Košuta, poet from Trieste
- Boris Pahor, writer from Trieste
- Alojz Rebula, writer and essayist from San Pelagio
- Josip Ribičič, writer
- Zora Tavčar, writer, essayist and translator
- Stanko Vuk, poet and Catholic political activist
Journalists
- Jurij Gustinčič, Slovenian journalist
- Miran Hrovatin, photographer and camera operator from Trieste, killed in Somalia with the journalist Ilaria Alpi
- Demetrio Volcic
- Sergio Tavčar, sport anchor from Trieste
Musicians
- Edi Bucovaz, musician from Venetian Slovenia, founder of the Beneški fantje folk group
- Marij Kogoj, Slovenian composer
- Denis Novato, accordion player from Trieste
Painters
- Milko Bambič, painter, illustrator, cartoonist, caricaturist, inventor, children's writer and author from Trieste
- Franc Kavčič, Classicist painter from Gorizia
- Avgust Černigoj, avant-garde painter from Trieste
- Gojmir Anton Kos, neo-historicist painter from Gorizia
- Zoran Mušič, modernist painter from Gorizia
- Klavdij Palčič, abstract painter, scenographer, graphic designer and former director of The Slovenian Cultural and Economic Union, from Trieste
- Lojze Spacal, abstract painter from Trieste
- Lojze Spazzapan, modernist painter from Gradisca d'Isonzo
- Jožef Tominc, classicist painter from Gorizia
- Edvard Stepančič, painter, from Trieste
- Edvard Zajec, painter and graphic artist, from Trieste
Politicians
- Engelbert Besednjak, Christian Democratic politician, Italian MP
- Darko Bratina, Sociologist and Center left politician, Italian senator
- Miloš Budin, Left-wing politician, Italian Senator, and Government official
- Ivan Marija Čok, Liberal politician and organizer
- Ivan Dolinar, Conservative politician, journalist and teacher
- Josip Ferfolja, Social Democrat politician
- Rudolf Golouh, Socialist politician, and trade union activist
- Ivan Nabergoj, Liberal Nationalist politician, Member of the Austrian Parliament
- Bogumil Remec, Christian Democratic politician and entrepreneur
- Mitja Ribičič, Communist politician, President of the Yugoslav government
- Josip Vilfan, Liberal politician, Italian MP
Psychotherapists
- Alenka Rebula Tuta, psychotherapist, poet, and author
- Pavel Fonda, psychiatrist, psychotherapist, and politician
Resistance fighters and anti-Fascist activists
- Ferdo Bidovec, anti-Fascist insurrectionist from Trieste, executed by the Fascist regime in 1930
- Lojze Bratuž, composer and Catholic activist from Gorizia, assassinated by Fascist squads
- Zorko Jelinčič, national liberal activist from Trieste, co-founder of the TIGR organization
- Fran Marušič, anti-Fascist insurrectionist from Basovizza, executed by the Fascist regime in 1930
- Zvonimir Miloš, Slovene-Croat anti-Fascist insurrectionist from Trieste, executed by the Fascist regime in 1930
- Pinko Tomažič, Communist activist from Trieste, executed by the Fascist regime in 1941
- Ivan Regent, Communist activist from Trieste
Scholars
- Milko Brezigar, Yugoslav economist
- Lavo Čermelj, Slovene anti-Fascist immigrant from Trieste; physicist, political activist and public intellectual
- Boris Furlan, jurist, legal theorist
- Boris M. Gombač, historian from Trieste
- Ivo Kerže, philosopher from Trieste
- Franc Kos, historian
- Milko Kos, historian
- Niko Kuret, ethnologist
- Alessio Lokar, economist and essayist from Gorizia
- Pavle Merkù, ethnomusicologist
- Avgust Pirjevec, literary scholar
- Jože Pirjevec, historian from Trieste
- Igor Škamperle, sociologist and writer from Trieste
- Božo Škerlj, anthropologist
- Vladimir Truhlar, theologian and poet
- Marta Verginella, historian from Trieste
- Sergij Vilfan, historian
Sports
- Sani Bečirovič, former basketball player, Italian citizen by marriage
- Arianna Bogatec, sailer
- Matej Černic, volleyball player
- Claudia Coslovich, athlete
- Lorenzo Crisetig, football player
- Gregor Fučka, former basketball player for the Italian national team
- Barbara Lah, triple jumper
- Edoardo Reja, football coach
- Lidija Rupnik, gymnast
- Giorgio Ursi, racing cyclist
- Mirza Alibegović, basketball player
- Amar Alibegović, basketball player
- Teoman Alibegović, coach and former basketball player
Others
- Sergej Mašera, Yugoslav naval officier, military hero, born in Gorizia
- Edvard Rusjan, pioneer aviator, born in Trieste, lived in Gorizia
- Jožko Šavli, author, amateur historian from Gorizia
- Sigmund Zois, Enlightenment figure and entrepreneur, born in Trieste
Italians of Slovene descent
Famous Italians of Slovene descent include:
- Gianni Bisiach, film director and author
- Andrea Bosic, actor
- Marco Castellani, musician
- Roberto Chiacig, basketball player
- Roberto Cociancich, politician, Senator, family of Slovene descent
- Roberto Cosolini, Mayor of Trieste, Slovene mother
- Armando Cossutta, politician, president of the Communist Refoundation Party and the Party of Italian Communists, 1998-2000
- Danilo Dolci, pedagogue and activist
- Michl Ebner, politician
- Pietro Fanna, football player
- Gregor Fučka, basketball player
- Giorgio Gaber, singer, songwriter and performer, father of Slovene descent
- Franco Giraldi, screenwriter and film director
- Gaetano Kanizsa, psychologist
- Guglielmo Oberdan, Italian nationalist activist and irredentist
- Giuseppe Pagano, Italian architect
- Giorgio Strehler, theatre director
- Walter Veltroni, politician, former Deputy Prime Minister of Italy, and Mayor of Rome, 2001-2008