Information

History of Trentino Italy

History of Trentino

Originally a Celtic city, Trento was later conquered by the Romans in the first Century BC. In 1027, the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, Conrad II, created the Prince-Bishop of Trento, who held both temporal and religious powers. Prince bishops ruled Trento until Napoleon conquered the city in 1801. In 1814 Trento was assigned to the Habsburg Empire. Trento became famous for the Council of Trent (1545-1563) which gave rise to the Counter-Reformation.

History – The Modern Age

During the late 19th Century Trento and Trieste, Italian cities still belonging to the Austrians, became icons of the national unification movement. The nationalist cause led Italy into World War I. The region was greatly affected during the war, and some of its fiercest battles were fought on the surrounding mountains. After the war, Trento and the surrounding region, whose inhabitants are in vast majority Italian-speaking, was given to Italy, where it belongs to date.

Eight centuries of Prince-Bishop rulers, relative independence from the rest of Europe and a strong sense of communal fate left a distinctive mark on the city’s culture, which is dominated by a progressive Social-Catholic political orientation.

From Enchanting Italy

Purchase Farmers and Nobles by clicking the photo or son Amazon

More Ancient history

During the Stone age the valleys of what is now Trentino were already inhabited by humans, the main settlements being in the valley of the Adige River, thanks to its milder climate. Research suggests that the first settlers (probably hunters) came from the Padana Plain and the Venetian Prealps, after the first glaciers began melting at the end of the Pleistoceneglaciations.

Findings (in particular, burials) from the Mesolithic period have been found in several parts of the province. These include the comuniof Zambana and Mezzocorona. A large area of a hunting-based settlement from the Neolithicperiod has been found near the lakes of Colbricòn, not far from the Rolle Pass.

Around 500 BC, the Raetians appeared in the Trentine area, coming from the Central and Eastern Alpsarea. They settled in several valleys and brought new skills on top of the traditional hunting: agriculture (grapes, vegetables, cereals), breeding (ovines, goats, bovines and horses). During the Roman Age, part of the current Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol region made up the province of Raetia.

This region was totally conquered by the Romans in the 1st century BC. The definitive defeat of the Rhaetians, near Bolzano, occurred during the military campaigns in the Alps of Drusus and Tiberius(16-17 BC). Trento became a Roman municipium n the 40s BC. During the reign of Emperor Claudius(41-54 AD) Trentino was integrated in the Imperial roadnet with the construction of the Via Claudia Augusta Padana (from Ostiglia to the Resia Pass) and the Via Augusta Altinate (from Treviso to Trento, passing through the Valsugana). Claudius also issued an Edict, contained in the Tabula clesiana, which extended Roman citizenship to the residents of this region. By the fourth century the area was fully latinisated.

Bishopric of Trent

The Prince-Bishops of Trent ruled the region from Buonconsiglio Castle since the 13th century

During the Late Antiquity, in the 5th century AD, Trentino was invaded several times, from North and East: first by the Ostrogoths, then by the Bavarians and Byzantines and finally by the Lombards. With the latter’s domination an idea of territorial identity of the province began to shape (Tridentinum territorium). In the same century the region became largely Christianized. In 774 Trentino was conquered by the Franks and became part of the Kingdom of Italy, a sometimes vague entity included in what was to become the Holy Roman Empire.

The first territorial unity of Trentino dates back to 1027, when emperor Conrad II officially gave the rule of the area to the Bishopric of Trent. This entity survived for some eight centuries and granted Trentino a certain autonomy, first from the Holy Roman Empire and then from the Austrian Empire.

Part of Austria

In the early 19th century some of the Trentine people participated actively in the resistance, led by the Tyrolean Andreas Hofer, against the French invasion.

Trentino (green area) was part of the “Alto Adige Department” under Napoleon

Napoleon created in 1810 the Department of Alto Adigethat included most of actual Trentino and the area around Bolzano. It was part of Napoleon’s Kingdom of Italyfor some years.

After the end of the Napoleonic era (1815), the Bishopric of Trent was dissolved and Trentino became part of the County of Tyrol, in which the majority of the population was German speaking. Though relatively well administered, and despite the presence of Trentine representatives in the Dietsof Innsbruckand Vienna, in the second half of the 19th century a movement (part of the general movement called Italian irredentism) arose with the aim of annexing all the region (south of the Alps watershed) to the Kingdom of Italy: this, however, was largely put forward by intellectuals like Cesare Battist iand Fabio Filzi, and met some support by the predominantly rural population.

Given the area’s strategic importance in the event of a war between Austria-Hungary and Italy, the Austro-Hungarians strengthened their troop levels there and fortified the area in the early twentieth century. Under the authority of the Austro-Hungarian chief of staff Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf, modern, armored fortifications were built in the areas around Lavarone and Folgaria; their dual purpose was to protect against an Italian attack and to secure the area as a staging ground for an Austrian assault on Northern Italy.[2]

After Italy entered the First World War in 1915, the Trentine territory was a main fronts between Italy and Austria-Hungary, and suffered heavy destruction. After the call to arms summoned by Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria on July 31, 1914, more than 55,000 Trentini fought for Austria, first against Russia and Serbia  and, starting from 1915, also against Italians. More than 10,000 of them died, and many others were wounded or made prisoners.[3]Further, hundreds of thousands of civilians were forced to abandon their native area when they were too near to the front lines. Many of them, captured by the Italian Army, were later transferred to Southern Italy as colonists.

Union to Italy

With the Treaty of Saint-Germain(1919), Trentino was united to Italy, together with the new Province of Bolzano/Bozen (South Tyrol), as part of Venezia Tridentina. The centralization process brought on by the Fascistsreduced the autonomy that cities like Trento or Roveretohad enjoyed under the preceding Liberal governments, while many of the smaller comuniwere united, reducing their number from the 366 under the Habsburg to 127.

 

From Wikipedia

Podcast

Researching Trentino, Campania, Liguria and Sicily

  Fantastic interview on Francisco Andragnes research and family. Francisco was born in Argentina and his surname is Basque, however 75% of his ancestry is of Italian origin. Francisco’s ancestry comes from Trapani, the westernmost town in Sicily, all the way to Borgo Sacco, a town in Trentino close to the Austrian border, including also ancestors from Crocefieschi, Voltri, Finale , Laigueglia and Savona in Liguria, Meta and Piano di Sorrento in Campania, Lugo in

Read More »
Stories

My Italian Ancestry by Francisco Andragnes

My Italian Ancestry By Francisco Andragnes My grandmother Elena (to the right) and her siblings in Vicenza I was born in Argentina and my surname is Basque, however 75% of my ancestry is of Italian origin. My ancestry comes from Trapani, the westernmost town in Sicily, all the way to Borgo Sacco, a town in Trentino close to the Austrian border, including also ancestors from Crocefieschi, Voltri, Finale , Laigueglia and Savona in Liguria, Meta

Read More »
Bob

Recent Posts

Roots and Reflections – Buon Natale

In this conversation, the hosts and guests share their unique Christmas traditions from their respective…

6 days ago

Rediscovering Italian Roots: Montescaglioso Basilicata

Join us on a heartfelt exploration as George Gingerelli takes us on his remarkable journey…

7 days ago

Researching Avellino The Valleriano Brothers’ Heritage Quest

Uncover the remarkable journey of Italian heritage with brothers Michael and Chip Valleriano, who embarked…

2 weeks ago

How To Redeem Your Roots

In this engaging conversation, Bob Sorrentino and Dawn Matera-Corsi delve into the significance of heritage…

2 weeks ago

Buon Onomastico – St. Nicola

https://youtu.be/Aqvqy23fpYc My Photos from St' Nick's Bari 9/23 IMG_0887 IMG_0885 IMG_0888 IMG_0889 IMG_0890 IMG_0891 IMG_0892…

2 weeks ago

Antenati and Italian Genealogy Research Tips

Discover the transformative journey of Bill Sallurday as he uncovers his Italian roots, tracing his…

1 month ago