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Provvidenti, Molise
Date: 1948
Notes: Maria Cerulli (nee Capporicci)
      Passport photo, taken before immigration to Montreal, Canada
Contributed by: Emma Cerulli

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Italy
Date: n.d.
Notes: "Vulcania Liner. Built: Monfalcone, Italy, 1928. The second of three ships built for Italy's Cosulich Line (the others were Saturnia and Urbania).... The Vulcania carried more passengers than any other Italian-flag ship.... In the 1930s the ship was used to transport troops during the Italian-Ethiopian war; it was later used in the 1940s by the Red Cross and the U.S. government. In the 1950s the ship was run as an immigrant ship. Image ID: Facebook (The Vincelli group).
Contributed by: Joseph A. Vincelli and the Vincelli family

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Italian emigrant wife 1908
Italy
Date: 1908
Notes: The image was taken from "Home Life in Italy, Letters from the Apennines" by Lina Duff Gordon (London: Methuen & Co., 1908). Caption: the emigrant's wife. Gordon's "Home Life in Italy" describes what life was like in Italy at the turn of the last century, including the effects emigration had on the population.
Contributed by: Courtesy of www.archive.org

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Italian immigrants
Calandrino, Sicily, Italy
Date: 1950
Notes: Alfonso Calandrino was born in 1906 on Saint Valentine's day in Ribera, Agrigento, in a house close to where Napoleon Bonaporte stayed in. At the age of 8 Alfonso's father died, making it impossible for him to continue his studies. He missed going to school a great deal, but there was nothing to be done. He had to provide for himself. He first worked as a farm hand, and then as a gardener. In 1959 he came to Montreal to be with his adult daughter. For 14 years he worked for the florist, Jules D'Alcantara. In 1990 he went to live at Centro Dante where he helped develop its garden. He also wrote poetry and prose. In his diary he wrote: "La solitudine non e una cattiva consigliera. La solitudine fa meditare, per tutto il tempo che la persona vuole. Spesso, la cattiva compagnia fa sbagliare strada, mentre la solitudine ti fa pensare, pensieri che sembrano strani ma hanno una ponderazione infallibile..."
      The photo and short biography of Alfonso Calandrino were first published in Centro Dante's "Album di Famiglia, 1996." Permission to use the material was granted by Santa Cabrini Hospital's administration.
Contributed by: Courtesy of the Santa Cabrini Hospital

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Italian immigrants
Lucca, Italy
Date: 1945
Notes: Dionisia Landucci was born in 1916. At the age of 12, after elementary school, she was sent to work. She worked as a machine operator [lavoriazione di filo da cucito] in a large company until 1954. The decision to immigrate was made by her husband, who after the war, found it hard to find employment. He left for Canada in 1951, she and her two children came to this country three years later. Here she also worked, becoming highly skilled in her field and much valued. After the death of her husband in 1995 she became a resident at Centro Dante. She often remembers with nostalgia her youth in Italy and how happy she was when she and her parents went to the sea for their vacations.
      The photo and short biography of Dionisia Landucci were first published in Centro Dante's "Album di Famiglia, 1996." Permission to use the material was given by Santa Cabrini Hospital's administration. For further information visit: www.sanacabrini.qc.ca.
Contributed by: Courtesy of the Santa Cabrini Hospital

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Italian immigrants
Venesia Giulia, Italy
Date: 1930
Notes: Giovanni Comparach was born in Yugoslavia, in Curzola, a place which in 1908 still belonged to Italy. At that time the place was very beautiful, but then the war came, and it devastated it. In 1933 he was recruited into the army and was sent to Ethiopia to fight "nella 'guerra di Mussolini.'" In 1952 viewed as a "orfano di guerra" (war orphan) he was allowed to enter Canada. Here he worked at various jobs and often thought of his home country.
      The photo and short biography of Giovanni Comparach were first published in Centro Dante's "Album di Famiglia, 1996." Permission to use the material was granted by Santa Cabrini Hospital's administration.
Contributed by: Courtesy of the Santa Cabrini Hospital

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Italian immigrants
Castelmare del Golfo, Sciliy, Italy
Date: 1956
Notes: For Giuseppina Fundaro it's still hard for her to understand why so many people left "quella belissima terra, con una suggestiva veduta del mare, baciata dal sole dal mattino al tramonto, e con un clima cosi diverso da quello di questa nuova patria." Obviously, she admits, most people left Sicily and came to Canada in the hope of getting a good job and improving their lives. In 1957 she too came to Canada with her husband and children. She now has 10 adoring grandchildren and 14 great grandchildren.
      The photo and short biography of Giuseppina Fundaro were first published in Centro Dante's "Album di Famiglia, 1996." Permission to use the material was given by Santa Cabrini Hospital's administration. For further information visit: www.santacabrini.qc.ca.
Contributed by: Courtesy of the Santa Cabrini Hospital

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Italian immigrants
Guardalfiera, Molise, Italy
Date: 1950
Notes: Emma Cichetti Latessa was born in 1914. Her older sister, Concetta, immigrated to Canada in 1904, long before she herself had been born. One of her sister's children eventually joined the Canadian army and fought in Sicily during World War II. The young man found his way to her little village. Their meeting eventually influenced her family's decision to pack up their bags and head for Montreal in the hope of having a better life. Her family sold off everything -- their house, their vineyards, and all their belongings. In 1960 she and her children landed in Halifax and she immediately felt isolated ("...fredda, squallida, deserta; un contrasto incomparable con il sole lucente de l suo paesetto che aveva lasciato in un'atmosera incantevole per la preparazione della festa di Natale."). The first few years in Montreal were very hard ("...tanto dure e colmi di sacrifici."]. Later, when her husband landed a job with Hydro Quebec, their fortunes improved. She stayed home and enjoyed being a mother to her children. Sadly, the premature death of her husband caused her great sorrow and changed her circumstances. In 1992 she became a resident of Centro Dante and here became involved in its many activities.
      The photo and short biography of Emma Cicchetti Latessa were first published in Centro Dante's "Album di Famiglia, 1996." Permission to use the material was given by Santa Cabrini Hospital's administration. For further information visit: www.santacabrini.qc.ca.
Contributed by: Courtesy of the Santa Cabrini Hospital

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Italian immigrants
Gesualdo, Campania, Italy
Date: 1966
Notes: Marianna Sasso Mannetta was born in 1915. She spent her childhood and adult life in the countryside, doing farm work and housework. In 1970 she came to Montreal to be with her adult children. Twenty years later, poor health made it impossible for her to live on her own. She became a resident at Centro Dante. Her greatest joy comes when her children and eleven grandchildren visit her.
      The photo and short biography of Marianna Sasso Mannetta were first published in Centro Dante's "Album di Famiglia, 1996." Permission to use the material was granted by Santa Cabrini Hospital's administration.
Contributed by: Courtesy of the Santa Cabrini Hospital

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Italy
Date: The 20th Century
Notes: Italians
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
      Italians
      Italiani
      Total population
      140,000,000
      (around 2% of the world's population)
      Regions with significant populations
      Italy 59 million [1]
      Brazil 25 million [2]
      Argentina 20 million [3]
      United States 17.8 million [4]
      Canada 1,445,335 [5]
      Venezuela 900,000 [6]
      Australia 852,418 [7]
      Germany 611,000 [8]
      Chile 450,000 [9]
      France 380,000a [10]
      Switzerland 291,200b [11]
      Belgium 290,000 [12]
      United Kingdom 133,500 [13]
      Spain 153,700 [14]
      Mexico 50,000 [15]
      South Africa 35,000 [13]
      Peru 28,000 [16]
      Croatia 19,636 [17]
      Ecuador 15,000 [18]
      Monaco 10,000 [19]
      Ireland 5,811 [20]
      Lebanon 4,300 [21]
      Languages
      Italian and Italian dialects
      (Sicilian ? Southern Italian languages ? Corsican ? Sardinian ? Northern Italian languages ? Friulian)
      Religion
     
      Roman Catholic (predominantly), others
      Footnotes
      a Italians by birth, not including an indeterminable number of Frenchmen of Italian ancestry because ancestry wasn't surveyed in the official 1999 census.
     
      b not including Italian-speaking Swiss people
     
      The Italian people are a Southern European ethnic group located primarily in Italy and, by virtue of a wide-ranging diaspora, throughout Western Europe, the Americas and Australia. They are one of the Latin European peoples and their native language is Italian, historically Italian dialects and other regional languages.
     
      There are almost 60 million Italians in Italy, about 290,000 in Switzerland, and about 28,000 in San Marino. There is also a large but undefined, autochthonous population in France (Nice, Corsica).[22] Smaller groups can also be found in Slovenia and Croatia, primarily Istria. There are notable populations of Italian descent in Brazil (Italian Brazilians), Colombia, Argentina (Italian Argentine), Peruvian (Italian Peruvian), Uruguay (Italian Uruguayans), the United States (Italian Americans), Venezuela (Italo-Venezuelans), Canada (Italian Canadians), Australia (Italian Australians), Chile (Italian Chileans), and throughout Europe?mainly in Spain, Belgium, United Kingdom (Italian-Scots/Italian-Welsh/Britalian), France and Germany (Italo-Germans).
     
      History
      The Italian people have somewhat varied European origins apart from the original Ancient Italic peoples: Northern Italy had a strong Celtic presence in Cisalpine Gaul until the Romans conquered and colonised the area in the 2nd century; the central portion of the Italian peninsula was inhabited by the Etruscans and Italic people; and southern Italy and Sicily was settled significantly by Greeks (see Magna Graecia).
     
      The Romans romanized the entire peninsula and preserved common unity until the 5th century AD. After the collapse of the Roman Empire in the West in 476 AD, the Italian peninsula was invaded by Germanic peoples crossing the Alps, establishing settlements in north-central Italy and to a much lesser degree in the south. The Germanic tribes underwent rapid Romanization.
     
      The Byzantine Greeks were an important power in southern Italy for five centuries, fighting for supremacy first against the Ostrogoths and later against the Lombards of Benevento. Greek speakers were fairly common in Calabria and Apulia until the 11th century when their rule ended: a few small Greek-speaking communities still exist in southern Italy and Sicily.[23]
     
      In 827 AD, the island of Sicily was invaded starting the period of Arab and North African influence in Sicily and Apulia, especially Bari. Arabs controlled Sicily until the Norman Christians conquered much of southern Italy and all of Sicily in 1091 AD, and began expelling them. [24]
     
      There are also still small Greek fishing villages in Calabria, Maltese-Italian residents whose family originated from Malta under Italian and then British rule from the 18th to the mid 20th centuries, and Catalan communities in Sardinia to this day.
     
      For more than 500 years (12th to 17th centuries) after Norman rule, Swabian (German) and Angevin (French) swapped control of regions in Italy, predominately southern Italy and Sicily. During the 11th through 16th century the majority of city-states from Northern and Central Italy remained independent, nurturing the era now known as the Renaissance. Habsburg Spain and Bourbon France dominated in southern Italy, resulting in some cultural and linguistic influences.
     
      In 1720, Sicily came under Austrian Habsburg rule and was swapped between various European powers until Giuseppe Garibaldi conquered Sicily and southern Italy, allowing for the annexation of the former Kingdom of the Two Sicilies into the new Italian state in 1860 (see Risorgimento).
     
      Culture
      Main articles: Italian culture and List of Italians
     
      From the Lombard invasion until the mid-nineteenth century, Italy was not the nation-state it is today. The Italian regions were fractured into various kingdoms, duchies, and domains. As a result, Italian dialects or regional minority languages and customs evolved independently. While all Italian states were similar and they retained basic elements of Roman language and culture,[citation needed] each developed its own regional culture and identity. As a result, even to this day, Italians define themselves primarily by their home region, province or city, and many still speak a local dialect or regional language in addition to standard Italian. Regional diversity is important to many Italians, and some regions also have strong local identities.
     
      Language
      The Italian language has steadily replaced the numerous dialects and Gallo-italic and Italic languages, such as Sicilian, Venetian, Emiliano-Romagnolo, Lombard, Sardinian, Piedmontese, Ligurian (also known as Genoese), Friulian, Ladin, Franco-Proven?al and Neapolitan. Standard Italian originated in literature of the 12th to 15th centuries, and was based on the dialects of Tuscany, along with influences of Sicilian and Venetian. In the 19th Century, Standard Italian became more common and helped unify the country.
     
      Some non-Italian speaking minorities live within Italy. Thousands of German Bavarian speakers remain in the extreme northern province of Bolzano-Bozen. Portions of the Friuli-Venezia-Giulia region have a small Slovene-speaking minority of Slavic origin. A small cluster of French-speaking people live in the province of Aosta and a small Catalan-speaking enclave in Sardinia goes back five centuries after first settled by Catalans from Catalonia in Spain. Two minor Italic languages are spoken outside of modern Italy-Corsican in Corsica, France and Romansh in eastern Switzerland.In Istria and Dalmatia there it is a small Italian community, that has survived the massacres of WWII.
     
      Since the 19th century, the economic conditions of the agrarian southern and north-eastern regions resulted in mass migration from these regions to the Americas, industrial parts of northern Italy, and to other parts of Western Europe such as France and Belgium. By the 1970s economic conditions in the poorer regions of Italy improved to the point that even the less-developed regions of South Italy received more immigrants than it sent outwards. Today, Italy is less urban than many other countries in Europe, with 67% of Italians living in a major urban area- compared to 76% of French, 88% of Germans and 90% of Britons. The vast majority of Italians live outside of the large (over 1,000,000 population) cities.[25]
     
      Religion
      Main article: Religion in Italy
     
      The most common religion amongst Italians is Roman Catholicism.[26] This reflects the enormous historical influence the Roman Catholic Church has had over the Italian peninsula, home to the popes and the contemporary Vatican City- headquarters of the Catholic Church. The majority of popes have been Italian and, for a long period of Italian history, they exercised temporal control over much of the peninsula (most notably the Papal states). A minority of Italians practice other religions, such as Protestantism, Judaism, and Eastern Orthodoxy. There are also non-religious or atheist Italian people.
     
      Arts
      The people of Italy have contributed significantly to world culture and scientific, and technological, progress continuously since ancient times. In the Arts, Italy produced some of the most widely known sculptors, writers and painters. Notable examples include Michelangelo, Dante, Pirandello and Raphael. Italian composers and musicians, such as Vivaldi, Rossini and Verdi, contributed to the evolution of western music, and Italians are cited with the creation of the opera; some of the most famous luthiers are Italians, like Andrea Amati, Antonio Stradivari.
     
      Science
      Famous Italian scientists include Leonardo da Vinci, a genius in several scientific disciplines, Galileo, the first to describe the laws of movement and use explicitly the experimental method, Alessandro Volta, the inventor of the electric battery, Antonio Meucci, inventor of the telephone, Antonio Pacinotti, inventor of the direct-current electrical generator, or dynamo, and of the electric engine, Galileo Ferraris, inventor of the alternating-current motor, Eugenio Barsanti and Felice Matteucci, who patented the first working efficient internal combustion engine, Guglielmo Marconi, the first to develop the wireless broadcasting, known as radio, Enrico Fermi the discoverer of neutron chain reaction and builder of the first atomic pile.
     
      Italian contributions to architecture and engineering are numerous since ancient times. Renowned architects include Brunelleschi, Bernini and Palladio.
     
      The rise of humanism and modern commerce can be attributed to conditions found in Italy during the Renaissance. This ambience also lead to the rise of the "universal man", of which Leonardo da Vinci often is considered as the prime example.
     
      Identity
      It is estimated that about 20 million Italian Argentines have at least one Italian forefather, the highest national concentration outside Italy (about 50% of the population of Argentina).
      Italian Immigrants in S?o Paulo. Brazil is home to over 28 million Italian Brazilians, the largest number of people with full or partial Italian ancestry outside of Italy.
     
      Diaspora
      Main article: Italian diaspora
     
      There is a history of Italians working and living outside of the Italian peninsula since ancient times. Italian bankers and traders expanded to all parts of Europe and the Mediterranean, sometimes creating outposts. In medieval times, there was a strong presence in Flanders, Lyon and the Middle East. Since the Renaissance, the services of Italian architects and artists were sought by many of Europe's royal courts, as far as Russia. This migration, though generally small in numbers, and sometimes ephemeral, pre-dates the unification of Italian states.
     
      The Dalmatian cities retained their Romanic culture and language in cities such as Zara, Spalato and Ragusa. The 1816 Austro-Hungarian census registered 66,000 Italian speaking people between the 301,000 inhabitants of Dalmatia, or 22% of the total Dalmatian population.[27]
     
      Italy became an important source for emigrants after about 1870. More than 10 million Italians emigrated between 1870 and 1920.[citation needed] In the beginning (1870-1880), the main destination of the migrants were other European countries (France, Switzerland, Germany, Belgium, the United Kingdom and Luxembourg), where most Italians worked for some time and then returned to Italy.[citation needed] During this time many Italians also went to the Americas, especially to Brazil, Argentina and the United States. From about 1880 until the end of the early 1900s, the main destinations for Italian immigrants were Brazil, Argentina as well as Uruguay.[citation needed] Smaller migration patterns of Italians went to Mexico, the United States, and Italian Corsicans constituted a large proportion of immigrants to Puerto Rico (see Corsican immigration to Puerto Rico).
     
      Brazil has the largest Italian population outside Italy. The country was in need of workers to embrace the vast coffee plantations, and Italian immigrants became a main source of manpower for its agriculture and industry. Argentina and Uruguay were rapidly industrializing and attracting immigrants for work and settlers to populate the country. Italian immigration heavily influenced the culture and development of these countries (Today, Argentina and Uruguay have the highest national concentrations of Italians outside of Europe - about 50% of the population in each country).[28]
     
      Starting in the early 20th century until the 1950s, the United States became a main destination for Italian immigrants, most settling mainly in the New York metropolitan area, Boston, Philadelphia, Detroit, Cleveland and Chicago. Other countries that received large numbers of Italians, primarily from about 1940 to the 1970s, were Australia, Canada, and Venezuela. During this period smaller migration patterns of Italians went to New Zealand and South Africa.
     
      In a wave of temporary Italian migration, from 1920 to the early 1970s (peaking in the periods of WWI and WWII), Italian "guest workers" went mostly to Austria, Belgium, France, West Germany, Switzerland and Luxembourg.[29]
     
      The migration of Italians has at times been very large and has influenced much of the world. It can be estimated as many as 70 million people of at least some Italian origin live outside Europe, primarily in the Americas.[citation needed] Large numbers of people with full or significant Italian ancestry are found in Brazil (28 million), Argentina (20 million), the United States (17.2 million), Canada (1.5 million) and Australia (1 million).
     
      Former Italian communities once thrived in their African colonies of Eritrea (50,000 Italian settlers in 1935),[30] Somalia and Libya (150,000 Italians settled in Libya, constituting about 18% of the total population).[31] Plans envisioned an Italian colony of 500,000 settlers in Libya by the 1960s.[32] There was emigration to Ethiopia as well. During the five-year occupation of Ethiopia, roughly 300,000 Italians were absorbed into East Africa (there were over 49,000 Italians living in Asmara in 1939, and over 38,000 in Addis Ababa). But fully one third of these Italians were military.[33]
     
      Italian diaspora
      Africa
      Egypt ? Eritrea ? Ethiopia ? Libya ? Somalia ? Tunisia
      Americas
      Argentina ? Brazil ? Canada ? Chile ? Mexico ? Peru ? United States (Puerto Rico) ? Uruguay ? Venezuela
      Asia
      Lebanon ? Syria
      Europe
      Albania ? Belgium ? Croatia (Dalmatia) ? France (Corsica, Nice, Savoy) ? Germany ? Greece (Corfu, Dodecanese) ? Malta ? Netherlands ? Romania ? Serbia ? Switzerland ? UK (Scotland ? Wales)
      Oceania
      Australia ? New Zealand
      countries in italics are former Italian colonies
      For original text with references see: "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italians."
     
Contributed by: Courtesy of Wikipedia

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