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Algeria
Date: The 20th Century
Notes: "Foto del 1921 di Algeri (dove si concentravano gli Italo-algerini, che avevano nell'edilizia una delle loro attivit? principali) con edifici simili a quelli di una tipica citt? meridionale italiana."
Contributed by: Text, Algeria; machine translation by Google

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Eritrea
Date: The 20th Century
Notes: Italian Eritreans
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
      Italo-eritrei
      Catholic Cathedral of Asmara, built by the Italians in 1922 and now meeting place of the remaining Eritrean Italians
      Total population
      900 (100,000 descendants in 2008[1][2][3])
      Regions with significant populations
      Asmara
      Languages
     
      Italian, Tigrinya
      Religion
     
      Christian, mostly Roman Catholic
      Related ethnic groups
     
      Italians
      Italian Eritreans (or Eritrean Italians) are Eritrean-born descendants of Italian settlers as well as Italian long-term residents in Eritrea.
      History
      Their ancestry dates back from the beginning of the Italian colonization of Eritrea at the end of the XIX century, but only after the Second Italo-Abyssinian War of 1935 they settled in large numbers. In the 1939 census of Eritrea there were more than 75,000 Eritrean Italians, most of them (53,000) living in Asmara. Many Italian settlers got out of their colony after its conquest by the Allies in November 1941 and they were reduced to only 38,000 by 1946.
     
      Although many of the remaining Italians stayed during the decolonization process after World War II and are actually assimilated to the Eritrean society, a few are stateless today, as none of them were given citizenship unless through marriage or -more rarely- by having it conferred upon them by the State.
     
      The Italian colony of Eritrea
      From 1882 to 1941 Eritrea was ruled by the Kingdom of Italy. In those sixty years Eritrea was populated - mainly in the area of Asmara - by groups of italian colonists, who moved there from the beginning of the XX century.
     
      The Italian Eritreans grew from 4,000 during World War I to nearly 100,000 at the beginning of World War II[4].
     
      The Italians brought to Eritrea a huge development of Catholicism and by the 1940 nearly half the Eritrean population was Catholic, mainly in Asmara where many churches were built.
     
      Italian administration of Eritrea brought improvements in the medical and agricultural sectors of Eritrean society. For the first time in history the Eritrean poor population had access to sanitary and hospital services in the urban areas.
      In Asmara was built the Cinema Impero in 1937. It is worldwide considered a masterpiece of "Italian Art-Deco style", later copied even in Miami Beach (USA)
     
      Furthermore, the Italians employed many Eritreans in public service (in particular in the police and public works departments) and oversaw the provision of urban amenities in Asmara and Massawa. In a region marked by cultural, linguistic, and religious diversity, a succession of Italian governors maintained a notable degree of unity and public order. The Italians also built many major infrastructural projects in Eritrea, including the Asmara-Massawa Cableway and the Eritrean Railway.[1]
     
      Benito Mussolini's rise to power in Italy in 1922 brought profound changes to the colonial government in Eritrea. Mussolini established the Italian Empire in May 1936. The fascists imposed harsh rule that stressed the political and racial superiority of Italians. Eritreans were demoted to menial positions in the public sector in 1938.
     
      Eritrea was chosen by the Italian government to be the industrial center of the Italian East Africa. The Italian government continued to implement agricultural reforms but primarily on farms owned by Italian colonists (exports of coffee boomed in the thirties). In the area of Asmara there were in 1940 more than 2000 small and medium sized industrial companies, concentrated in the areas of construction, mechanics, textiles, electricity and food processing. Consequently, the living standard of life in Eritrea in 1939 was considered one of the best of Africa for the Italian colonists and for the Eritreans[2].
     
      The Mussolini government regarded the colony as a strategic base for future aggrandizement and ruled accordingly, using Eritrea as a base to launch its 1935?1936 campaign to colonize Ethiopia. In 1939 nearly 40% of the male Eritreans able to fight were enrolled in the colonial Italian Army: the best Italian colonial troops during World War II were the Eritrean Ascari, as stated by Italian Marshall Rodolfo Graziani and legendary officer Amedeo Guillet [3].
      year Italian Eritreans Eritrea population
      1910 ...............1000 .............390,000
      1935 ...............3100 .............610,000
      1939 .............76,000 .............740,000
      1946 .............38,000 .............870,000
      2008 .................900 ...........4,500,000
      The Italian Eritrean population in Eritrea, from 1910 to 2008
     
      [edit] Asmara development
     
      Asmara was populated by a numerous Italian community and the city acquired an Italian architectural look. Today Asmara is worldwide known for its early twentieth century Italian buildings, including the Art Deco Cinema Impero, "Cubist" Africa Pension, eclectic Orthodox Cathedral and former Opera House, the futurist Fiat Tagliero Building, neo-Romanesque Roman Catholic Cathedral, and the neoclassical Governor's Palace. The city is littered with Italian colonial villas and mansions. Most of central Asmara was built between 1935 and 1941, so effectively the Italians managed to build almost an entire city, in just six short years.[5]
     
      The city of Asmara had a population of 98,000, of which 53,000 were Italians according to the Italian census of 1939. This fact made Asmara the main "Italian town" of the Italian empire in Africa. In all Eritrea the Italians were 75,000 in that year.[4]
     
      Many industrial investments were done by the Italians in the area of Asmara and Massawa, but the beginning of World War II stopped the blossoming industrialization of Eritrea [6].
     
      When the British army conquered Eritrea from the Italians in spring 1941, most of the infrastructures and the industrial areas were extremely damaged and the remaining ones (like the Asmara-Massawa Cableway) were successively removed and sent toward India and British Africa as a war booty. [7]
      Map of the Africa Orientale Italiana: the biggest extension of Eritrea was reached during the Italian empire (1936-1941), when northern parts of conquered Ethiopia were assigned to Eritrea by the Italians as a reward for the Eritrean "Ascari'" help in the conquest of Ethiopia
     
      The following Italian guerrilla war was supported by many Eritrean colonial troops until the Italian armistice in September 1943. Eritrea was placed under British military administration after the Italian surrender in World War II.
     
      The Italians in Eritrea started to move away from the country after the defeat of the Kingdom of Italy by the Allies, and Asmara in the British census of 1949 already had only 17,183 Italian Eritreans on a total population of 127,579. Most Italian settlers left for Italy, with others to United States, Middle East, and Australia.
     
      After WWII
      The British maintained initially the Italian administration of Eritrea, but the country soon started to be involved in a violent process of independence (from the British in the late forties and after 1952 from the Ethiopians, who annexed Eritrea in that year).
     
      Since then the Eritrean Italians have diminished as a community and now are reduced to a few hundreds, mainly located in the capital Asmara. Actually the most renowned of them in Eritrea is the professional cyclist Domenico Vaccaro, who won in Asmara the last stage of the Tour of Eritrea in April 2008.[8]
     
      Language and Religion
      Most Italian Eritreans can speak Italian, as their language is still widely understood and spoken by many Eritreans of other racial groups: there is only one remaining Italian-language school in Asmara, renowned in Eritrea for its sports activities[5]. Italian is still spoken in commerce in Eritrea[6].
     
      Until 1975, there were in Asmara an Italian Liceum, an Italian Technical Institute, an Italian Middle school and special university courses in Medicine done held by Italian teachers[9].
     
      Gino Corbella, an Italian consul in Asmara, estimated that the diffusion of the Italian language in Eritrea was supported even by the fact that in 1959, nearly 20,000 Eritreans were descendants of Italians who had illegitimate sons/daughters with Eritrean women during colonial times.[10][11]
     
      Italian Eritreans can also speak the country's de facto official languages Tigrinya, Arabic, and English. The assimilated Italian Eritreans of the new generations (in 2007 they numbered nearly 900 persons) only speak Tigrinya and a bit of Italian, although a few are stateless. Nearly all are Roman Catholic Christians, while some are converts to other sects of Christianity and Sunni Islam.
     
      Prominent Italian Eritreans
      1949 Conference in the Vatican on Eritrean independence. Dr. Di Meglio is the second from the right
     
      * Vincenzo Di Meglio. A Doctor at Asmara hospital during the later years of Italian rule, and appointed Director of the C.R.I.E (Comitato Rappresentativo degli Italiani dell?Eritrea), the main association of Italians in Eritrea during British rule. Dr. Di Meglio was one of the main opposers in Eritrea of the British attempt in 1947 to divide Eritrea between Sudan and Ethiopia, a British plot to increase their influence in the region. He obtained the dismissal of this project by the United Nations with his continuous pressure on UN latin-american representatives (like those of Haiti): the proposal was rejected by a margin of just one vote -that of Haiti- and so Eritrea was not divided between Sudan and Ethiopia. He was later unsuccessful -as representative of independist eritrean organizations- when he spoke at the United Nations assembly in New York against the annexation of Eritrea by Ethiopia, as a federated province, in 1950. At the UN, Vincenzo Di Meglio promoted in agreement with the Italian government the idea of "Trustee Administration" by Italy of an independent Eritrea, akin to that of Somalia[7].
      * Ferdinando Martini. The first Governor of the Italian colony of Eritrea. In 1897 he established the Capital of the colonia primogenita ("first-born colony", as Eritrea was called by the Italians) in temperate Asmara, moving the Italian Administration away from hot, equatorial Massawa. During ten years as governor, Fernando Martini built many infrastructures in Asmara (like the present Presidential Palace).
      * Luciano Violante, former President of the Italian Senate
      * Bruno Lauzi, singer-songwriter
      * Italo Vassalo, footballer
      * Sivana Savorelli, aka Lara Saint Paul, designer
     
      For original text with references see Wikipedia, "Italian Eritreans."
Contributed by: Courtesy of Wikipedia

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Eritrea
Date: The 20th Century
Notes: "Catholic Cathedral of Asmara, built by the Italians in 1922 and now meeting place of the remaining Eritrean Italians."
Contributed by: Courtesy of Wikipedia

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Eritrea
Date: The 20th Century
Notes: "In Asmara was built the Cinema Impero in 1937. It is worldwide considered a masterpiece of "Italian Art-Deco style", later copied even in Miami Beach (USA)."
Contributed by: Courtesy of Wikipedia

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New Zealand (in English translation)
Date: The 20th Century
Notes: Italo-New Zealand
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
     
      Italian emigration to New Zealand
      Italo-Italians are New Zealanders emigrated to New Zealand over the past centuries and their descendants.
      History
      Italian Migration in New Zealand has always been very low, although the presence of Italian dates back to the voyages of James Cook (when an Italian named Ponto was part of his tripulazione).
     
      Until 'Ottocento were few Italians who came to live on islands, and almost always returned in neighboring Australia.
     
      Some Italians, like Salvatore Cimino came from Capri in 1839, is rooted in the territories of the indigenous Maori, creandovi families still exist. Another Italian who emigrated in those years, the name of Nicola Sciascia, currently has 2000 descendants of the Maori, who meet regularly to celebrate their links. [1]
     
      The majority is dedicated to 'agriculture (especially of the vine) and all' breeding, but some also in search of 'gold ( "Garibaldi Diggins," that is Mines Garibaldi).
     
      In the early decades of the twentieth century there was almost a thousand Italians in New Zealand, concentrated in Auckland, Wellington and Nelson.
     
      Many were persecuted (and even some interned) during the Second World War:
      "The entry into war also led to security measures that involved but the few Italians who lived there and that we live today. In June of 1940 courts were asked to judge the dangerousness of all communities dell'Asse present in New Zealand. As the Italian emigration had focused especially coastal fishing, (see the case of Eolian present already 40 years), most of them, already incorporated, was dispersed in villages and small communities. The largest part of the migration in this area consisted of Anglo-Saxon and German. Again, since 1927, had reached the fascist doctrine, which had not then had a great result, although there were islands in the same faction of the fascist British and indigenous islanders that poorly tolerated the crown. In 1941 were transferred on Somes 86 men of which 25 Italian civilians. Women and children were not interned, although problems are then presented for their existence. The treatment of prisoners is brought for example, citing that the Italians eat spaghetti and fish caught by them. [2]
     
      After the war, especially after the seventies, all Italians were successfully integrated into New Zealand society.
     
      Italian community
      The first attempt to organize mass immigration of Italians was made in 1870 by the New Zealand Government, but was half failure. Some hundreds of Italians were taken from 'Italy to do manual work tiring, but proved unsuitable and ended up returning almost everyone in Europe.
     
      Instead the 'Italian emigration was successful when implemented with reference to family and friends. " In practice, an Italian who had started a successful (ie, in trade or viticulture) and then "called" by others to enlarge its activity [3].
     
      In this form (called in English "migration chains, or chains emigratorie) is created major New Zealand communities:
      * Fishermen from the island of Stromboli created in 'Island Bay, near Wellington, a place known as "Little Italy".
      * Peasants from the province of Potenza are rooted in Nelson, cultivating tomatoes.
      * Farmers Veneto developed plantations in the fertile valley of the Hutt.
      * Miners from Belluno developed mining towns in the West Coast.
      * Lombardi Valtellina created by the farms, producing dairy products, in Taranaki.
     
      Currently, the Italo-New Zealand are in concentrated form to eighty percent in the cities of Auckland and Wellington, and are mainly engineers, merchants and entrepreneurs. Over the past decades has failed the resentment against the Italians, caused by the war against Mussolini British Empire. [4]
     
      Italians resident in New Zealand are 2216 in 2007, according to the statistics of 'AIRE of Italian Foreign Ministry. [5]
     
      Italian organizations
      The first Italian club, Club Garibaldi, was founded in Wellington in 1882 and is still active.
     
      In 1955 was founded the "Dante Alighieri" in Auckland, to promote the Italian language and culture at the Italo-New Zealand.
     
      Also, Nelson has existed since the 1937 "Club Italia", the place famous festivals and concerts throughout New Zealand. [6]
     
      Statistics
      The New Zealand census show the following consistency of the Italian community:
     
      * Census 1874: 280 Italiani
      * Census 1901: 428 Italiani
      Census * 1951: Italy 1058
      Census * 2001: Italy 1440
      Census * 2006: Italy 1539
     
      In the census of 2006 have declared an ethnic Italian 3114 people. The New Zealanders with Italian ancestry are about 30,000.
     
      See text for original English language Wikipedia, "Italian-New Zealand."
     
Contributed by: Text, Italian Wikipedia; machine translation by Google

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Paraguay
Date: 1919-1929?
Notes: 100,000 people living in Paraguay are of Italian descent.
Contributed by: Courtesy of the New York Public Library, Digital Gallery, Digital ID: 1572755.

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Madrid, Spain
Date: n.d.
Notes: 95,337 people are living in Spain that are of Italian descent.
Contributed by: Courtesy of the New York Public Library, Digital Gallery, Digital ID: 835916

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Italy & Around the world
Date: The 20th century
Notes: For information on the "Italian Empire," "Italian Irredentism," "Italian Mare Nostrum" and "Greater Italia" see Italy Revisited -- "Wars to 1923" and/or "Wars to 1969."
Contributed by: Image courtesy of Wikipedia

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