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Trieste - Before the Storm

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I was visiting family in Trieste (Trst), Italy. With unusual clouds in the sky and funeral silences, the city looked like a ghost town to me. On the streets, there was no traffic, parking was empty and the people seemed to be hiding somewhere.

Anyone who visited Trieste in the past knows how overcrowded it is and that the only reliable form of transportation is by way of motorcycles.

There were a few lost visitors who had no idea what was going on, but for those in the know, the Main Square in front of Town Hall was being prepped for a game and subsequent celebration. That day, Italy played France for the soccer world championships.

And then that evening...

STORM!!!

In Berlin's Olympia Stadium on Sunday, July 9, 2006, Italy becomes soccer world champions for the fourth time after beating ten-man France 5-3 on penalties (after a 1-1 draw). Twelve years after losing to Brazil in the first shoot-out in a FIFA World Cup™ Final, Italy made up for that heartbreak as all five men in blue converted their kicks to claim world football's greatest prize for the first time since 1982.


 


History:*

In Modern age Trieste had grown into an important port and trade hub. It was constituted a free port by Emperor Charles VI and remained a free port from 1719 until July 1, 1891. The reign of his successor, Maria Theresa of Austria, marked for Trieste in particular the beginning of a flourishing era.

The city was occupied by French troops three times during the Napoleonic Wars, in 1797, 1805 and 1809. In the latter occasion it was annexed to the Illyrian Provinces by Napoleon. In this period Trieste lost in a definitive way its autonomy (even when it was returned to the Austrian Empire in 1813), and status of free port was interrupted.

Following the Napoleonic Wars, Trieste continued to prosper as the Imperial Free City of Trieste (Reichsunmittelbare Stadt Triest) and it became capital of the Austrian Littoral region, the so-called Küstenland. Its role as the principal Austrian commercial port and shipbuilding center was later emphasized by the Foundation of the Austrian Lloyd in 1836 and the construction of the Vienna-Trieste Austrian Southern Railway, completed in 1857.

In the beginning of the 20th century, Trieste was a buzzing cosmopolitan city frequented by artists such as James Joyce, Italo Svevo and Umberto Saba. The city was part of the so-called Austrian Riviera and a very real part of Mitteleuropa. The particular Friulian dialect, called Tergestino, spoken until the beginning of the 19th century, had been gradually supplanted by Triestine (i.e. a Venetian dialect) and other tongues, including Italian, German and Slovenian. While Triestine was the language of the major part of the population, German was the language of the Austrian bureaucracy and Slovenian was the language of the surrounding villages. Viennese architecture and coffeehouses still mark the streets of Trieste today.

After the constitution of the Italian Social Republic, on September 23, 1943, Trieste was nominally absorbed into this entity. The Germans, however, annexed it to a Adriatic Littoral Operation Zone, which included also Gorizia and Ljubljana and was led by Austrian Friedrich Rainer. Under the Nazi occupation, the sole extermination camp on Italian soil was constructed near Trieste, at the Risiera di San Sabba, on April 4, 1944. The city also suffered from the partisan activity and from Allied bombardments.

On April 30, 1945 the Italian anti-fascist Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale (CLN) of don Marzari and Fonda Savio, with 3500 volunteers, incited a revolt against the Nazis. On May, 1 Yugoslav (predominantly Slovene, with some Croat and Croatian Serb) partisans of Tito's army arrived and occupied most of Trieste. The 2nd New Zealand Division continued its advance along Route 14 around the north coast of the Adriatic to Trieste and arrived to the city on the very next day. The German forces eventually capitulated in the evening of May, 2.

In 1947, Trieste became an independent state as the Free Territory of Trieste. This state was de facto dissolved in 1954: the city of Trieste went to Italy, while the southern part of the territory went to Yugoslavia. The annexation to Italy was officially proclaimed on October 26 of that year. The border questions with Yugoslavia and the status of the ethnic minorities were settled definitively in 1975 with the Treaty of Osimo.

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Piazza Unità d'Italia, Mazzoleni fountain
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(Piazza Unità d'Italia, Mazzoleni fountain)

Piazza della Borsa, the Stock-Exchange Square
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(Piazza della Borsa, the Stock-Exchange Square, designed by A.Mollari in the beginning of the 19th century. Nowadays it houses The Chamber of Commerce)

Chiesa di Santo Spiridione
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(Chiesa di Santo Spiridione is the Serbian Orthodox church of Trieste.)

the Roman amphitheater Trieste
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(the Roman amphitheater Trieste former Tergeste (a venetic toponym), which probably dates back to the protohistoric period, was enclosed by walls built in 33-32 BC on Emperor Octavius’s orders.

Santa Maria Maggiore - Outside
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(Santa Maria Maggiore next to the Protestant church of Saint Silvester.)

Santa Maria Maggiore - Inside
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(Santa Maria Maggiore, The inside is rather dark. Worth seeing is the chapel of the Madonna della Salute ("Madonna of Health") with a sculpture attributed to sculptor Sassoferrato (17th century). The people of Trieste have been worshipping this statue since it save them from a cholera epidemic in 1849.

Piazza Unità d'Italia ("Italian Unity square")
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(Piazza Unità d'Italia ("Italian Unity square") is the main square of Trieste and one of the largest in Europe. It hosts the cultural life of the city and the most important buildings. It was opened with its present dimensions (16,000 square metres) around 1870).

* Portions of this article was authored and/or copyrighted by Wikipedia contributors, sponsored by the Wikimedia Foundation.


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