Trieste, a diverse identity
A door to the Balkans at the far edge of Italy, Trieste is a vibrant crossroads of cultures and influences. Mistreated by history, this is a city to discover without hesitation.
Trieste: City of Literature
Bella e colta, Trieste è la città più cosmopolita d’Italia. Vi si respira il glorioso passato asburgico che ne fece “la piccola Vienna sul mare” e negli incroci di lingue, popoli e religioni che ancora la caratterizzano si intuisce con facilità la sua anima insieme mitteleuropea e mediterranea.
SCOPRI DI PIÙ:
Beautiful and cultured, Trieste is Italy's most cosmopolitan city. There are still echoes of the glorious
Habsburg past that made it “the little Vienna on the sea”, and in its characteristic mixture of languages, peoples and religions that still characterize it, you can easily understand its combined Central European and Mediterranean souls.
FIND OUT MORE:
Schön und kultiviert, ist Triest die kosmopolitischste Stadt Italiens. Überall ist die glorreiche Habsburger Vergangenheit zu fühlen, die aus ihr „das kleine Wien am Meer“ gemacht hat. In ihr kreuzen sich Sprachen, Völker und Religionen, die sie immer noch auszeichnen und ihre mitteleuropäische und zugleich mediterrane Seele erahnen lassen.
ENTDECKEN SIE MEHR:
Credits:
Servizio Musei e Biblioteche - Comune di Trieste
Drone - Uponadream Studios
Discover Friuli Venezia Giulia:
Youtube:
Facebook:
Twitter:
Instagram:
Il rogo del Narodni dom, 1920 - Le vie della memoria
Le vie della memoria. Un percorso tra le violenze del Novecento nella Provincia di Trieste.
Soggetto e scenneggiatura: Raoul Pupo, Roberto Spazzali.
Con la partecipazione di: Raoul Pupo, Roberto Spazzali, Fabio Todero, Silva Bon, Marina Rossi, Milan Pahor, Tristano Matta.
Documentario
Lingua: Italiano
Durata: 60' circa
Italia, 2010
Istituto regionale per la storia del movimento di liberazione nel Friuli Venezia Giulia
Provincia di Trieste
1st Historic Dinner for Independence for Kosova at the NYC Sheraton Hotel Part 2 04-28-1990
If you Would Like to Support the Civic League, You Can Make a Contribution Here:
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
Learn More About the Activities of the Civic League On Our Website:
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
Stay in Touch with the Civic League on Facebook:
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
You Can Also Stay in Touch with the Civic League on Twitter:
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
Former Congressman Joe DioGuardi and Author/Activist Shirley Cloyes Have Been Actively Working to Enhance Public Awareness About the Unique History, Traditions, and Culture of the Albanian People. For Over 25 Years, Joe and Shirley Have Fought to Protect and Advance the Human, Civil, and Political Rights of All Albanians Living In the Balkans. With Your Support, The Civic League Will Continue Working Against Political Corruption, and the Oppression of the Albanian People.
Fiume City State: Free Love, Drugs and Proto Fascism
Check out Squarespace:
→ Subscribe for new videos two times per week.
This video is #sponsored by Squarespace.
Our sister channels:
Biographics -
TopTenz -
Credits:
Host - Simon Whistler
Author - Arnaldo Teodorani
Producer - Jennifer Da Silva
Executive Producer - Shell Harris
Business inquiries to admin@toptenz.net
Source/Further reading:
Gabriele D’Annunzio and Fiume:
Slav phobic stance of the Fiume legionnaires:
D’Annunzio’s wives and lovers:
The Regency of Carnaro and its constitution:
Guido Keller:
Mussolini’s ambivalence:
Futurism:
The Peace negotiations and ‘mutilated victory’:
Eric Clarks Travel Videos - Piran Slovenia - Great Walled Town. Great Square. Ocean all around!
Eric Clarks Travel Videos - Piran Slovenia - Great Walled Town. Great Square. Ocean all around!
From Wikipedia
Piran (Slovene pronunciation: [piˈɾáːn] (listen); Italian: Pirano [piˈraːno]) is a town in southwestern Slovenia on the Gulf of Piran on the Adriatic Sea. It is one of the three major towns of Slovenian Istria. The town has much medieval architecture, with narrow streets and compact houses. Piran is the administrative centre of the local area and one of Slovenia's major tourist attractions. Until the mid-20th century, Italian was the dominant language, but was replaced by Slovene as demographics shifted.
In the pre-Roman era, the hills in the Piran area were inhabited by Illyrian Histri tribes who were farmers, hunters and fishermen. They were also pirates who disrupted Roman trade in the northern Adriatic.[2] The Piran peninsula was incorporated into the Roman Empire in 178 and 177 BC and settled in the following years with rural homes (villae rusticae).
Piran before the inner marina was buried and remade into a town square
Tartini Square as it appears today
The decline of the Roman Empire, from the 5th century AD onward, and incursions by the Avars and Slavs at the end of the 6th century, prompted the Roman population to withdraw into easily defensible locations such as islands or peninsulas. This started local urbanisation and by the 7th century, under Byzantine rule, Piran had become heavily fortified. Despite the defences, the Franks conquered Istria in 788 and Slavs settled in the region. By 952, Piran had become a part of the Holy Roman Empire.[2]
The earliest reliable records of the area are in the 7th century work Cosmographia by an anonymous cleric of Ravenna. The name of the town most probably originates from the Greek pyrrhos,[3] which means red, because of the reddish flysch stones commonly found in the town's area.[citation needed] Some historians also refer it to pyros, meaning fire, due to ancient lighthouses which were supposed to be on the edge of the marina.[4]
From 1283 to 1797, the town became part of the Republic of Venice, where it was governed in a semi-autonoumous way, with a council of local noblemen assisting the Venetian delegate. Several enemy (e.g. from the Republic of Genoa) and pirate assaults were repelled during the late Middle Ages; a great pestilence hit the town in 1558, killing about two thirds of the population. The last decades of Venetian rule were marked by decadence, due to the competition with the nearby Austrian port town of Trieste.
The town was annexed to Austrian Empire in 1797; but during the years from 1806 to 1814, when it was ceded to Napoleonic Empire. On 22 February 1812, the Battle of Pirano was fought between a British and a French ship of the line in the vicinity of Piran. This was a minor battle of the Adriatic campaign of the Napoleonic Wars. The French Rivoli had been recently completed at Venice. The French naval authorities intended her to bolster French forces in the Adriatic, following a succession of defeats in the preceding year. Captain John Talbot of HMS Victorious arrived off Venice in mid-February and blockaded the port. When Rivoli attempted to escape under the cover of fog, Talbot chased her and forced her to surrender in a five-hour battle, Rivoli lost over half her crew as either wounded or dead. This was the only battle ever fought in the sea nowadays belonging to Slovenia.
At the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, Piran was an Austro-Hungarian city with over 12,000 inhabitants, larger than the nearby Koper. It was a flourishing market and spa town with good transport connections. The first trolleybus line in the Balkans was introduced to public service on 24 October 1909 in Piran. In 1912, it was replaced by a tramway that operated on the same route till 1953.
After the First World War, together with Trieste and all Istria, the town was ceded to Italy. There were no particular events in those years, until Italy entered the Second World War in 1940. With the defeat of the Axis powers and the rise of Tito's rule, Piran was assigned to the Free Territory of Trieste, Zone B, under Yugoslavian administration. The town was annexed to Yugoslavia in 1954, according to the London Memorandum signed together with Italy. A significant part of Piran's population chose to emigrate to Italy or abroad in the final phase of the Istrian exodus, rather than stay in socialist Yugoslavia. The annexation to Yugoslavia was finally ratified with the Osimo Treaty in 1975, signed by Italy as well. Since 1991, Piran is part of independent Slovenia.
On 24 October 2010, Slovenia became the first country of former communist Europe to elect a black mayor.
Sailing to Susak / Sansego
A brand new video about a mysterious island in the northern Adriatic Sea. The real jewel, which the world has no equal.
On this island there are no cars. Time stops here. Life takes place in a different rhythm than we are accustomed.
Subscribe Our Channel
Visit Our Website
Please watch: Building Sailing Catamaran in 180 Days
Interiors and Modifications
The music in this video is the creation of my classmate and good friend Alojz Studen - Luj. He's an extraordinary creator. There are plenty of great music on his channel.
The Best of Slovenia
Rick Steves' Europe Travel Guide | Little Slovenia is the least visited and most underrated of Europe's alpine countries. From its prosperous capital of Ljubljana, we enjoy the mountain resort of Lake Bled, venture into the Julian Alps for natural thrills mixed with World War I history, go spelunking in a gigantic cave, and swim with Slavs in a charming Adriatic port.
© 2010 Rick Steves' Europe
The game, il gioco pericoloso dei migranti sulla rotta balcanica
Con l’intensificarsi dei controlli e dei respingimenti al confine serbo-croato, la Bosnia diventa la nuova porta d'Europa. Secondo le stime, dall’inizio dell’anno, sono transitate nel paese più di 21mila persone, almeno 5.000 si trovano bloccate nella regione Una-Sana, vicino al confine croato. Ed è qui che sorge il “jungle camp” un’ex discarica, ripulita in pochi giorni e riconvertita a campo informale. Qui sono state trasferite a metà giugno più di 600 persone, scortati dalla polizia con l’obiettivo di alleggerire la pressione migratoria nella cittadina di Bihac. Il jungle camp, chiamato così perché nasce nel mezzo della foresta, è gestito dalla Croce rossa locale che fornisce i pasti e una prima assistenza medica. Le condizioni sono pessime, specialmente dal punto di vista igienico-sanitario. La polizia bosniaca pattuglia la foresta prima della frontiera con la Croazia, quella croata si occupa del tratto successivo: se qualcuno riesce ad entrare nel paese viene respinto e riportato indietro, spesso con la forza. Secondo le testimonianze dei migranti la Croazia non permette di fare domanda d’asilo nel paese neanche a chi ne fa esplicita richiesta. Eppure chi arriva qui non è disposto ad arrendersi: lo chiamano il game il tentativo di arrivare fino all’Italia superando le tre frontiere più difficili (Bosnia- Croazia, Croazia-Slovenia e Slovenia-Italia).
Con questo reportage, realizzato ad agosto 2019, ripercorriamo tutti i punti nevralgici di questa nuova rotta balcanica:
dai capannoni di Bira, una ex fabbrica di frigoriferi ora centro di accoglienza, passando per Velika Kladusa, fuori dall’ ex residence Miral, fino a Cazin, ex hotel Sedra che da subito ha ospitato famiglie e minori stranieri non accompagnati.
Video di Eleonora Camilli
Montaggio di Chiara Ercolani
Leggi le notizie correlate su Redattore Sociale
Trieste, incendio a San Giacomo: il lavoro dei vigili nella notte
L'arrivo e le prime operazioni nella notte dei Vigili del Fuoco nello stabile di via dei Giuliani dove è avvenuto l'incendio (video Vigili del Fuoco) LEGGI L'ARTICOLO
Bike trip from Italy to Slovenia - Episode 2, Parma to Mantova (The unexpected happened)
We had the crazy idea to go from Parma, Italy to Ljubljana, Slovenia, sister cities, by bike! But we also had the amazing idea to document everything.
In this episode, we finally left Parma and started our trip. Fernanda was quite tired already and then the unexpected happened.
Every Sunday a new episode, as follows:
#1 The bicycles - How we got our bikes and preparation for the trip
#2 Parma to Mantova - We got lost!
#3 Mantova to Ferrara - First night outside. Arriving with an incident
#4 Ferrara to Chioggia - The Delta Po
#5 Chioggia to Venice - The Little Venice
#6 Venice to Concordia - Lido and La Biennale di Venezia
Products we use:
DJI Drone:
Follow us on:
Facebook: Monday Feelings
Instagram: @mondayfeelings
Twitter: @monday_feelings
Google+: Monday Feelings
mondayfeelings.com
SLO - A1 - Koper to Ljubljana - July 2018
One of the most beautiful countries of Europe: Slovenia! This country is astonishingly green.
Driving through Slovenia requires a vignet. There used to be tollgates on this route, but they are slowly being removed (can be seen in this video as well). Furthermore, the electronic infoboards are always in both Slovenian and English, which is a rare sight in Western Europe actually! The quality of the Slovenian highways is very high.
A very busy section during black saturdays in the summer because of visitors of Croatia that come from the Tauern Autobahn.
Filmed with: Garmin Dashcam 55
Playback speed: x3,5
Music used: (all rights go to their original producers and record labels)
Intro: Who.Is - Cryptanalysis
Alex M.O.R.P.H. & Marjan - Take My Breath (Intro Mix)
Liam Wilson - Feel Your Dream
Ben Gold ft. Sivan - Stay (Sneijder Remix)
Andain - Promises (Chris Schweizer Remix)
Prestigio Roadrunner 520: Timelapse Serbia - Slovenia through Croatia via highway
Timelapse travel from Serbia (board with Croatia) via Croatia to Terme Catez in Slovenia. Made in Full HD, reduced from 30fps to 1fps. Used Prestigio RoadRunner 520 DVR
Il mio viaggio nei Balcani: i momenti trash e le librerie dell'ex-Yugoslavia
Poetry, music and identity (with English subtitles) | Jorge Drexler
(Full English subtitles are available for this talk -- click the CC button in the bottom right of your screen to turn subtitles on.)
One night in 2002, a friend gave Jorge Drexler the chorus to a song and challenged him to write the rest of it using a complex, poetic form known as the Décima. In this fascinating talk, Drexler examines the blended nature of identity, weaving together the history of the Décima with his own quest to write one. He closes the talk with a performance of the resulting song, La Milonga del Moro Judío.
The TED Talks channel features the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes (or less). Look for talks on Technology, Entertainment and Design -- plus science, business, global issues, the arts and more.
Follow TED on Twitter:
Like TED on Facebook:
Subscribe to our channel:
Pavane de l'Ange
Provided to YouTube by Believe A.
Pavane de l'Ange · Philippe Eidel
Renaissance
℗ Philippe Eidel
Released on: 2001-01-01
Author: Philippe Eidel
Composer: Philippe Eidel
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Porto Garibaldi Beach Coast of Adriatic Sea in Italy
Free video about Adriatic Sea. This free video was created for you by and can be used for free under the creative commons license with the attribution of epSos.de as the original author of this Adriatic Sea video.
Thank you for supporting the creative commons movement !!
The Adriatic Sea is a sea separating the Italian Peninsula from the Balkan peninsula. The Adriatic Sea is named after the ancient Etruscan city 's Adria, located on the territory of present Italian town of the same name, in the province of Rovigo in Veneto. The Adriatic Sea is a part of the Mediterranean Sea, a sort of gulf lying very close to the north. The Adriatic Sea is a part of the Mediterranean Sea, a very elongated gulf closed north. He bathes the north and east of Italy and west of the peninsula Balkan. The countries bordering the Adriatic Sea are Italy, to Slovenia, to Croatia, to Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Montenegro and Albania. The Adriatic Sea has several important seaports, especially Venice (Mestre) and Trieste, which was long maritime outlet of the Austro-Hungarian Empire to the Mediterranean sea. The Adriatic horn six states: Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro and Albania. In Italian is called Mother Adriatico ; in Albanian, Deti Adriatik ; in Bosnian and Croatian.
The Adriatic Sea is considered an articulation of the Mediterranean Sea, but in the Preclassic period was considered to be an articulation of the Ionian Sea. During the medieval period the Venetians called around the Adriatic and the Gulf of Venice and also called il nostro channel, like the continuation of the Grand Canal.
One of the most famous legends is that of the Argonauts. Set in Pola in Croatia who stop coming to Colchis on the Adriatic for fear of having to inform the king failure of his mission and the death of his son Jason. According to legend, the island Brioni in the Istrian peninsula, was born in the hands of angels.
The west coast is low and sandy presented except the promontory of Gargano, the promontory of Conero promontory and San Bartolo, while the east is rocky, with many entries, peninsulas and islands, as Istria and Dalmatia. The main islands of the Adriatic Sea.
Adriatic passes in the south to the Ionian Sea at Otrantosundet. The greatest depth is 1588 meters. Adriatic has since time immemorial been busy shipping traffic. Examples of this are the traffic with ferries running between several cities on both sides of the ocean. The name Adriatic has been around since ancient times ; the Latin name of the Mare Hadriaticum or Mare Adriaticum. The name, which comes from the city of Adria (or Hadria ), was originally just a name on the upper part of the ocean, but was expanded in pace with Syrakusakolonierna became more and more important. Even at that time ranged Adriatic but only to Monte Gargano, the rest was called the Ionian Sea. The Adriatic Sea is, in principle, between Italy and Croatia, and both coasts are major tourist destinations. In ancient Roman times was transported objects, animals and slaves across the Adriatic to Ostia, Rome's port.
Adriatic is most 770 km wide, and has an average width of 160 kilometers. The name of the Adriatic Sea has existed since ancient times. The Latin Journal Mare Hadriaticum. The name probably derives from the town of Adria or Hadrian, which was the name for the northern part of the bay. He later came to mean the entire bay. The Adriatic Sea is mostly closed more connected with the Ionian Sea and the Mediterranean Sea over it. Limit the Adriatic and Ionian Seas are the Strait of Otranto 75 km wide between Italy and Albania.
The sea is mostly shallow. North of Pula, the depth not exceeding 50 m, south of Zadar, 100 m - the area during the Ice Age was on the mainland. In the southern part of the Adriatic Sea is hollow where depths drop quickly (maximum depth is 1233 m). The Adriatic is a relatively warm sea - temperature does not fall below 11 ° C. Transparency He is also great. An important property of seawater and salinity, or salinity, reflecting the total amount of dissolved salts in seawater 1000g.
Ocean currents in the Adriatic Sea warm and the eastern coast of flowing from south to north, and along the west coast from north to south. Tides are not emphasized. Croatian Adriatic coast is considered the cleanest seas in Europe. At the same time the Italian coast mainly polluted (pollution which brings river Po ) but this excessive pollution has no effect on the Croatian coast due to sea currents.
Thank you for supporting the creative commons movement !!
Serbia: Mladic partito per L'Aja
Ratko Mladic ha lasciato Belgrado alla volta dell'Aja: prima un convoglio di auto della polizia serba, poi un secondo, hanno lasciato il cortile del tribunale di Belgrado, diretti all'aeroporto.
L'autostrada che dalla capitale serba porta allo scalo è stata chiusa, un solo aereo aspettava in pista.
...
Wines and food of Istria in Croatia w Guido Schwengersbauer
*Come on a wine & food tour with BKWine!* --- Guido Schwengersbauer gives us an introduction to the wines and food of Istria in Croatia:
Istria is a region in northern Croatia on the border to Slovenia, not far from Italy. It is an area known for good food, good wine, olive oil, truffles and a beautiful landscape.
On the wine side, much has happened since 1990, when Yugoslavia disappeared. Earlier it was important to make large quantities of cheap wine. Now there is a new generation of winegrowers, called The Young Wild, with new ideas, new technology, and new skills in how to make quality wine. There has been a revolution in winemaking in Croatia.
There are two genuine, unique, autochthonous grape varieties in Istria: First, malvasia, or malvasia istriana (from Istria), a white grape variety making full-bodied and relatively aromatic white wines, but much more sophisticated than malvasia wines from many other wine regions. The typical red wine is made from a grape variety called teran (a relative to refosk or refosco). It used to give very tannic and heavy wines. Now there are many exciting new wineries making unique high quality wines from this grape with modern winemaking techniques. There are around 40 modern wineries in Istria and everyone is making a lot of experiments.
Gastronomy: Istrian food is based on the special climate and the special temperatures they have (in summer and in winter), and the wind, the Bora. The wind makes it possible to make a lot of dried (not smoked!) meat, sausages, and hams. The Istrian cuisine is a mix of Italian cooking, Austrian and Hungarian traditions, and food from the Balkans. There is also a very traditional Istrian kitchen but with a variety that makes it exciting and that lets you always discover new things.
By BKWine,
Interviewer: Per Karlsson, BKWine.
© Copyright BKWine, Per Karlsson.
Music: Johan Stertman & Patrik Lundin, with permission
See all our wine videos on our BKWine TV:
Come on a wine and food tour with BKWine:
Belgrado, la Dubai dei Balcani?
A Savamala, quartiere di Belgrado, è stato inaugurato l'Eagle Hill, un’ex banca che da quest’anno ospita un’esposizione interamente dedicata al contestato progetto Waterfront, che a breve potrebbe cambiare per sempre lo skyline della città. Con queste immagini Sabino Ciprelli ci accompagna all'interno dell’edificio dove si ha subito l’impressione dell’investimento in immagine fatto dal governo. Eleganti hostess accolgono il visitatore e lo guidano nella sala principale dell’esposizione dove il progetto viene presentato in pompa magna da un enorme plastico al centro della sala. Guardandosi attorno si viene proiettati nella Belgrado del futuro attraverso enormi schermi touch screen che ricostruiscono strade ed edifici della nuova città.