Best Attractions and Places to See in Brunico, Italy
Brunico Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in Brunico. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Brunico for You. Discover Brunico as per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Brunico.
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List of Best Things to do in Brunico, Italy
South Tyrolean Folklore Museum
Brunico Kronplatz Turismo - Plan de Corones
Montagna Kronplatz
Cimitero Austro-Ungarico di Brunico
Kronplatz Ski Fields
La Citta vecchia di Brunico
Messner Mountain Museum Ripa
Concordia 2000
Parrocchiale di Nostra Signora
Castello di Brunico
Drone footage captures Zaha Hadid's mountaintop museum in South Tyrol
This video shot by drone captures the late Zaha Hadid's Messner Mountain Museum, which is half buried into the peak of an Alpine mountain in Italy.
The footage offers a drone's eye view of the large volumes of the museum, which appear to burst through the rockface of Mount Kronplatz at 2,275 metres above sea level.
Dezeen commissioned videographer Alaïa Fonk to shoot the film during a trip to South Tyrol to explore the region's contemporary architecture scene.
Fonk's footage shows off the museum's curved forms. One cantilevers over the valley, while two others form windows, offering views from the underground galleries.
More glass-reinforced fibre concrete forms emerge from the ground to create canopies that frame the building's entrance.
The museum is the final instalment in a series of six mountain museums in South Tyrol commissioned by Reinhold Messner – the first climber to reach the summit of Mount Everest without additional oxygen.
Read more on Dezeen: dezeen.com/?p=1106324
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MOUNTAIN MUSIC FESTIVAL 2019 - South Tyrol meets South America (Official Aftermovie)
10.08.2019
MOUNTAIN MUSIC FESTIVAL on Schlossberg Bruneck with:
Perin & Barbarossa
Jemm Music Project
VINOROSSO
Anavantou!
Partykräsherz
Thanks to:
Messner Mountain Museum Ripa, Tourismusverein Bruneck, Bruneck Events, Wingman Events, Niederstätter, Harpf.
Video filmed by Sven Kurt Albertini and Jakob Rieper
Editing by Sven Kurt Albertini
(C) VINOROSSO 2019
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Südtirol Jazzfestival Alto Adige in Bolzano 2018
Impression of the four great concerts of the Südtirol Jazzfestival Alto Aldige 2018 we could see during our holidays in Bolzano in july 2018:
- Simone Graziano Frontal (from Italy) with Dutch guitarist Reinier Baas
- nOx.3 & Linda Oláh: French jazztrio with Swedish singer and electronic performace artist Linda Oláh
- Messing With Voice (tuba & vocals): Lars Andreas Haug & Camilla Susann Haug
- Fazer from München with Matthias Lindermayr trumpet
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South Tyrol
South Tyrol (German and Ladin: Südtirol, Italian: Sudtirolo), also known by its Italian name Alto Adige, is an autonomous province in northern Italy. It is one of the two autonomous provinces that make up the autonomous region of Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol. The province has an area of 7,400 square kilometres (2,857 sq mi) and a total population of 511,750 inhabitants (31.12.2011). Its capital is the city of Bolzano (German: Bozen; Ladin: Balsan or Bulsan).
The majority of the population is of Austro-Bavarian heritage and speaks German. Around a quarter of the population speak Italian as their first language, mainly concentrated in and around the two largest cities (Bolzano and Merano), and a small minority speak Ladin as their first language.
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Reinhold Messner by Mojca Mavec
Meeting legend Reinhold Messner on castle Firmiano in South Tyrol. Nothing for ladies in high heels! The Museum is set high above Bolzano and is just one of four in the country founded by the world's most famous climber.
South Tyrol | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
South Tyrol
00:02:01 1 Name
00:03:36 2 History
00:03:45 2.1 Annexation by Italy
00:06:04 2.2 Gruber-De Gasperi Agreement
00:07:36 2.3 Südtirolfrage
00:08:51 2.4 Autonomy
00:09:36 2.5 Euroregion
00:10:13 3 Geography
00:11:33 3.1 Administrative divisions
00:12:12 3.2 Districts
00:12:20 3.3 Largest municipalities
00:12:29 3.4 Climate
00:15:59 4 Politics
00:17:38 4.1 Last provincial elections
00:17:50 4.2 List of Governors
00:17:58 4.3 Secessionist movement
00:18:45 5 Economy
00:19:42 5.1 Transport
00:21:35 6 Demographics
00:21:44 6.1 Languages
00:24:34 6.2 Religion
00:25:18 7 Culture
00:25:27 7.1 Education
00:25:35 7.2 Architecture
00:25:56 7.3 Museums
00:26:21 7.4 Media
00:26:38 7.5 Music
00:27:11 7.6 Sports
00:28:05 8 See also
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- Socrates
SUMMARY
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South Tyrol is an autonomous province in northern Italy. It is one of the two autonomous provinces that make up the autonomous region of Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol. Its official trilingual denomination is Autonome Provinz Bozen – Südtirol in German, Provincia autonoma di Bolzano – Alto Adige in Italian and Provinzia autonoma de Bulsan – Südtirol in Ladin, reflecting the three main language groups to which its population belongs. The province is the northernmost of Italy, the second largest, with an area of 7,400 square kilometres (2,857 sq mi) and has a total population of 528,641 inhabitants as of 2018. Its capital and largest city is Bolzano (German: Bozen; Ladin: Balsan or Bulsan).
According to 2014 data based on the 2011 census, 62.3% of the population speaks German (Standard German in the written form and an Austro-Bavarian dialect in the spoken form); 23.4% of the population speaks Italian, mainly in and around the two largest cities (Bolzano and Merano); 4.1% speaks Ladin, a Rhaeto-Romance language; 10.2% of the population (mainly recent immigrants) speaks another language as first language.
The province is granted a considerable level of self-government, consisting of a large range of exclusive legislative and executive powers and a fiscal regime that allows it to retain a large part of most levied taxes, while remaining a net contributor to the national budget. As of 2016, South Tyrol is the wealthiest province in Italy and among the wealthiest in the European Union.
In the wider context of the European Union, the province is one of the three members of the Euroregion of Tyrol-South Tyrol-Trentino, which corresponds almost exactly to the historical region of Tyrol. The other members are Tyrol state in Austria, to the north and east, and the Italian Autonomous province of Trento to the South.