|
|
Italian Provinces by Region
Open Directory
SlowTrav.com
Italian Provinces by Name
Agrigento
Alessandria
Ancona
Aosta
Arezzo
Ascoli Piceno
Asti
Avellino
Bari
Belluno
Benevento
Bergamo
Biella
Bologna
Bolzano
Brescia
Brindisi
|
|
Cagliari
Caltanissetta
Campobasso
Caserta
Catania
Catanzaro
Chieti
Como
Cosenza
Cremona
Crotone
Cuneo
Enna
Ferrara
Florence
Foggia
Forli-Cesena
Frosinone
Genoa
Gorizia
Grosseto
Imperia
Isernia
L'Aquila
La Spezia
Latina
Lecce
Lecco
Livorno
Lodi
Lucca
Macerata
Mantua
Massa-Carrara
Matera
|
|
Messina
Milan
Modena
Naples
Novara
Nuoro
Oristano
Padua
Palermo
Parma
Pavia
Perugia
Pesaro e Urbino
Pescara
Piacenza
Pisa
Pistoia
Pordenone
Potenza
Prato
Ragusa
Ravenna
Reggio
Reggio nell'Emilia
Rieti
Rimini
Rome
Rovigo
|
|
Salerno
Sassari
Savona
Siena
Sondrio
Syracuse
Taranto
Teramo
Terni
Trapani
Trento
Treviso
Trieste
Turin
Udine
Varese
Venice
Verbano-Cusio-Ossola
Vercelli
Verona
Vibo Valentia
Vicenza
Viterbo
|
|
Italian Provinces with New Names
Two Italian provinces have new names:
Forlė is now Forlė-Cesena, and
Verbania is now Verbano-Cusio-Ossola.
New Italian Provinces in Sardinia
The autonomous region of Sardinia has passed a law
creating four new provinces, which must now be approved
by the Italian government before taking effect. The
new provinces would be named Carbonia-Iglesias
(or Sulcis-Iglesiense), Medio Campidano, Ogliastra,
and Olbia-Tempio. Their capitals would be either
Carbonia or Iglesias, Sanluri, either Lanusei or
Tortolė, and either Olbia or Tempio, respectively.
That information leads me to believe that they
would be formed by splitting off parts of Cagliari,
Cagliari, Nuoro, and Sassari, respectively. P
roponents say that the smaller provinces would bring
government closer to the people.
|
|
|
|
|