Italian diaspora

[10] A third wave, primarily affecting young people, widely called "fuga di cervelli" (brain drain) in the Italian media, is thought to be occurring, due to the socioeconomic problems caused by the financial crisis of the early 21st century.

[38] The architecture of Corfu City still reflects its long Venetian heritage, with its multi-storied buildings, its spacious squares such as the popular "Spianada" and the narrow cobblestone alleys known as "Kantounia".

As for the personalities of the modern era, Napoleon Bonaparte, French emperor and general, was ethnically Italian of Corsican origin, whose family was of Genoese and Tuscan ancestry.

His brother Alfonso Tonti, with French explorer Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, was the co-founder of Detroit in 1701, and was its acting colonial governor for 12 years.

During the Spanish conquest of what would be present-day Argentine territory, an Italian Leonardo Gribeo, from the region of Sardinia, accompanied Pedro de Mendoza to the place where Buenos Aires would be founded.

The epidemics were the driving force behind the decision to rebuild entire sections of the city, an undertaking known as the "risanamento" (literally "making healthy again"), a pursuit that lasted until the start of World War I.

[63] The Commissariat also helped to set up remittances sent by emigrants from the United States back to their homeland, which turned into a constant flow of money amounting, by some accounts, to about 5% of the Italian GNP.

France and the UK took over the spoils of war that included Italian discovery and technical expertise in the extraction and production of crude oil, superhighways, irrigation, electricity.

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.

After independence, some Italians remained for decades after receiving full pardon by Emperor Selassie,[100] but eventually nearly 22,000 Italo-Ethiopians left the country due to the Ethiopian Civil War in 1974.

[129][130] The symbolic starting date of Italian emigration to the Americas is considered to be 28 June 1854 when, after a twenty-six day journey from Palermo, the steamship Sicilia arrived in the port of New York City.

[131] Two years earlier, the Transatlantic Steam Navigation Company with the New World had been founded in Genoa, the main shareholder of which was King Victor Emmanuel II of Piedmont-Sardinia.

The aforementioned association commissioned the large twin steamships Genova and Torino to the Blackwall shipyards, launched respectively on April 12 and May 21, 1856, both destined for the maritime connection between Italy and the Americas.

[148] Prior to World War I, Italians were concentrated in the Caribbean coast surrounding Barranquilla, Cartagena and Santa Marta as well as in Bogotá, many of which had married women of the Colombian high society and of Spanish lineage.

[154][155][156] Over the years, many descendants of Italian immigrants came to occupy important positions in the public life of the country, such as the presidency of the republic, the vice-presidency, local administrations and congress.

The citadel of Rhodes city is a UNESCO World Heritage Site thanks in great part to the large-scale restoration work carried out by the Italian authorities.

Starting from this period the migratory flows from Italy expanded (mostly coming from Friuli, Lombardy, Veneto and Emilia-Romagna), and with them the numerical consistency of the Italian communities increased.

This time, however, it was not a voluntary migration, but a forced recruitment of Italian workers, based on an agreement stipulated in 1937 between Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini, to satisfy the need to find cheap labor for German factories in exchange for the supply of coal to Italy.

[213] The most important Italian-Luxembourg was the politician and trade unionist Luigi Reich who, from 1985 to 1993, was mayor of Dudelange and national vice-president of the Confédération générale du travail luxembourgeoise (CGT-L).

The outbreak of the First World War and the consequent dangerousness of travel put an end to this phase, in which more than 9.5 million people left Italy, equal to a quarter of the total population.

In this period, the decrease in non-European immigration led to an increase in European flows, towards France (the favorite destination of the opponents of the regime) and Germany (after the signing of the Pact of Steel).

The highest number is in Argentina, with 673,238 registered Italians residing in the country in 2016, followed by Germany with 581,433, Switzerland with 482,539, France with 329,202, Brazil with 325,555, the UK with 232,932, Belgium 225,801, the United States with 218,407, Canada with 122,262, Australia with 120,791, and Spain with 118,879.

[257] From the late 19th to the mid-20th century, millions of Italians settled in Argentina, Uruguay, Southern Brazil and Venezuela, as well as in Canada and the United States, where they formed a physical and cultural presence.

Examples are Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, where Talian is used, and the town of Chipilo near Puebla, Mexico; each continues to use a derived form of Venetian dating back to the nineteenth century.

Only in Argentina, according to an estimate,[261] there are tens of millions of Italian oriundi and no less nourished are the communities in the United States of America and Brazil, other main destinations of the aforementioned migratory flow at the turn of the 20th century.

In many other European countries the Italian communities are widely distributed, but at least in the Schengen area the fall of many nationalistic barriers that made the problem of relations with the Motherland much less stringent.

[262] In Italy, a nation in which the phenomenon of emigration abroad (especially between the 19th and 20th centuries) has developed in huge proportions, the recovery of the relationship with the communities of Italian origin formed in the world is enjoying growing attention.

Regulations are beginning to be enacted, particularly in regional areas, which no longer provide assistance and not only for those who were born in Italy and who expatriated, but also for their descendants (precisely the oriundi), so that the cultural identity bond can be consolidated.

An example of this is the law of the Veneto region n°2 of January 9, 2003,[263] in which various actions are arranged in favor of the emigrant, the surviving spouse and descendants up to the third generation, in order to "guarantee the maintenance of the Venetian identity and improve the knowledge of the culture of origin".

En promedio, menos del 40 % (36,4 %) de la población exhibe ambos linajes no amerindios; pudiendo ser europeo, asiático o africano.

Trade routes and colonies of the Genoese (red) and Venetian (green) empires during the Middle Age
The Galata Tower in Istanbul , Turkey, built in 1348 by the Republic of Genoa and still a symbol of the Italian Levantine
The Italian Lebanese actress Antonella Lualdi in a scene from the film Silver Spoon Set (1960)
The Odesa Opera and Ballet Theatre , Ukraine. It was started with the important contribution of the Italians of Odesa
Catholic Church of Santa Maria Assunta in Kerch , Ukraine , reference for the Italians of Crimea
Gibraltarian Calentita is very similar to the Genoese Farinata . Genoese community in Gibraltar influenced the Gibraltarian cuisine
Typical Venetian architecture in the old town of Corfu , Ionian Islands , Greece . The Ionian islands, having been under the dominion of the Republic of Venice for centuries, have been inhabited by the Corfiot Italians .
Napoleon , the most notable Italian French personality [ 39 ]
Lombard Street in London took its name from the small but powerful community from northern Italy, living there as bankers and merchants after AD 1000. [ 41 ]
View of Buenos Aires , Argentina . Leonardo Gribeo gave the name to the city
Italian emigration per region from 1876 to 1900 and from 1901 to 1915
Ship loaded with Italian emigrants arrived in Brazil (1907).
Poster created in 1886 by the Brazilian state of São Paulo , intended for potential Italian emigrants to Brazil
Modenese emigrants to Capitan Pastene ( Chile ) in 1910: the Castagnoli family
The Benvenuti family, who immigrated to Caxias do Sul , a municipality of Brazil founded by Italian emigrants from Veneto , in a photo of 1928
One of the two braziers that burn perpetually on the sides of the tomb of the Italian Unknown Soldier at Altare della Patria in Rome . At their base there is a plaque bearing the inscription Gli italiani all'estero alla Madre Patria ("Italians abroad to the Motherland") .
Italian Club in Boksburg , in South Africa
Arrival of the first Italian locomotive in Tripoli, Italian Tripolitania , in 1912
Church of Our Lady of the Rosary in Asmara, built by Italian Eritreans in 1923
Palace of the Italian Governorate in Ethiopia, 1939
Buildings showing influence of the Italian "Liberty" architecture in Tunis
The Egyptian Museum of Cairo (the most important museum of ancient Egypt in the world) was built between 1897 and 1902 by the Garozzo-Zaffarani, an Italian construction company. [ 105 ]
The Italian Moroccans were concentrated in the "Maarif" district (also called "Little Italy"), near the Boulevard De la Gare in Casablanca . [ 110 ]
The Italian Algerian Giacomo D'Angelis, founder of the historic Hotel D'Angelis in Algiers , 1919
Mulberry Street , along which New York City's Little Italy is centered, circa 1900, United States
Italian immigrants lay cobblestones on King Street in Toronto , Canada , 1903.
Italian immigrants arriving in São Paulo , circa 1890, Brazil . The South American country has the largest number of people with full or partial Italian ancestry outside Italy, with São Paulo as the most populous city with Italian ancestry in the world. [ 133 ]
Italian immigrants in a conventillo in Buenos Aires , Argentina . Italian is the largest single ethnic origin of modern Argentines (62.5% of the country's population), [ 126 ] surpassing even the descendants of Spanish immigrants . [ 57 ] [ 127 ]
Italian immigrants in Uruguay
Ship loaded with Italian emigrants arrived in Mexico.
Some Italian immigrants in Costa Rica in the first half of the 20th century
Italians in the central park of Guatemala City (1900)
Italian Salvadorans at the beginning of the 20th century
The " Casa de los Genoveses " ("house of Genoans ") in Panama Viejo
Former Presidential House of Honduras from 1924 to 1989, built by Italian Honduran architect Augusto Bressani
Takeaway pizzeria in India
Belgian poster posted in Italy to encourage Italian immigration to Belgium
The first Italian immigrants to Štivor , Bosnia and Herzegovina , 1883
Italian worker in a mine near Duisburg , in Germany, in 1962
Memorial to Italian volunteers who fought in the Polish January Uprising of 1863–1864, Olkusz , Poland
Monument to the workers—mostly Italian—who died in Switzerland during the construction of the Gotthard Tunnel
Italian Cultural Centre, City of Bradford , England
Italian Cultural Centre, Canberra , Australia
Italian emigrants employed in the construction of a railway in the United States (1918)
Italians abroad in 1930
Municipalities where Talian is co-official in Rio Grande do Sul , Brazil
Italian Paraguayans originally from Campania during the 3rd edition of the Festa Italiana ("Italian Feast") in Asunción . Their stand is decorated with a flag of Italy and some cockades of Italy .
Trilingual sign in San Francisco, Argentina , in Spanish, Italian and Piedmontese .
World map of first level subdivisions (states, counties, provinces, etc.) that are home to Little Italys or Italian neighbourhoods
The Commenda di San Giovanni di Prè in Genoa , Italy, which houses the National Museum of the Italian Emigration
The Port of Genoa , from which millions of Italian emigrants left for the Americas, Africa, Asia and Australia [ 13 ]
A scene from the film Red Passport (1935)
A scene from the film Path of Hope (1950)
A scene from the film A Girl in Australia (1971)
A scene from the film Bread and Chocolate (1974)