User Contributed Dictionary
Adjective
tristeFrench
Adjective
tristeAntonyms
Related terms
See also
Italian
Antonyms
Related terms
Latin
Adjective
tristeAdverb
trīstēRomanian
Pronunciation
Adjective
tristeSpanish
Etymology
From trīstisAdjective
Antonyms
Derived terms
Swedish
Adjective
triste- See trist
Extensive Definition
Trieste (lang-it Trieste; Slovene
and Croatian:
Trst) is a city and port in northeastern Italy very near to
the Slovenian border,
to the North, East and South. Trieste is located at the head of the
Gulf of
Trieste on the Adriatic
Sea. With a population of 208,614 (2007) it is the capital of
the autonomous region Friuli-Venezia
Giulia and Trieste province.
Trieste flourished as part of Austria, from 1382
(the Austro-Hungarian
Empire from 1867) until 1918 when it was one of the few
seaports in what was one of the Great Powers
of Europe. It was among the most prosperous Mediterranean
seaports as well as a capital of literature and music. However, the
collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and Trieste's annexation to
Italy after World War I
led to a decline of its economic and cultural importance.
Today, Trieste is a border town. The population
is an ethnic mix of the neighbouring regions; The dominant local
Venetian dialect of
Trieste is called Triestine
("Triestin" - , in Italian "Triestino"). This dialect and the
official Italian language are spoken in the city centre, while
Slovene is spoken in several of the immediate suburbs. The Venetian and the
Slovene languages are considered autochthonous
of the area. There are also small numbers of German
and Hungarian
speakers.
The economy depends on the port and on trade with
its neighbouring regions. Throughout the Cold War Trieste
was a peripheral city, but it is rebuilding some of its former
influence.
Places of touristic interest in Trieste include
numerous examples of Art Nouveau
and neoclassical
architecture from its Austrian past, the
International Centre for Theoretical Physics, the
International School for Advanced Studies and Trieste
University.
History
Ancient era
The area of what is now Trieste was settled by the Carni, an Indo-European tribe (hence the name Carso) since the 3rd millennium BC. Subsequently the area was populated by the Histri, an Illyrian people, who remained the main civilization until the 2000 BC, when the Palaeo-Veneti arrived.By 177 BC, the city was under the rule of the
Roman
republic. Trieste was granted the status of colony under
Julius
Caesar, who recorded its name as Tergeste in his Commentarii de
bello Gallico (51 BC). After the end of the Western Roman Empire
(in 476),
Trieste remained a Byzantine
military centre. In 788 it became part of the Frank
kingdom, under the authority of their count-bishop. From
1081 the city came loosely under Aquileia's
patriarchy, developing into a free commune
by the end of the 12th century.
Austria
After two centuries of war against the nearby major power, the Republic of Venice (which occupied it briefly from 1369 to 1372), the burghers of Trieste petitioned Leopold III von Habsburg, Duke of Austria to become part of his domains. (The agreement of cessation was signed in October 1382, in St. Bartholomew's church in the village of Šiška (apud Sisciam), today one of the city quarters of Ljubljana.) The citizens, however, maintained a certain degree of autonomy up until the 17th century.Trieste grew into an important port and trade
hub. It was made a free port
within the Austrian domains 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 the beginning of a flourishing era
for the city.
Trieste was occupied by French
troops three times during the Napoleonic
Wars, in 1797, 1805 and 1809. In the latter it was annexed to
the Illyrian
Provinces by Napoleon,
during which period Trieste lost its autonomy (even when it was
returned to the Austrian
Empire in 1813), and the 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.
The city's role as main Austrian trading port and
shipbuilding centre was later emphasized with the foundation of the
merchant shipping line Austrian
Lloyd in 1836, whose headquarters stood at the corner of the
Piazza Grande and Sanita. By 1913 Austrian Lloyd had a fleet of 62
ships comprising a total of 236,000 tons.
The modern Austro-Hungarian
Navy also used Trieste's shipbuilding facilities and as a base.
The construction of the first major trunk railway in the Empire,
the Vienna-Trieste Austrian
Southern Railway, was completed in 1857, a valuable asset for
trade and the supply of coal.
At the beginning of the 20th century, Trieste was
a buzzing cosmopolitan city frequented by artists such as James Joyce,
Italo
Svevo, Ivan Cankar,
Dragotin
Kette 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, was gradually overcome by the Triestine (i.e., a
Venetian
dialect) and other languages, including Italian, German and
Slovene. While Triestine was spoken by the biggest part of the
population, German was the language of the Austrian bureaucracy and
Slovenian was used in the surrounding villages. Viennese
architecture and coffeehouses still dominate the streets of Trieste
to this day.
Annexation to Italy
Together with Trento, Trieste was the main site of the irredendist movement, which aimed for the annexation to Italy of all the lands they claimed were historically inhabited by culturally Italian people. After the end of World War I, Austria-Hungary was dismantled and Trieste became part of Italy in 1920, along with the whole Julian March (Venezia Giulia). The annexation, however, brought a loss of importance for the city, with the new state border depriving it of its former hinterland. The Slovene ethnic group (at the time about the 25% of the population) suffered prosecution by the rising Fascist Regime. This led to a period of inner strain which culminated on April 13 1920, when a group of Italian nationalists burnt the Narodni dom (National House), the cultural centre of Trieste's Slovenes.World War II
After the constitution of the Italian Social Republic, on 23 September 1943, Trieste was nominally absorbed into this entity. The Germans, however, annexed it to the Operation Zone of the Adriatic Littoral, which also included the former Italian provinces of Gorizia, Ljubljana and Udine, led by Friedrich Rainer. Under the Nazi occupation, the only concentration camp on Italian soil was built in a suburb of Trieste, at the Risiera di San Sabba (Rižarna), on 4 April 1944. The city also saw a high Italian partisan activity and suffered from Allied bombings.Yugoslav and New Zealand involvement
On April 30 1945, the Italian anti-fascists Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale (CLN) of don Marzari and Savio Fonda, constituted of 3500 volunteers, incited a riot against the Nazis. On May 1, Yugoslav partisans of Tito's army arrived and freed most of the city from the Nazis, except for the courts and the castle of San Giusto, the garrisons here refusing to surrender to any force other than the New Zealanders. The 2nd New Zealand Division continued to advance towards Trieste along Route 14 around the northern coast of the Adriatic sea and arrived in the city the next day. The German forces eventually capitulated on the evening of May 2 following their arrival. The Yugoslav troops of Tito held full control of the city until June 12, a period known as the 'forty days of Trieste'. During this period, many fascists, nationalists and many other people not favourable to the communist regime disappeared. Many were tossed alive in the potholes ('foibe' of the Carso) in a tit-for-tat policy of brutality initiated by the Italian fascists in the 1930s. Eventually, the New Zealanders forced the Yugoslav army to leave. Trieste and its surrounding regions remained under Allied control until 1954.The Italian city
In 1947, Trieste was declared an independent state as the Free Territory of Trieste split into two zones, A and B, along what was called The Morgan Line.From 1947 to 1954, Zone A was governed by the
Allied Military Government, comprised of the American "Trieste
United States Troops" (TRUST), and "British Element Trieste Forces"
(BETFOR), led by Sir Terence
Airey. The southern part of the territory, Zone B comprised
what was not yet annexed to Yugoslavia of Istria, roughly the
coastline from Muggia to Koper/Capodistria.
Marshall Tito, the ruler of the Soviet-sponsored
communist state of Yugoslavia, made several forays across the
Morgan Line and into Zone A, attempting to wrest control of the
city of Trieste away from TRUST and BETFOR. These now-forgotten
skirmishes made up the very first battles in what would later
become the Cold War.
The Free Territory of Trieste was dissolved in
1954: the city of Trieste in Zone A was ceded to Italy, while the
southern part of the territory (Zone B) went to Yugoslavia, along
with some of the surrounding villages formerly included in Zone A.
The annexation to Italy was officially proclaimed on October 26,
1954.
The border questions with Yugoslavia and
the status of the ethnic minorities were settled definitively in
1975 with the Treaty of
Osimo.
Transport
Maritime transport
Trieste's maritime location and its former long term status as part of the Austrian and Austro-Hungarian empires made its dock the major commercial port for much of the landlocked areas of central Europe. In the 19th century, a whole new port district known as the Porto Nuovo was built northeast to the city centre.In modern times, Trieste's importance as a port
has declined, both due to the annexation to Italy, for Italy's
wider choice of better located ports, and the competition with the
nearby new port of Koper in Slovenia. However,
there is significant commercial shipping to the container terminal,
steel works and oil terminal, all of which are located to the south
of the city centre. After many years of stagnation, a change in the
leadership placed the port on a steady growth path, recording a 40%
increase in shipping traffic as of 2007.
Rail transport
Railways came early to Trieste, due the port and the need to trasport people and goods for long distances. The first line to reach the city was the Sudbahn in 1857. This line stretched for 1400 km to Lviv (in present day's Ukraine) via Ljubljana (in Slovenia), Sopron (in Hungary), Vienna (in Austria), and Kraków (in Poland), crossing the backbone of the Alps by the Semmering Pass near Graz. This line approaches Trieste through the village of Villa Opicina, a few kilometres far from the city but over 300 metres higher. Due to this, the line undertakes a 32 km detour to the north before terminating at Trieste Centrale station.A second transalpine railway was inaugurated in
1906, with the opening of the Transalpina
Railway from Vienna via Jesenice and
Nova
Gorica. This line also approached Trieste via Villa Opicina,
but took a rather shorter loop southwards towards Trieste's other
main railway terminal,
Trieste Campo Marzio station, south to the central station. The
line is no longer operating, and Campo Marzio station is now a
railway museum.
In order to facilitate the freight traffic
between the two stations, and the nearby dock areas, a temporary
line known as the Rivabahn was built along the waterfront in 1887.
This line survived until 1981, when it was replaced by the Galleria
di Circonvallazione, a 5.7 km rail tunnel route, east of the city.
Freight service from the dock area includes container services to
northern Italy and to Budapest, together
with truck carrying services to Salzburg and
Frankfurt.
Passenger rail service to Trieste now largely
consists of trains to Venice, connecting
to services to Rome and Milan at Mestre. These trains
reach the central station bypassing the Gulf of
Trieste which connects with the Sudbahn's northern loop.
International transports between Italy and Slovenia now pass
through Villa Opicina, bypassing Trieste.
Air transport
Trieste is served by the nearby Friuli Venezia Giulia Airport, located at Ronchi near Monfalcone at the head of the Gulf of Trieste.Local transport
Local public transport in Trieste is operated by Trieste Trasporti, which operates a network of around 60 bus routes and two boat services. They also operate the Opicina Tramway, a unique hybrid tramway and funicular railway that provides a more direct link between the city centre and Villa Opicina.Main sights
Castles
Castle of Miramare
The Castle was built between 1856 and 1860 from a project by Carl Junker working under Archduke Maximilian.The Castle gardens provide a setting of
outstanding beauty with a variety of trees, chosen by and planted
on the orders of Maximilian, that today make a remarkable
collection.
Features of particular attraction in the gardens
include two ponds, one noted for its swans and the other for lotus
flowers, the Castle annexe ("Castelletto"), a nearby a bronze
statue of Maximilian, and a small chapel where is kept a cross made
from the remains of the "Novara", the flagship on which Maximilian,
brother of Emperor
Franz Josef, set sail to become Emperor of Mexico.
Castle of San Giusto
Designed on the remains of previous castles on the site, it took almost two centuries to build. The stages of the development of the Castle's defensive structures are marked by the central part built under Frederick III (1470-1), the round Venetian bastion (1508-9), the Hoyos-Lalio bastion and the Pomis, or "Bastione fiorito" dated 1630.The Castle - in which several rooms, including
the Sala Caprin, are open to the public - houses a Museum
displaying historical weapons and is regularly used for the staging
of exhibitions, events and, in the summer, open-air shows. A walk
on the Castle ramparts and bastions gives a complete panorama of
the city of Trieste, its hills and the sea.
Churches
- The Cathedral of San Giusto.
- The Serb-Orthodox Temple of Holy Trinity and St. Spiridio (1869). The building adopts the Greek-Cross plan with five cupolas in the Byzantine tradition.
- Basilica of San Silvestro (11th century)
- Church of Santa Maria Maggiore (1682)
- Church of San Nicolò dei Greci (1787). This church by the architect Matteo Pertsch (1818), with bell-towers on both sides of the facade, follows the Austrian late baroque style.
- Israelite Temple of Trieste (1912)
Archaeological remains
- Arch of Riccardo (33 BC). It is an Augustan gate built in the Roman walls in 33. It stands in Piazzetta Barbacan, in the narrow streets of the old town. It's called Arco di Riccardo ("Richard's Arch") because is believed to have been crossed by King Richard of England on the way back from the Crusades.
- Basilica Forense (2nd century)
- Palaeochristian basilica
Roman theatre
Trieste or Tergeste, which probably dates back to
the protohistoric period, was enclosed by walls built in 33–32 BC
on Emperor Octavius’s orders. The city developed greatly during the
1st and 2nd centuries.
The Roman theatre lies at the foot of the San
Giusto hill, facing the sea. The construction partially exploits
the gentle slope of the hill, and much of the theatre is made of
stone. The topmost portion of the amphitheatre steps and the
stage were supposedly made of wood.
The statues that adorned the theatre, brought
back to light in the 1930s, are now preserved at the Town Museum.
Three inscriptions from the Trajan period
mention a certain Q. Petronius Modestus, someone closely connected
to the development of the theatre, which was erected during the
second half of the 1st century.
Caves
In the whole Trieste province, an amount of 10
speleological groups (24 in Friuli-Venezia
Giulia) exist. The Trieste plateau (Altopiano Triestino),
called Kras or the Carso and covering an
area of about 200 km² within Italy has approximately 1500 caves of
various sizes. Among the most famous ones are the Grotta Gigante,
the largest tourist cave in the world, with a single cavity large
enough to contain St Peter's in Rome, and the Cave of
Trebiciano (350 m deep) at the bottom of which flows the
Timavo
River. This river dives underground at Škocjan Caves in
Slovenia (they are on UNESCO list) and flows about 30 km before
emerging about 1 km from the sea in a series of springs near Duino
reputed by the Romans to be an entrance to Hades.
Others
- The Risiera di San Sabba (Risiera di San Sabba Museum), a national monument. It is a testimonial of the only Nazi extermination camp in Italy.
- The Foibe (Fojbe), also sort of national monuments (foiba of "Basovizza" is a national monument). Those are a testimonial of the extermination of Italians by Yugoslav troops after World War II. Yugoslav army took revenge on the Italian fascists, because of the violence, which lasted from 1920 until 1945, on the Slovene minority of the Trieste region.
- The Trieste Joyce Museum
- Civico Museo di Storia Naturale di Trieste (natural history museum) containing fossils of early man.
- Civico Orto Botanico di Trieste, a municipal botanical garden
- Orto Botanico dell'Università di Trieste, the University of Trieste's botanical garden
- Val Rosandra, a national park on the border between Trieste and Slovenia
Literature
Many famous writers lived and created their major works in Trieste.Italian writers
- Carolus L. Cergoly
- Italo Svevo
- Umberto Saba
- Scipio Slataper
- Pier Antonio Quarantotti Gambini, born in Istria (now in Croatia)
- Enzo Bettiza, born in Split
- Fulvio Tomizza, born in Istria (now in Croatia)
- Claudio Magris
- Pino Roveredo
- Giani Stuparich
- Susanna Tamaro
Austrian and German writers
- Robert Hamerling
- Rainer Maria Rilke (lived in Duino near Trieste)
- Veit Heinichen
- Theodor Däubler
Slovenian writers
- Igo Gruden (born in a village near Trieste)
- Vladimir Bartol
- Marica Gregorič Stepančič
- Boris Pahor
- Alojz Rebula
- Julius Kugy (born in Gorizia)
- Jovan Vesel Koseski (born in Carniola, but lived in Trieste)
Other writers
Other famous people
- Lidia Bastianich, acclaimed Italian-American chef and TV cooking show host whose family lived in a Triestian refugee camp after their escape from Istria in 1957
- Bobi Bazlen, critic and translator
- Mathilde Bonaparte, Napoleon's niece, daughter of his brother Jerome Bonaparte was born here in 1820 and died in the early 20th century
- Ludwig Boltzmann, Austrian physicist
- Demetrio Carciotti, (Dimitrios Karitsiotis), Greek merchant and important patron of Greece
- Avgust Černigoj, Slovenian painter
- Biaggio Chianese, Italian boxer
- George Dolenz, actor and father of Micky Dolenz of the Monkees
- Boris Furlan, Slovenian jurist, translator and politician
- Almerigo Grilz, journalist, freelance war reporter and politician
- Margherita Hack, Italian astronomer
- Julius Kugy, Austrian alpinist and musician
- Doro Levi, archaeologist
- Franko Luin, Swedish-Slovenian graphic designer
- Cesare Maldini, former AC Milan captain, Italian manager and father of Paolo Maldini
- Mauro Maur, Italian trumpet player and composer
- Alberto Randegger, composer
- Ivan Rendić, Croatian sculptor
- Mitja Ribičič, Slovenian Communist leader, President of the Yugoslav Government (1969-1971)
- Tanja Romano, world champion of skating
- Edvard Rusjan, Slovenian aircraft constructor and pilot
- Abdus Salam, Pakistani theoretical physicist
- Denis Sciama, British physicist
- Igor Škamperle, sociologist, novelist and mountaineer
- Alex Staropoli, keyboardist for the band Rhapsody of Fire
- Elisa Toffoli, Nationally renowned singer/songwriter, pianist, and guitarist
- Viktor Sulčič, Argentine-Slovenian architect (born in the suburb of Santa Croce/Križ)
- Max Tonetto, an Italian winger playing for AS Roma
- Luca Turilli, guitarist for the band Rhapsody of Fire
- Tone Tomšič, partisan hero
- Primož Trubar, Slovenian protestant reformer
- Vittorio Vidali (aka Enea Sormenti, Jacobo Hurwitz Zender, Carlos Contreras), Communist agent
- Ivan Vidav, Slovenian mathematician
- Boris Ziherl, Slovenian Communist leader and Marxist philosopher
- Sigismund Zois, Slovenian mecenate and natural scientist
Other Trivia
- The first men to reach the very deepest point in the oceans (the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench), used a special bathyscaphe named Trieste in 1960.
- The city was honored with a reference to a starship named the Trieste in the Star Trek: The Next Generation first season episode "11001001". The ship was stationed sixty-six hours away from Starbase 74 during the Bynar supernova incident. The starship name was related to the special minisub (bathyscaphe Trieste) of Jacques Piccard that touched in 1960 the bottom of the Pacific ocean, "boldly reaching" new frontiers for mankind.
- Listed as a location for filming of the popular Francis Ford Coppola movie, The Godfather: Part II (released December 1974).
See also
- University of Trieste, located in Trieste.
- INFN, (National Institute of Nuclear Physics), the nuclear physics laboratory located in Trieste.
- Central European Initiative, located in Trieste.
- International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), located in Trieste.
- The Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP), located in Trieste.
- International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA), located in Trieste.
- ELETTRA Synchrotron Light Laboratory, located in Trieste.
- Teatro Comunale Giuseppe Verdi, located in Trieste.
- Trieste Astronomical Observatory, located in Trieste.
- U.S. Triestina Calcio, Trieste's soccer club.
- Il Piccolo, Trieste's newspaper.
- International Talent Support, International competition for fashion and photography
References
Further reading
External links
triste in Arabic: ترييستي
triste in Samogitian: Triests
triste in Bulgarian: Триест
triste in Breton: Trieste
triste in Bosnian: Trst
triste in Catalan: Trieste
triste in Corsican: Trieste
triste in Czech: Terst
triste in Danish: Trieste
triste in German: Triest
triste in Modern Greek (1453-): Τεργέστη
triste in Esperanto: Triesto
triste in Spanish: Trieste
triste in Basque: Trieste
triste in Finnish: Trieste
triste in French: Trieste
triste in Friulian: Triest
triste in Galician: Trieste
triste in Hebrew: טריאסטה
triste in Hindi: ट्रिएस्ट
triste in Croatian: Trst
triste in Hungarian: Trieszt
triste in Indonesian: Trieste
triste in Italian: Trieste
triste in Japanese: トリエステ
triste in Korean: 트리에스테
triste in Latin: Tergeste
triste in Lithuanian: Triestas
triste in Neapolitan: Trieste
triste in Dutch: Triëst (stad)
triste in Norwegian Nynorsk: Trieste
triste in Norwegian: Trieste
triste in Occitan (post 1500): Trieste
triste in Polish: Triest
triste in Piemontese: Triest
triste in Portuguese: Trieste
triste in Romanian: Trieste
triste in Russian: Триест
triste in Sicilian: Triesti
triste in Serbo-Croatian: Trst
triste in Simple English: Trieste
triste in Slovak: Terst
triste in Slovenian: Trst
triste in Serbian: Трст
triste in Swedish: Trieste
triste in Turkish: Trieste
triste in Ukrainian: Трієст
triste in Venetian: Trieste
triste in Volapük: Trieste
triste in Chinese: 的里雅斯特