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  2. Trento - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trento

    After World War I, Trento and its Italian-speaking province, along with Bolzano (Bozen) and the part of Tyrol that stretched south of the Alpine watershed (which was primarily German-speaking, as still is to this day), were annexed by Italy. [citation needed] In July 1943 Mussolini was removed as Prime Minister when the allies invaded Sicily.

  3. Trentino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trentino

    The region was the location of heavy fighting during World War I, as it was directly on the front lines between Austria-Hungary and Italy. [20] Trentino was occupied by Italy in November 1918 and was annexed in 1919 by the Kingdom of Italy in the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye (1919) .

  4. South Tyrol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Tyrol

    A map from 1874 showing South Tirol with approximately the borders of today's South and East Tyrol. South Tyrol (occasionally South Tirol) is the term most commonly used in English for the province, [10] and its usage reflects that it was created from a portion of the southern part of the historic County of Tyrol, a former state of the Holy Roman Empire and crown land of the Austrian Empire of ...

  5. Palazzo Arcivescovile (Trento) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palazzo_Arcivescovile_(Trento)

    In the central section is the large portal with a lowered arch, surmounted by a balcony. The balcony, located on the piano nobile, is accessed through the serliana above which is a bas-relief sculpture of the Madonna and Child Jesus commissioned by Celestino Endrici. The central part culminates with a decorative motif of volutes and a shield in ...

  6. Trento railway station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trento_railway_station

    Trento railway station (Italian: Stazione Ferroviaria di Trento, German: Bahnhof Trient) is the main station of Trento, capital of the autonomous province of Trentino, in northeastern Italy. The station was opened in 1859 by the Austrian Empire's Südbahn. It is located on the trans-Alpine Brenner Railway connecting Verona

  7. Santa Maria Maggiore, Trento - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Maria_Maggiore,_Trento

    The Council of Trent held in Santa Maria Maggiore in a painting preserved in the Tridentine Diocesan Museum.. Traditionally, the foundation of the cathedral was attributed to St. Vigilius, the third Bishop of Trento, in the late fourth of early fifth century, but archaeological investigations between 1974 and 1978 and again in 2007–2009 have cast further light on the story of the building.

  8. Municipalities of Trentino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Municipalities_of_Trentino

    The list shows the municipalities of the autonomous province of Trento, Italy. Trentino is divided into 176 administrative subdivisions (Comuni/Gemeinden). Some municipalities have a second official language such as German (Cimbrian and Mócheno) and Ladin. Most German names of municipalities however are historical apart from the previously ...

  9. Venetian Prealps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venetian_Prealps

    They are located in Triveneto, in the north-eastern part of Italy. Geography. Administratively the range is divided between the Italian provinces of Trento ...