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Trentino is an Italian newspaper published in Trento, Italy. The newspaper, which was first published in 1945, is Trentino 's counterpart of Alto Adige , published in Bolzano . As of 2020, its editor is Pierluigi Depentori.
Editoriale Nazionale – Il Resto del Carlino, La Nazione, Il Giorno; Gruppo Amodei – Corriere dello Sport, Tuttosport; Nord Est Multimedia – Messaggero Veneto, Il Piccolo, Il Mattino di Padova, La Tribuna di Treviso, La Nuova Venezia, Corriere delle Alpi; Antonio Angelucci – Il Giornale, Libero, Il Tempo
Alto Adige is an Italian local daily newspaper, based in Bolzano.It is sold in South Tyrol and since 1999 also in the province of Belluno.Prior to 2000, the newspaper was published with three local editions, for South Tyrol, Trentino and Belluno, when was subdivided with two new local newspapers: Trentino and Corriere delle Alpi.
Gazzetta di Mantova; Gazzetta di Milano (1816–1875) Gazzetta di Modena; Gazzetta di Parma; Gazzetta di Reggio; Gazzetta del Sud; Il Gazzettino; Giornale di Brescia; Il Giornale d'Italia; Giornale di Sicilia; Il Giornale; Il Giorno (newspaper)
Corriere del Trentino is an Italian local newspaper owned by RCS MediaGroup and based in Trento, Italy. It was launched in 2003 in Trentino , on the basis of Corriere del Mezzogiorno . [ 1 ]
l'Adige was founded in 1945 as the weekly Il Popolo Trentino. In started to be published in 1946 as a daily under the direction of Flaminio Piccoli , editor in chief from 1946 until 1977. Until 1981, the newspaper politically supported the Christian Democracy , which was also one of the stakeholders of the publisher.
In January 1945, three representatives of the major political forces of the Italian Resistance, Giuseppe Liverani, managing director of Il Popolo (The People), Primo Parrini, managing director of Avanti!, and Amerigo Terenzi, CEO of L'Unità, advanced the possibility to organize a news agency as a cooperative of newspapers, not controlled by the government nor private groups, replacing the ...
Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol has many small and picturesque villages, 16 of them have been selected by I Borghi più belli d'Italia (English: The most beautiful Villages of Italy), [29] a non-profit private association of small Italian towns of strong historical and artistic interest, [30] that was founded on the initiative of the Tourism ...