100 Fun Facts About Italy. Bet You Didn't Know!
Here are 100 fun facts
that you might not know about Italy, its people, and its
history:
- Italy is slightly larger than
Arizona.
- Almost 20% of Italy's population is
over 65 years old.
- Italy borders Austria, France,
Vatican City, San Marino, Slovenia, and Switzerland.
- Its longest border is with
Switzerland.
- The average Italian family has 1.27
children.
- Everybody 18 and over can vote,
however you have to be at least 25 to vote in Senate
elections.
- The Italian flag is inspired by the
French flag introduced during Napoleon's 1797 invasion
of the peninsula.
- The average Italian makes $26,700 a
year, however those in the more prosperous north make
almost $40,000
- The thermometer is an Italian
invention.
- Italy's unemployment rate is around
8.6%, but it is as high as 20% in the more impoverished
south.
- Italian farms produce grapes,
potatoes, sugar beets, soybeans, grain, olives, beef,
and dairy.
- The average life expectancy at birth
for an Italian is 79.54 years.
- The famous children's story,
Pinocchio , was written by an Italian.
- The city of Naples gave birth to the
Pizza .
- The piano hails from Italy.
- The longest river in Italy is the Po.
- The average Italian consumes half a
pound of bread a day.
- Italy's contributions to science
include the barometer, electric battery, nitroglycerin,
and wireless telegraphy.
- Famous Italian explorers include
Christopher Columbus, Marco Polo, John Cabot, and
Amerigo Vespucci.
- Today's modern Italian language
originated in the region of Tuscany.
- Enrico Fermi, inventor of the nuclear
reactor, was an Italian.
- The automobile, Fiat , is one of
Italy's greatest products.
- With almost 40 million visitors,
Italy is the fourth most visited country in the world.
- Italy is home to two microstates, San
Marino and Vatican City.
- Besides Julius Caesar,
Shakespeare also set in Italy ( entirely or partially):
Romeo and Juliet, Othello, The
Merchant of Venice, Antony and Cleopatra,
Coriolanus, Cymbeline,Much Ado
About Nothing, Othello,The Taming of
the Shrew, Titus Andronicus, The Two
Gentlemen of Verona,The Winter's Tale
- Cologne came out of Italy.
- The ice cream cone is an Italian
invention.
- The majority of Italian-American
immigrants came from Naples and southern Italy.
- The ancient city of Pompeii was
destroyed by the volcano Mt. Vesuvius.
- Mt. Vesuvius last erupted in 1944,
destroying a number of neighboring villages.
- Eyeglasses are an Italian invention.
- The average Italian is 41 years old.
- Italy has 16 regions and 4 autonomous
regions.
- Before adopting the euro, Italy's
currency was known as the lira.
- The average Italian consumes 26
gallons of wine a year.
- Italy's major industries include
tourism, machinery, iron and steel, chemicals, food
processing, textiles, motor vehicles, clothing,
footwear, and ceramics.
- Italy has more hotel rooms than any
other nation in Europe.
- The espresso machine hails from
Italy.
- Italy is the world's fifth largest
industrial economy.
- Barely a third of Italy's land is
arable and suitable for farming.
- Italy's biggest trading partners are
Germany, France, the United States, and Great Britain.
- Over 40% of Italy's labor force is
unionized.
- The telephone was created by an
Italian (Meucci) *Note.
- Most of Italy's industry is centered
around the northern cities of Milan, Turin and Genoa .
- Since the end of WWII, Italy has seen
almost 60 governments come and go.
- The area around Venice is the
wealthiest region in Europe.
- Over 75% of Italy is mountainous or
hilly.
- The typewriter is an Italian
invention.
- Italians used to be known for having
large families, however Italy is now known for having
Europe's lowest birthrate.
- Italy owes much of its prosperity to
thousands of small private family enterprises.
- Italian families save more money than
the Japanese and Germans, and three times more than
Americans do.
- The average Italian consumes 25
kilograms of pasta a year.
- With over 5 million people, Rome is
Italy's largest Italy.
- Italy has a population of over 58
million.
- Italians refer to their country as
Italia.
- Italy imports over 75% of its energy.
- The service sector accounts for
almost 70% of the Italian economy.
- Agriculture used to make up over a
third of Italy's economy. It now makes up less than
three percent.
- The official language is Italian, but
German and French are also spoken in some regions.
- Italy's north has warm summers and
cool winters. Italy's south has hot summers and mild
winters.
- The Seven Hills of Rome are Aventine,
Caelian, Capitoline, Esquiline, Palatine, Quirinal, and
Viminal.
- The symbol SPQR can be found on many
ancient buildings in Rome. It stands for "the senate and
people of Rome."
- Rome was founded in 753 BC.
- Italy did not become a united country
until 1861
- The national protest song of Italy is
Bella Ciao. It was made famous by Italian
partisans in WWII, and can be heard at almost any
protest.
- Before Rome became a republic and an
empire, it had seven kings.
- The first king of Rome was its
legendary founder, Romulus.
- "Ars longa, vita brevis" is a common
saying in Italy. It means "art is long, life is short"
and reflects the Italian love of leisure.
- An engineering marvel of the ancient
world, Cloacus Maxima, is the sewer of Rome.
- The first Roman Emperor was Augustus
Octavian, who came to power in 27 BC.
- The Roman Empire fell in 476 AD,
after its last emperor, Romulus Augustulus, was forced
to abdicate by barbarian invaders.
- A Roman Centurion commanded 100
hundred men.
- A Roman Legion was made up of 6,000
men.
- Italy has a resident foreign
population of 1.27 million.
- Italy's current constitution took
effect January 1, 1948
- The president of Italy is a
ceremonial figure.
- The prime minister serves as the head
of government and is the one who runs the country.
- Since October 1946, the national
anthem of Italy has been Inno de Memeli .
- The Italian flag is green, white, and
red.
- The colors of the Italian flag
represent three virtues: hope (green), faith (white),
and charity (red).
- The Italian Republic does not have an
official motto, but it does have a common phrase: "L'Italia
è una Repubblica democratica, fondata sul lavoro"
(Italy is a democratic Republic, founded on labor).
- St. Francis of Assissi and Saint
Caterina of Siena are the patron saints of Italy.
- 98% of Italians are Roman Catholic.
- The Roman Catholic Church is based in
Italy.
- Italy has over 3,000 museums.
- The national sport of Italy is Soccer
(known as football outside of America).
- Italy's national dish is pasta.
- The Italian language evolved from the
Latin of the Roman Empire.
- The Italian peninsula is surrounded
by five seas (the Adriatic, Ionian, Tyrrhenean, Ligurian,
and Mediterranean).
- Italy has two large islands, Sicily
and Sardinia , as well as a number of smaller islands.
- The Italian island of Sicily is
famous for being home of the illicit Mafia criminal
organization.
- Napoleon spent his first exile on the
Italian island of Elba.
- The Alps mountain range form part of
Italy's northern border, and for a long time, protected
the peninsula from invasion.
- Italy has three active volcanoes:
Vesuvius, Etna, and Stromboli.
- Naples is the largest city in
southern Italy.
- Next to Rome, Milan is the
second-largest city in Italy.
- Milan is home to Italian fashion and
finance.
- Rome's nickname is "The Eternal
City."
- Florence is home to Italian art.
- A vespa is an Italian-made motor
scooter that many people ride around busy city streets
on.
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