Why Are North & South Italy So Different From Each Other?

▶ In this video I talk about how North Italy is very different from the South in a number of indicators such as GDP, industry, population, unemployment or foreign residents. Before I do that I take a look at why those differences exist, going back in the history of the Italian Peninsula all the way back to the fall of the Roman Empire up to the point of its unification into the modern country we know today.
TIMESTAMPS:
00:00 Intro
00:32 Historical Context
04:26 Current Differences
10:56 Summary
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Пікірлер: 2 200

  • @General.Knowledge
    @General.Knowledge Жыл бұрын

    *Which other countries have significant differences between parts of their territories?* Also, check out the NEW VIDEO: kzread.info/dash/bejne/h2Sftc2QpKm5Y7A.html

  • @Delta_Lupus

    @Delta_Lupus

    Жыл бұрын

    Geographically I would have to say Northern and Southern Germany

  • @elioclaudioponzi4853

    @elioclaudioponzi4853

    Жыл бұрын

    poland, clearly

  • @valimback5109

    @valimback5109

    Жыл бұрын

    Ukraine 🇺🇦

  • @bpie_ef3967

    @bpie_ef3967

    Жыл бұрын

    Most of countries actually... maybe the USA, Russia (divided West/Est), China (also West/Est), Japan (with Okaido in the south) maybe even England, or the UK as a whole

  • @mudgetheexpendable

    @mudgetheexpendable

    Жыл бұрын

    US internal divisions: California vs Everybody; the Mountain West vs the Urban East; the Midwest vs the South; the Gulf Coast vs the federal gov't; etc etc

  • @Rapper_skull
    @Rapper_skull Жыл бұрын

    I just want to point out one thing: Italy has a lot of dialects, but they're dialects of Italy, not of Italian. Makes a huge difference and that's something a lot of people would agree on, if they didn't regard the term "dialect" as inferior to "language".

  • @jokerofmorocco

    @jokerofmorocco

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah and the languages from the North aren't even in the same sub-family as Italian as they're Gallo-Italic while the Central and South are Italo-Dalmatian. (Sardinian is also in a completely separate category of Romance language)

  • @balinttelek5539

    @balinttelek5539

    Жыл бұрын

    Moreover, in the North there is a small but not insignificant region where the majority of people (roughly 500.000), speaks austrian german

  • @nyko921

    @nyko921

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alexs.7915 Tutto ciò te lo sei inventato praticamente tu. In linguistica non esiste ancora una definizione ufficiale di cos'è una lingua o un dialetto, la definizione più supportata al momento è che una lingua sia un modo di parlare e un dialetto una variante di questo specifico modo di parlare. Nel video viene mostrato una mappa, tutte quelle aree diversamente colorate sono diverse lingue in quanto non discendono dall'italiano, che vengono impropriamente chiamate dialetti per ragioni puramente politiche. Il napoletano, per esempio, non è italiano. È un dialetto della lingua Napoletana (quella che si parlava nell'antico regno di Napoli), come lo sono i dialetti pugliesi, abruzzesi ecc. Ma non hanno niente a che vedere con l'italiano.

  • @commenter4190

    @commenter4190

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nyko921 nessuna lingua regionale italiana "ha a che vedere con l'italiano" (toscano-fiorentino scelto in virtù del suo prestigio letterario e di una presunta maggiore somiglianza con la pronuncia latina), il fatto che siano evoluzioni indipendenti del LATINO VOLGARE sul fondo (substrato) pre-romano (celti, veneti, etruschi, sanniti, greci) ecc. non lo avete studiato a scuola? si vede che a scuola insegnano ancora che i nostri antenati "hanno sempre parlato l'italiano" che "si parlava ugualmente in tutte le parti d'Italia anche prima dell'unità" come vuole la retorica risorgimentale!

  • @nyko921

    @nyko921

    Жыл бұрын

    @@commenter4190 È quello che ho detto. Hai espresso il mio stesso concetto con parole diverse.

  • @joeshar.
    @joeshar. Жыл бұрын

    The cities closer to the center of Europe are lucky to grow. That's why London is on the southeast of England or Milano is on the north of Italy or St.Petersburg is at most western part of Russia instead of located in Siberia. If we go back in time, center was Mediterranean whereas Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Athens got the advantage to grow. Center has moved to north after Industrial Revolution.

  • @jout738

    @jout738

    Жыл бұрын

    Its that big cities are everywhere around the world and they just need to generate and attract people from large area to grow big. I just think south-italy has got poor with their big immigration, while the cold north-italy has stayed rich with their good bankers from Milano example.

  • @yaylah7314

    @yaylah7314

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jout738 north of Italy stayed rich because of the bankster (gangster) but also because of the massive immigration from the south of Italy

  • @etnalutt3492

    @etnalutt3492

    Жыл бұрын

    Milano is the ugliest City in Italy.

  • @etnalutt3492

    @etnalutt3492

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yaylah7314 And foreigners. The South is Beautiful and Traditional

  • @MagicMike_101

    @MagicMike_101

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yaylah7314 Blah blah blah

  • @1BobsYourUncle
    @1BobsYourUncle Жыл бұрын

    I lived in Southern Italy for 5 years, the people were great. Very warm and always treated me well. When I would visit the north of Italy, it was beautiful but the people were much more reserved and not as friendly.

  • @memento316

    @memento316

    Жыл бұрын

    Because we must work every days to help our country....did you see the video? In the South people normally are more relaxed because if you don't have a job and you can survive "where is the problem?".

  • @federicolopezmusic

    @federicolopezmusic

    Жыл бұрын

    @@memento316 aha😂

  • @ilmegliodellhiphopitaliano3589

    @ilmegliodellhiphopitaliano3589

    Жыл бұрын

    @@memento316 ma quando mai, siete fissati con sta cazzata, "noi lavoriamo noi qua noi la", ma per piacere.... fate le stesse ore di qualsiasi lavoratore al sud con la differenza che a noi non le pagano, anzi siccome da voi è meglio regolamentato ne fate anche meno , ho vissuto anni al nord, per esempio in trentino quando staccavano da lavorare (lavoravo in un centro commerciale) li vedevi tutti incazzati che correvano verso la macchina, mai un sorriso o un saluto, nemmeno in germania si atteggiavano così da coglioni che fanno tutto loro, anzi... invece al sud nonostante ci facciano scoppiare di lavoro non pagando un cazzo all ora, sono sempre tutti contenti appena finiscono di lavorare.. a milano per dirne una, è rarissimo ti salutino quando entri in un bar e quando ringrazi dopo aver comprato qualcosa ti dicono prego, mica grazie a te! poi il fatto che tu dica "did you see the video?" come se fosse legge fa proprio ridere,secondo te è giusto fidarsi di un tipo che al posto di Piemonte dice "PIEMO"? tralasciando la mappa dei dialetti che è estremamente ridicola....

  • @federicolopezmusic

    @federicolopezmusic

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ilmegliodellhiphopitaliano3589ma che al sud siano più socievoli non si discute. Però non è ubriacandosi di parole che vivi per forza meglio. Poi se parli del Trentino è come il Friuli, sono casi estremi. Milano non fa testo, c’è quasi più gente del sud che del nord…

  • @yincognito

    @yincognito

    Жыл бұрын

    @@memento316 This has nothing to do with work, your supposed patriotism or your incorrect assumption that friendlier people work less. It's a matter of materialism vs spiritualism oriented mindset due to ethno-historical context. Some people run after money, some people see more than money in life. Like always, a balance between materialism and spiritualism is optimal, going to extremes is detrimental, just like with everything that is a part of nature.

  • @intersezioni
    @intersezioni Жыл бұрын

    all of northern Italy is part of the blue banana, the richest and most productive area of ​​all Europe and the world, which starts from the south of England, in the city of London, Paris and a part of north-eastern France, a part of western Germany and ends on all of northern Italy. Italy is the second largest industrial and exporting power in Europe after Germany

  • @antoniousai1989

    @antoniousai1989

    Жыл бұрын

    It's the second largest manufacturing power for goods, not industrial in general. France is way bigger than Italy in heavy industry and similar.

  • @intersezioni

    @intersezioni

    Жыл бұрын

    @@antoniousai1989 manufacturing also includes large-scale industry, and Italy surpasses France.

  • @pebos1234567890

    @pebos1234567890

    Жыл бұрын

    Pretty sure northern india has the most fertile soil. It feeds over 1 billion people

  • @SoLazy100

    @SoLazy100

    Жыл бұрын

    Also all of Switzerland, Belgium and the Netherlands.

  • @tomh2121

    @tomh2121

    Жыл бұрын

    Blue banana actually goes up through North West England and the Midlands via London. It doesn’t start in London. It includes Manchester, Liverpool, Birmingham

  • @donnadrane4977
    @donnadrane4977 Жыл бұрын

    Both of my grandmas were Italian but with ancestors at opposite ends of the country. They each spoke a different dialect and would fight over whose language was the correct one! Ah, good times. My sister and I would call them fric and frac because they were such characters.

  • @alessiovalentini4401

    @alessiovalentini4401

    Жыл бұрын

    Just speak Italian, that's the same for everyone regardless of the region

  • @MikeGreenwood51

    @MikeGreenwood51

    2 ай бұрын

    @@alessiovalentini4401 So tell the people of one region how to properly pronounce in Italian the words pronounced differently in an other region. LOL. We have simila in our Country. But telling the others that our way is superior is just not etiquette, if you know what I mean.

  • @alessiovalentini4401

    @alessiovalentini4401

    2 ай бұрын

    @@MikeGreenwood51 Sorry, but the Italian language is the same for everyone, it's not that a different language is taught or spoken depending on the region. What changes are the regional dialects and languages, but they do not derive from the Italian language

  • @lll____251

    @lll____251

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@MikeGreenwood51 That's very ignorant of you. Italian is a language with rules and grammar, then there are dialects. From what I see, the original comment was confused too since his/her grandmas were not italians but only had italian ancestors, so they only knew dialect. But italian is one language and that's it

  • @gabriele7381
    @gabriele7381 Жыл бұрын

    The north is undoubtely polluted because of its concentration of industries but there's also a geographical factor playing. The northern flatlands lie between the Alps and Appenines mountains which really traps air pollution in between. Being trapped between two mountain chains also repair ourselves by strong winds that usually sweep away smog. That said it is unfair to call the south prettier and the north uglier and polluted. The north is equally beautiful to me.

  • @youtubeyoutube936

    @youtubeyoutube936

    Жыл бұрын

    Prov Como Lecco Sondrio ❤️

  • @pietrooliani3251

    @pietrooliani3251

    Жыл бұрын

    @@youtubeyoutube936 udio fin che stai sotto le alpi (o come la chiamiamo in aviazione "zona laghi") ti do ragione, ma in mezzo alla pianura il paesaggio diventa rapidamente molto monotono (all'infuori di qualche centro cittadino)

  • @lukedavis2383

    @lukedavis2383

    Жыл бұрын

    People in England say the exact same things about the north and south of England but the other way round too Italy. That the south is less pretty ,more congested and less friendly than the North. Interesting as it's a similar situation too Italy in that sense.

  • @milo5524

    @milo5524

    Жыл бұрын

    "Il nord più brutto e inquinato" è ovviamente una stupidaggine. Trovo più accogliente il nord invece... Saluti da Roma.

  • @marcogallostampino2063

    @marcogallostampino2063

    Жыл бұрын

    Ogni regione ha la sua tipicità,io vivo in provincia di Milano e a parte il triangolo industriale(Milano/Torino/Genova,pieno di industrie), il nord (che per moltissimi comuni cittadini si chiama PADANIA ) è pieno di cose bellissime da vedere per i turisti e viverci.Problema serio è il costo della vita che è doppio in confronto con altre regioni.🤷🏻‍♂️🤷🏻‍♂️😑🙁

  • @ilsevanderbij7179
    @ilsevanderbij7179 Жыл бұрын

    My family is from the south (Salento region) and they're often very stereotypically "Italian" in a lot of ways. I remember my old zio walking into the kitchen of a restaurant and yelling at the staff if the food wasn't good enough 😂😂😂 but when one of my cousins married a northener, he had a massive culture shock to deal with! He and his in-laws sometimes could barely understand each other because of the difference in dialects/swear words/ and so on. (I myself am Dutch, by the way. I just happen to have Italian family because my dad's aunt married an Italian man. I visit them at least once a year, actually!)

  • @ilsevanderbij7179

    @ilsevanderbij7179

    Жыл бұрын

    As a matter of fact, I generally understand southern Italian languages/dialects a lot better than the northern equivalents, because I spent my summers in the south as a kid and picked up a lot of their unique linguistics. With northerners I could use subtitles because they sometimes pronounce things in a way that sounds weird af to me lmao

  • @ekal1883

    @ekal1883

    Жыл бұрын

    SALENTO REGION? AHAHHA SEI PUGLIESE AL MASSIMO

  • @frankgentile5383

    @frankgentile5383

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ekal1883 Salerno + Sorrento = Salento!

  • @geoofficial1

    @geoofficial1

    Жыл бұрын

    With a very patriotic Sicilian Francofontese Nonna and late Sanzese Nonno, let‘s just say the Italian stereotypes live along. One of my zio‘s follows this and the other doesn‘t. My mum is as far from Italian-looking, sounding and acting as you could ever think. My dad’s side of the family is Yugoslav Macedonian. This is about as Southern-Italian as you can get, Salermo and Syracuse.

  • @GrouRocks

    @GrouRocks

    Жыл бұрын

    Why do you have a Dutch name then?

  • @fil.z9698
    @fil.z9698 Жыл бұрын

    90% of stereotypes about Italians concern southern Italy. We in the north are very different

  • @thefirm4606

    @thefirm4606

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes you are! ❤

  • @kevinboros7427

    @kevinboros7427

    Жыл бұрын

    You would say that, wouldn't you

  • @abraxas1983

    @abraxas1983

    Жыл бұрын

    correct!

  • @jimhellenic9643

    @jimhellenic9643

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes you are! Boring and grey!

  • @arthas9844

    @arthas9844

    Жыл бұрын

    Can you explain in what way are we different? I met a tons of southern Italians and they are very similar to Northern Italians both in looks and I the way of thinking

  • @cristianocosta4662
    @cristianocosta4662 Жыл бұрын

    Most of the information are right. Some small simplification but in 10 mins is natural. Very good job. A small thing.. Italy united in 1861. In 1848 we lost the first independence war..😮

  • @General.Knowledge

    @General.Knowledge

    Жыл бұрын

    That is correct! My mistake. Thank you :)

  • @marioscharalambous7165

    @marioscharalambous7165

    Жыл бұрын

    Also the previous time italy was united was after justinians gothic wars where he reintegrated it into the roman empire

  • @thebigthreekilledmyb

    @thebigthreekilledmyb

    Жыл бұрын

    I think you got mislead by the fact that in 1848 the “Statuto Albertino” got officially approved as a sort of a modern constitution. Right after unification this constitution was applied to the rest of territories, so in some way in 1848 the “modern” Italian country started to exist, even if more different in terms of territories (southern italy was not included back then). I have some old coins at home from 1948 mentioning “100th anniversary of Italy”

  • @harunkayacan258
    @harunkayacan258 Жыл бұрын

    As a turkish student, I had lived in Venice for more than 2.5 years and I didnt know that before I came there. I was so surprised when I saw the different local dialects etc but anyways I like italian people and still remember my fun days there :))

  • @iMorands

    @iMorands

    Жыл бұрын

    glad u had a good time here

  • @FernandoGarcia-nz9el

    @FernandoGarcia-nz9el

    Жыл бұрын

    fun how days how, nightlife, drugs and rock roll??

  • @harunkayacan258

    @harunkayacan258

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FernandoGarcia-nz9el no visiting historical places, swiming in Lido, eating delicious food and spending time with your friends.

  • @bambinaforever1402

    @bambinaforever1402

    Жыл бұрын

    I speak Italian and understand it all right, but i understand almost nothing of that Venice dialect. Was so funny when we came there i was ordering food in a restaurant in italian and they started asking me something i was like duuuuuhhhh was that italian. So funny.

  • @ramumanickam1643

    @ramumanickam1643

    Жыл бұрын

    @@harunkayacan258 How come you have so much money to travel to Europe when turkey has a failing economy baffles me. Europe allows muslim terrorist like you to go to Europe to destroy their country and convert people but hate us instead when we bring development 🤦🏽‍♀️

  • @ayeshaclassesgk
    @ayeshaclassesgk Жыл бұрын

    Best knowledge❤️thanks for the constant uploads and being the amazing person that you are!

  • @G4BR13L_
    @G4BR13L_ Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for keeping the contente so well made visually as informative. Vlw Gajo!

  • @MBP1918
    @MBP1918 Жыл бұрын

    Italy has so many regional languages its insane

  • @InsaneSquiddy

    @InsaneSquiddy

    Жыл бұрын

    the regional languages also have dialects, basically we have a language for every city

  • @rob_3764

    @rob_3764

    Жыл бұрын

    @@InsaneSquiddy indeed, this map doesnt specify that in the same "dialect region" there are completely different dialects, for example in the Neapolitan one there are the Bari's one, the Brindisi one, the Neapolitan one (+ its variants) that are completely different from each other

  • @toffonardi7037

    @toffonardi7037

    Жыл бұрын

    That almost nobody speaks anymore except few areas

  • @utente1489

    @utente1489

    Жыл бұрын

    @@toffonardi7037 bhe dipende , io sono Campano( provincia di Napoli) e a volte anche i prof parlano in dialetto😅

  • @toffonardi7037

    @toffonardi7037

    Жыл бұрын

    @@utente1489 e infatti si vedono i risultati )))

  • @jdawg8487
    @jdawg8487 Жыл бұрын

    North and South Italy really isn’t different from how the North and South of the USA are different from each other. The divide is similar in a lot of ways.

  • @thefirm4606

    @thefirm4606

    Жыл бұрын

    The same exists in the uk 😊

  • @rsj2877

    @rsj2877

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thefirm4606 that one is sort of reverse, right?

  • @thefirm4606

    @thefirm4606

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rsj2877 yes, the north traditionally working class, industrial, resources, manufacturing; the south, finance, import/export, better education, better infrastructure, more sought after.

  • @mimmoliciano8402

    @mimmoliciano8402

    Жыл бұрын

    except you are wrong. northern and southern italy really started to diverge culturally since the indo europeans first came to the peninsula 3500 years ago. (they settled more heavily in the north hence why northern dialects are closer to continental celtic and there are generally more "blond - fair haired" individuals in the north event tho there arent that many, the phenotype differences can be found mostly in skin color and facial features, while southern italians are more mediterranean looking). the two regions have had 3500 years to diverge and develop into their own, you would be amazed by how much the south and north differed pre-unification ; you cant really compare it to north and south america who had about 300 years to develop their cultures and had way fewer cultural differences when the colonization of southern america started

  • @jdawg8487

    @jdawg8487

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thefirm4606 The Northern US is traditionally wealthier than the South but you also have the Rust Belt in the North/Midwest region where I’m from and economic and population growth has been stagnant here for decades. The South is actually the fastest growing region of the country too.

  • @lastoriainunaanimazione
    @lastoriainunaanimazione Жыл бұрын

    As Italian I can say that the unification of Italy was in 1861, not in 1848.

  • @Slave-of-the-sistem

    @Slave-of-the-sistem

    Жыл бұрын

    Quella è solo la data della proclamazione del regno d'Italia (ma come si fa a parlare di unità d'Italia se manco Roma avevamo?) , in effetti la totale "unificazione" è stata raggiunta solo con la Prima Guerra Mondiale, ma l'Italia moderna con i confini che conosciamo esistono stabilmente dal 1954 (quando è stato raggiunto un accordo per disegnare i confini vicino a Trieste ed Istria con gli alleati e la Jugoslavia)

  • @jonathanandrew2909

    @jonathanandrew2909

    Жыл бұрын

    The seeds of unification were planted in 1848.

  • @TiemposDePaz

    @TiemposDePaz

    Жыл бұрын

    Its when it began, not completed in 1861

  • @SaraGrenni

    @SaraGrenni

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jonathanandrew2909 regardless. Italy in 1848 was very much not unified.

  • @jonathanandrew2909

    @jonathanandrew2909

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SaraGrenni what do you mean “regardless”?! 1848 was a pivotal year for the region.

  • @nyko921
    @nyko921 Жыл бұрын

    9:57 not regional dialects. Those are actual languages, that developed from Latin separately from italian.

  • @megavesh9061
    @megavesh9061 Жыл бұрын

    Most of us (italians) can understand which city a person comes from just hearing him/her speaking, based on his dialect or also from the "sound" of its italian. E.g. from Udine, from Bologna, from Venice, from Treviso, from Milan, from Trieste, from Parma etc: we all speak ITALIAN but we have different rhythms and musicality in the pronunciation of the phrase

  • @Tonyx.yt.
    @Tonyx.yt. Жыл бұрын

    5:28 nope, the main reason is that unlike other high developed and populated regions of Europe, pianura padana is surrounded on 3 sides by mountains so air pollutant get trapped inside, unlike flat open and more windy regions like north western germany or southern England

  • @rob_3764

    @rob_3764

    Жыл бұрын

    also there arent many parks unlike in other european cities, of you look at Rome's industrial zones you'll notice that there are lots of parks which reduce pollution

  • @melinda6921

    @melinda6921

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, come diciamo sempre purtroppo viviamo in una conca e il ricambio d'aria è quasi a zero...

  • @giorgiaolivotto8442

    @giorgiaolivotto8442

    Жыл бұрын

    Time to get back on that Turchino project?

  • @charlottejameson8924

    @charlottejameson8924

    Жыл бұрын

    This has been said to have contributed to the higher death rates from COVID in that area, poorer average respiratory health due to pollution from industry.

  • @mariajoaoferrazdeabreu150
    @mariajoaoferrazdeabreu150 Жыл бұрын

    Congrats! Always learning with this channel.

  • @mantidepocoreligiosa
    @mantidepocoreligiosa Жыл бұрын

    As italian (from Tuscany), I was curious to have a recap on Italy's differences saw from the outside. Good job, most of the infos are corrects and you looked very deep inside the reasons (staying in the 10min time). Congratulations !

  • @samuele7098
    @samuele7098 Жыл бұрын

    Great video, but Italy unified in 1861, not 1848 as you keep saying! Even the timelapse you show for the unification is mostly about 1860-1861. Also, i think alpine northern Italy might be considered a third group: it's much less populated, industrialised and polluted. Last time i checked the highest life expectancy was that of Trentino in the alps, it was the second highest in all of europe behind a spanish region if I remember well. Also, these regions tend to have thriving tourism thanks to the mountains and extremely good standards of living and, hdi gdp per capita, in part thanks to the autonomy granted to those regions (because there are many sizeable minorities there, like slovenes, ladins and french. German speakers are even the absolute majority in a province). I grew up in the alps and now i live in a big flat city in the north and life is very different (although culturally it's still more familiar than the south).

  • @samuele7098

    @samuele7098

    Жыл бұрын

    @@YukonGhibli no, it's 1861, that's when the kingdom of Italy was proclaimed and in 2011 Italy celebrated 150 years of national unity. If you consider the unification "done" only when Italy had all of its current land then 1871 is just as wrong since it gained some provinces after ww1.

  • @samuele7098

    @samuele7098

    Жыл бұрын

    @@YukonGhibli che carino che sei. Ho una laurea in storia, bello, e ti assicuro che non ha alcun senso dire che nel 1871 l'Italia era unita e nel 1861 no. Dal punto di vista dell'Italia "moderna" non ha senso parlarne fino a dopo il 1945. Nel 1871 era molto più simile a 10 anni prima che non ad oggigiorno sotto ogni punto di vista. Dal punto di vista territoriale il 1871 non è uno spartiacque importante visto che non è stata né la prima né l'ultima acquisizione territoriale dopo l'unificazione ufficiale (e questo lo dico da trentino, che nel 1917 sarebbe stato ancora cittadino austriaco). Cosa più importante l'Italia ha UFFICIALMENTE celebrato i 150 anni d'unità nel 2011, quindi se vuoi dire che non solo io, ma l'intera nazione, comprese tutte le autorità e gli studiosi, non capiscono quando sia stata unificata l'Italia forse devi riflettere un secondo prima di dire agli altri di studiare, somaro arrogante.

  • @ammonal244

    @ammonal244

    Жыл бұрын

    Guarda che ha ragione lui, pirla

  • @etnalutt3492

    @etnalutt3492

    Жыл бұрын

    ETRURIA was unified long ago BC Also Rromak Empire was unified, and they had built wherever they concored. They were builders. Their enemies were destroyers. Destroying is easy, no knowledge needed. Once the Empire collapsed every republic ruled themselves Until someone came up with a name Italy which means Latini, and the Country with the same people was named with a new name and united.

  • @etnalutt3492

    @etnalutt3492

    Жыл бұрын

    @@samuele7098 Provinces?

  • @flmbprt
    @flmbprt Жыл бұрын

    I lived in Rome for eight yeras, and traveled a lot through the country, as well as made friends from several places. It is indeed a country with strong diferences.

  • @valerianocuomo996

    @valerianocuomo996

    3 ай бұрын

    Rome is central north, not south, Rome is rich, high salaries, 33 million tourists

  • @vamshimohan1339
    @vamshimohan1339 Жыл бұрын

    Good information. Thanks for making a video.

  • @memo1070
    @memo1070 Жыл бұрын

    Great video with all relevant details

  • @davidepregno
    @davidepregno Жыл бұрын

    A very well done video!!! Cheers to you from northern italy :)

  • @CesaresChannel
    @CesaresChannel Жыл бұрын

    The difference between regions in Italy is noticeable. Not only north v south but each region has a distinct character

  • @Gianluca-

    @Gianluca-

    3 ай бұрын

    Nope.

  • @lll____251

    @lll____251

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@Gianluca- yes

  • @studmuffinthuglife
    @studmuffinthuglife Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video! Can't wait for the next !

  • @mrantipatia1872
    @mrantipatia1872 Жыл бұрын

    Interesting video. Italy has several problems, but do not succed in hating it. 🇮🇹Ti amo, Italia 💚🤍❤️

  • @GhostSal

    @GhostSal

    Жыл бұрын

    Here is something else most people don’t realize about Italy today. Foreigners make up 8.7 percent of the Italy’s population, yet commit over half of all serious crimes. A whopping 89.7 percent of crimes involving exploitation of prostitution, 55.8 percent of cases involving sexual violence, 52.8 percent of robberies, 52.4 percent of thefts, and 43.6 percent of malicious injury cases. Keep in mind, the data does not include crimes committed by second-generation Italians. In other words, Italians born to immigrant parents are not listed as “foreigners” and are instead seen as Italian citizens. If you add them, it’s over 80% of the seríous crimes in Italy. The data helps dispel the notion that immigrants coming in are all just peaceful people looking for a better life. The data shows that foreigners account for a massively disproportionate share of the overall crime rate. “the worrying cultural climate in which certain phenomena occur is a sign of a total lack of any kind of values”. - Chief Inspector Omar Di Ronco After a week of widespread chaos breakout n Italian lakeside towns near Lake Garda involving up to 2,000 migrants. The chaos included widespread violence, stabbings and assaults. The Italian public prosecutor’s office and the Italian Parliament have opened a number of investigations, including into cases where migrant men sexually assaulted teen girls, including 6 on a train from Lake Garda to Milan. “They are just a culture of criminals who have left a deep wound in my community. We lived a week of war,” said the mayor of Italian lakeside town Peschiera

  • @escantonio6110
    @escantonio6110 Жыл бұрын

    Me (a napolitan): ah s**t, here we go again

  • @yokez

    @yokez

    Жыл бұрын

    I thought we were Naboli Daboli

  • @thefirm4606

    @thefirm4606

    Жыл бұрын

    😂😂😂❤

  • @musamusashi
    @musamusashi Жыл бұрын

    Italians over 50 may remember the tv show Portobello and one guest proposing the distruction of part of the alps to help wind circulate and clear the Pianura Padana from fog and pollution.

  • @marcop1587

    @marcop1587

    Жыл бұрын

    🤣 an all-time Classic!

  • @marcocappa3738

    @marcocappa3738

    Жыл бұрын

    Someone suggested to nuke the mount Turchino,near Genua to create a marine air stream from Thyrrenian sea to the northern plains....many people phoned protesting...

  • @joshhoward1289
    @joshhoward1289 Жыл бұрын

    Nice video. Well done, very informative and interesting

  • @jorgecanalesbarrera7090
    @jorgecanalesbarrera7090 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing content, thanks

  • @nicolanobili2113
    @nicolanobili2113 Жыл бұрын

    As for the "warmer and more hospital character" of the South: it is a prejudice, or rather, a very subjective interpretation. I mean, in the South people do tend to address people in a friendly way and to be more open, whereas in the North they need to know you a bit, but everything is relative. Many southeners, although sincerely trying to be friendly, may appear to be "intrusive" or even "excessively curious" to strangers or foreigners. I remember a young student of mine (I used to teach Italian to foreigners), a German au pair, who said that she did not like Naples because everyone was noise and they were always paying her unsolicited compliments on the street, whereas in Bologna people minded their business, therefore she eventually decided to move there.

  • @pjuliano9000

    @pjuliano9000

    Жыл бұрын

    So, she was attractive

  • @albertjussan5891
    @albertjussan5891 Жыл бұрын

    Hello, I really like the complete overview that you gave. Although I have to point out 2 big mistakes: the date of creation on Reign of Italy was 1861 and not 1848. The second one is about the language(s), there are other languages spoken in Italy other than Italian, those are regional languages and not dialects, despite the fact that most of Italians called them dialects, (this might be the reason why you also used that term) but they aren't dialects of Italian language but separate languages as shown in the correct map that you posted. Thanks

  • @cantrait7311
    @cantrait7311 Жыл бұрын

    Well done I found that quite interesting

  • @janelletaggart1819
    @janelletaggart1819 Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic video, thanks!

  • @michaelarighi5268
    @michaelarighi5268 Жыл бұрын

    One other difference I noticed with my (northern) family was what I'd call the "butter line." The farther north, the likelier you are to find butter, rather than olive oil, used as the basis for cooking. My extended family, from Milan/Como used butter almost exclusively. My nuclear family used olive oil, but only because my (Ialian) Dad got his first job during the Depression at an olive company in Southern California. So he could get olive oil for free. He had to buy butter. So we used olive oil.

  • @thornil2231

    @thornil2231

    Жыл бұрын

    There is a very famous french movie called "la cuisine au beurre" dealing with that exact subject.

  • @Valentina-qy1yx

    @Valentina-qy1yx

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm from Milan with family origin all in the north and definitely use more olive oil than butter, maybe 70%. to 30%. Butter is also not great in Italy.

  • @demoniack81

    @demoniack81

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Valentina-qy1yx This, Torinese here and I almost always use oil. When i want butter for the taste, i use Irish or German butter. Italian butter tastes like a big ol' scoop of nothing.

  • @chiarac980

    @chiarac980

    Жыл бұрын

    anche il grasso di maiale in emilia romagna(strutto)

  • @kauanluiz9193

    @kauanluiz9193

    Жыл бұрын

    Olive oil just better

  • @bruno_h9113
    @bruno_h9113 Жыл бұрын

    Great video and love your content! It is important to mention tho that Italy was unified in 1861, not 1848, but great video!

  • @tommasopaniccia7551

    @tommasopaniccia7551

    Жыл бұрын

    Or in 1870 - when Rome was annexed, or in 1919 - when the last parts of Italy were annexed. Kingdom of Italy was proclaimed before the south joined, which sounds very silly with contemporary eyes, but the Savoy family was claiming the HRE "Kingdom of Italy" (that is: everything north of the Papal states), and not actual Italy.

  • @gmango47
    @gmango47 Жыл бұрын

    grande lavoro. Great job

  • @renebecker5503
    @renebecker5503 Жыл бұрын

    yes please, I would love some General Knowledge about the unification of Italy...

  • @ilFrancotti
    @ilFrancotti Жыл бұрын

    Re-Unification was in 1861. It was unified the first time in 79 BC. This said, if you are interested in those kind of north-south divisions Mexico has a rather similar situation in terms of wealth disparity.

  • @shroomma

    @shroomma

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, cause we are romans. Oh yes. Same mindset, same lifestyle. Why don't we just call the French Gauls then, I can already see Macron with checkered trousers ad a big braided mustache

  • @alessiovalentini4401

    @alessiovalentini4401

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shroomma Well "Italia" existed since the time of Rome and it was several times kingdoms of Italy over time such as with the Ostrogoths, Holy Roman Empire or Napoleon. The current modern state was born in 1861

  • @Awakeningspirit20
    @Awakeningspirit20 Жыл бұрын

    Most Italian-Americans are southern, including me! But barely, apparently our heritage is about as far north as you can go in southern Italy, modern Isernia/Molise, before you hit the other regions. So many other Italian-Americans are Sicilians (which some classify as different than Italians, almost their own ethnic group). Meanwhile 'my' part of Italy apparently was and is the equivalent of Italian West Virginia, very rural and lesser known.

  • @Marco_franceschini

    @Marco_franceschini

    Жыл бұрын

    That's partially true, Veneto and Friuli had a huge emigration between 19th and 20th century, but mainly because they were underdeveloped and rural until the 1950es. This is due to the Austro Hungarian domination hindering the industrial revolution there and fortifying those territories as the border of their empire

  • @kenos911

    @kenos911

    Жыл бұрын

    Damn I have an Iranian family name because one of my ancestors found themselves in Sicily and eventually the family became northern Italian, but they kept the name

  • @meliodys

    @meliodys

    Жыл бұрын

    thats interesting i always thought, as a grandchild of an Italian immigrant, that most came from mid-northern italy. that’s cool!

  • @GB-ko8cv

    @GB-ko8cv

    Жыл бұрын

    every region in italy you can classify as '' different than italians ''

  • @matthewf6465

    @matthewf6465

    Жыл бұрын

    Molise? More like Molisn't

  • @riccardoguerra5444
    @riccardoguerra5444 Жыл бұрын

    Bellissimo video 🇮🇹🤍

  • @alyssalauren8088
    @alyssalauren8088 Жыл бұрын

    Great video!!

  • @tommasologiudice6154
    @tommasologiudice6154 Жыл бұрын

    The peninsula has not just been unified under the Roman empire, it was also unified under the ostrogoths in the 500s and then by the byzantines soon after (though not for long)

  • @mattpotter8725
    @mattpotter8725 Жыл бұрын

    Would love to see this kind of analysis of the UK, or more specifically England, I think that has a similarly big divide between the South East and rest of the country.

  • @federicolopezmusic

    @federicolopezmusic

    Жыл бұрын

    The difference between north and south of Italy is more like the UK than north and south England. A bunch of states put together by military force. We don’t even understand each other when speaking our local dialects.

  • @mattpotter8725

    @mattpotter8725

    Жыл бұрын

    @@federicolopezmusic I agree that the difference is bigger, Italy wasn't even unified as a single country that long ago, but you've obviously never been to Newcastle upon Tyne and heard someone speaking in their commercial dialect, of even parts of rural Yorkshire. Anyway my comment wasn't about whether one country had more difference then either, I enjoyed this video and wanted more of them. I'd be quite interested in one on Germany as well, even France which I know had many different languages and dialects, Spain too.

  • @jorge_channel1674

    @jorge_channel1674

    Жыл бұрын

    I was just studying history of England, in particular heptarchy, and it is very interesting. It could be interesting to know if the differences between south and north deriving from ancient kingdoms (as Mercia, Kent, Essex, Sussex, Wessex etc.) or not, and the same about language and accents. However England to me as non English person (I am Italian, northern Italy) seems to be pretty similar culturally, is that right? England has a long history and this has maken it more homogeneous than other countries but probably not so homogeneous as foreign people think. It s also interesting knowing about Scotland and Welsh, Ireland and Northern Ireland, which are the main differences? in comparison with English people? I think to understand differences and similarities you have to live or grew up in a country. Me, as northern italian from Milan, a big city where you can find people from various parts of Italy, I probably, as the bulk of people living in big northern italian cities, can understand better the difference. If you never live in Italy it is almost impossible to understand how deep the differences are, not just from north to south or center but also in the same region. For istance About local languages (many times italians called them dialects, but actually they are not) spoken in Italy almost all the northern Italy is gaulish-italian, the southern italy is italian-dalmatian. Italian northern languages are closer to French than to Italian. This is one main difference, but also gaulish italian languages like Lombard has also big difference, for example from east and west dialects. A person from Bergamo who speaks eastern lombard, it is a bit difficult to me understand him as a speaker of western lombard also if we speak the same language (lombard) and we live just 40 km from each other. The differences about language is also from little town to little town, but this is pretty normal in a natutal language. Anyway this was just to show how deep differences are and most of people, italian or foreign people do not know or not consider it.

  • @mattpotter8725

    @mattpotter8725

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jorge_channel1674 Great comment. Firstly when I made the comment it wasn't because I thought England was more diverse than Italy or possibly any other country in Europe or even anywhere else the world. I think you are right that in England (not the United Kingdom, but England) it is fairly unified in terms of feeling English, understanding people from all over the country, though as I said it you want to parts of the country, Newcastle, Yorkshire, Cumbria, Cornwall, even Birmingham you might find it hard understanding some of the dialects. It isn't like Italy because Italy until I think it was Garriboldi unified the country it was a number of separate kingdoms or city states due to historical events over the centuries. I know that, and maybe you do from studying the heptarchy, that after the Anglo-Saxons had settled there were a number of Viking invasions that settled the large parts of the North and East of the country that eventually there was an agreement between Alfred the Great and the Danish warlord Guthrum for peaceful coexistence between the two communities. From this there are legacies in the placenames in parts of England, in Yorkshire places that end in thwaite are only found in places ruled by the Danes and from what I've heard certain words used in these areas and a part of their dialect is also due to influence from the Danish population that mixed into the rest of the Anglo Saxon population over the subsequent centuries, even after I think it was the king Edward the Elder reconquered most of England in the early 900s. It is this that greatly have me motivation to make the comment I made. I'm pretty sure the English language has loanwords from these Danes originating from this period in history. There are still big differences in dialects across England, I think there are videos here on KZread showing the huge diversity. I'm not sure it's easy and I'm not qualified to say whether one country's language is more or less diverse than any other, but I've also seen videos that suggest that England and even the UK in general has a huge diversity in dialects in such a small area. It is on the whole interintelligable but I just remember a group of Newcastle United football fans, Geordies, on the tube in London spotting a child and making a comment calling them a bearn (in their dialect meaning a baby or young child), it made me smile because the Londoner had no clue what they were talking about!!! So I'm not sure it's as homogeneous as you think.

  • @Lore087
    @Lore087 Жыл бұрын

    Bel video, bravo!

  • @Tathagatchat
    @Tathagatchat Жыл бұрын

    Was quite interesting.. Thanks..

  • @iroN_NRG
    @iroN_NRG Жыл бұрын

    The industry map you have shown is from the 1960, when Italy economy just exploited, and industries were all in piedmont and lombardy. Nowadays is a little bit different, but the north south divide is now as big if not bigger

  • @baerbelbaer1963
    @baerbelbaer1963 Жыл бұрын

    Great video! Thx

  • @barumbadum
    @barumbadum Жыл бұрын

    Great video 👍

  • @albertoliberatore777
    @albertoliberatore777 Жыл бұрын

    Little corrections to be made: -Italy was unified on 1861 not 1848 (this is the year the Risorgimento started) -After the collapse of Western Roman Empire Italy remained united until the Lombards invasion in 684AD, therefore this should be the date to use for the begining of the split of North and South. Even if this wasn't a complete and omogeneous, i.e.: in the North there was the bizantine esarcate of Ravenna (from which originated the sub-region Romagna, from the latin Romānia) and in the South there was a lombard duchy, which later became Principalty of Benevento, called in the latin medieval sources "Langobardia Minor". Other thing you forgot to mention is that the industrial infrastructure in the North was helped by the enlighted industrial policies of the Kingdom of Sardinia and the fact that there the use of the alpine water resources used to power the early factories with first water mills and later hydro-electric plants. Other difference to mention is the frequency of earthquakes: the North is geologically more stable then the Centre and South. Just to make an example, in the last 20 years there was only one earthquake in the North (2012 Emilia-Romagna earthquake), while in the Central and Southern Italy there had been three.

  • @charlottejameson8924

    @charlottejameson8924

    Жыл бұрын

    Good point, the famous earthquake of Messina did a lot of damage in Calabria as well.

  • @albertoliberatore777

    @albertoliberatore777

    Жыл бұрын

    @@charlottejameson8924 I didn't mention that on purpose and I just talked about the ones occurred in the last 20 years.

  • @andredamasio5186
    @andredamasio5186 Жыл бұрын

    Awesome video, it would be great if you could do a similar comparison for Germany, perhaps also France, very interesting stuff!

  • @General.Knowledge

    @General.Knowledge

    Жыл бұрын

    I did one about Germany already! Although it was pretty much only focused on the Cold War divide and how the territories of the old Democratic Republic is still different in many aspects.

  • @Nicarand

    @Nicarand

    Жыл бұрын

    @@General.Knowledge The North/South divide in Germany is also very noticable, nobody ever really talks about that though. Might be a good option!

  • @joeybailey3636

    @joeybailey3636

    Жыл бұрын

    @general knowledge you should do one on France. France is so vaste and different between its region (south west spanish influence, south east Italian influance, north east german / swiss / belgium influence, north west gaelic and british influence). Matter fact France is so vast that when French people do dna test there is no French recognised in DNA just other groups (germanic, english, irish, iberian etc.)

  • @tlacorp.3813

    @tlacorp.3813

    Жыл бұрын

    @@General.Knowledge Economically Eastern Germany is still very behind.

  • @sirstamfordraffles6557

    @sirstamfordraffles6557

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Nicarand And today it’s probably far more noticeable, especially in culture and language.

  • @Amadeo-hd3zw
    @Amadeo-hd3zw Жыл бұрын

    Yesss, do a video about the unification please

  • @LP12BZ
    @LP12BZ Жыл бұрын

    Great video

  • @Pafemanti
    @Pafemanti Жыл бұрын

    Lovely video! Since you asked for critiques about what you may have gotten wrong, your pronunciation of initial Rs (Righi, Romagna, etc.) sounds Brazilianized (like English H). It should be trilled, like the way Spanish speakers do double R. Also, Lazio is LAT-si-o (the Italian Z conserves a "T" sound; it can be a whistled version of Latin T, which is why Lazio is directly from the same root as "Latin" 😉). Besides that, I'm glad I finally have a better understanding of the factors that make the north so different from the south. I didn't think about the distance from other countries argument, though I knew about the plains in the north. Thanks for this explanations!

  • @no_name4796
    @no_name4796 Жыл бұрын

    9:01 clarification: Sicily seems to be doing great woth trains but in reality it's so bad that if you live there or you own a car or you rely on bus (which also aren't great) For comparision, catania (sicily 2nd biggest city) has around 1/2 trains per hour which is basically the same of many small cities in emilia romagna

  • @fabiosarrica379

    @fabiosarrica379

    Жыл бұрын

    Not just that: the palermo-catania train route takes about twice as long by train as it does by car

  • @giorgio_sa931
    @giorgio_sa931 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much my friend

  • @thefirm4606
    @thefirm4606 Жыл бұрын

    Fabulous thank you ❤

  • @General.Knowledge

    @General.Knowledge

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for watching! :)

  • @jaredspencer3304
    @jaredspencer3304 Жыл бұрын

    One more factor is the massive depopulation of southern Italy during the end of the 19th century. Over 4 million Italians, mostly from the south, emigrated to the United States at that time. Same with Ireland, which has only just now recovered from their mass migration over 200 years ago.

  • @giorgiodifrancesco4590

    @giorgiodifrancesco4590

    Жыл бұрын

    Definitively not. it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emigrazione_italiana#/media/File:Emigrazione_italiano_per_regione_1876-1915.svg

  • @charlottejameson8924

    @charlottejameson8924

    Жыл бұрын

    Post WW2 to Australia and Canada

  • @charlottejameson8924

    @charlottejameson8924

    Жыл бұрын

    @@giorgiodifrancesco4590 Thank you, an interesting article.

  • @giorgiodifrancesco4590

    @giorgiodifrancesco4590

    Жыл бұрын

    @@charlottejameson8924 That emigration was generally from the South of the paeninsula. From the North they went mainly to France and Switzerland, at that time. Between northeners, only the emigrants from the Veneto region went to Germany. Sourtherners went mainly to Belgium and Germany.

  • @goncalocurto
    @goncalocurto Жыл бұрын

    Muito bom! Que tal um sobre Portugal? Há claramente diferenças entre a distribuição demográfica e o contexto geopolítico no norte e no sul (especialmente Alentejo). Parabéns pelo canal!

  • @madmanbass78
    @madmanbass78 Жыл бұрын

    Great video, I really enjoyed it! I think it should be streamed on the telly in Italy so that also italians could learn those things about their own country 🤭 Seriously though, you said it all, no objections there.. bravo 👏

  • @gabrielemangialavori8732
    @gabrielemangialavori8732 Жыл бұрын

    YES PLEASE make a video about the unification of italy 😍, it would be a very interesting thing that nothing is know about outside of Italy 🙏

  • @richardsmith579
    @richardsmith579 Жыл бұрын

    The pollution certainly concentrates in the Po valley, but the microclimate here, with a low-lying depression surrounded by mountains, does lead to a slow movement of air.

  • @donaldclifford5763

    @donaldclifford5763

    Жыл бұрын

    Kind of like Las Angeles.

  • @itseveryday8600
    @itseveryday8600 Жыл бұрын

    One thing I can add is that, during WW2, the US-ally coalition invaded Italy (who was ruled by Mussolini), from the southern coast, and slowly fought their way up north. America who was concerned of opportunist communists taking over towns that were left in political vacuum after US-allies had fought and made their way, further up north, made a deal with local Italian Mafia groups to take over these towns and keep out the communists. This may have worked at the time, but these Mafia groups managed to consolidate enough power in the town halls, and its municipalities, and so they gained permanent political power there. US-allies only made their way half way up Italy before winning, so this only affected southern Italy, and northern Italy was spared from this situation. After the ww2, northern Italy managed to flourish, where as southern Italy controlled & miss managed by Mafia (e.g corruption & demanding protection money etc), remained relatively poor. Another thing is, Mussolini actually kicked out many of the Mafia out of Italy (who fled to America), but Americans put them back into Italy during ww2, for the reasons mentioned above. An American Italian mafia boss was allowed to make a deal with US government, and after ww2, he was freed out of US jail for cooperating with the US government & facilitating the contact between US government and Italian Mafias. He was allowed to retire back in Italy after the war. His name was Charles 'Lucky' Luciano, from the Genovese crime family.

  • @giorgiodifrancesco4590

    @giorgiodifrancesco4590

    3 ай бұрын

    Exactly. This is well told in the book written on the subject by an English university historian. Furthermore, it must be underlined that, if the mafia still had bases in Sicily, the Neapolitan Camorra was completely recreated on new bases by the Sicilian mafioso Luciano, choosing common criminals for himself Logically, in the economic disaster caused by the war, the new Camorra was also able to flourish.

  • @meditationbreath
    @meditationbreath Жыл бұрын

    very nice thank you

  • @rolfjacobson833
    @rolfjacobson833 Жыл бұрын

    thanks again

  • @pasqualegargiulo9648
    @pasqualegargiulo9648 Жыл бұрын

    the kingdom of 2 sicily wasnt an agricoltural based, it was the most industrialized region of europe yet and also the richest, it became agricoltural after the wars and the garibaldini ( brits in reality) unified Italy

  • @marcocarlson1693

    @marcocarlson1693

    8 ай бұрын

    So very true.

  • @stephans1990
    @stephans1990 Жыл бұрын

    In college I had two Italian professors; One was from Milan, the other one from Sicily. The first one considered the north of the country the true Italy, the middle he compared to the Balkans and the south might as well be Somalia. The second professor said that the north of Italy might as well be part of Switzerland as far as he was concerned.

  • @jorge_channel1674

    @jorge_channel1674

    Жыл бұрын

    Your professor is right, I mean culturally northern Italy is much more similar to Switzerland and other mittle european nations, than southern Italy.

  • @marcocarlson1693

    @marcocarlson1693

    8 ай бұрын

    Just have to say the Milanese Prof. sure didn't know anything really about Sicily, and that's not so atypical.

  • @Lurker27819

    @Lurker27819

    6 ай бұрын

    Hm

  • @danielszelmenis8392
    @danielszelmenis8392 Жыл бұрын

    plz make a video about the italian unification, btw love your vids

  • @danielszelmenis8392

    @danielszelmenis8392

    Жыл бұрын

    sure i will downloud it

  • @casswood
    @casswood Жыл бұрын

    You need either a popscreen on your VO microphone, or a highpass filter on the audio track to cut out those low plosives.

  • @HeresTheGenZFlorentineFolks.
    @HeresTheGenZFlorentineFolks. Жыл бұрын

    As northern Italian, i want say: 1st, the last one about hair and eyes colors isn't true. We're all mixed. 2nd, if you find a blonde Italian isn't because he's\she's of French or Germanic descent, it means nothing. Look at my mom, blue eyes and she's 100% Italian from Northern Tuscany. Same with me.

  • @commenter4190

    @commenter4190

    Жыл бұрын

    anyway you should remember that nordic populations like the Longobardi during the Middle Age settled in the entire peninsula and many of them in Toscana

  • @uncitoyen_8614

    @uncitoyen_8614

    Жыл бұрын

    A lot of northern italians have germanic (lombards) or celt ancestors and in the facts, I would say than Tuscany is the border between the germanic culture in the nord and the latin culture in the south.

  • @HeresTheGenZFlorentineFolks.

    @HeresTheGenZFlorentineFolks.

    Жыл бұрын

    @@uncitoyen_8614 lombards arrived in Tuscany in 500 ac

  • @uncitoyen_8614

    @uncitoyen_8614

    Жыл бұрын

    @@HeresTheGenZFlorentineFolks. Yes and I see Tuscany as a central-northern region.

  • @HeresTheGenZFlorentineFolks.

    @HeresTheGenZFlorentineFolks.

    Жыл бұрын

    @@uncitoyen_8614 sure you’re right. But there is a difference talking about norther Tuscany (look at the northern point of Tuscany, it almost touch southern point of Lombardy) that I already consider it “north” and talking about southern Tuscany (where they speak Roman dialect even if they’re in Tuscany that i consider it “central”. I’m just talking about Northern Tuscany, where I’m from.

  • @HM-sv4xg
    @HM-sv4xg Жыл бұрын

    Would love to see a comparison between the North South divide in Italy vs the North South divide in the UK

  • @larrymcdonald8084

    @larrymcdonald8084

    5 ай бұрын

    It's way bigger in Italy. The average Lombardian makes 40,000 $, while the average Calabrian makes 15,000 $. I don't think there is a region in the UK(city excluded) where its people make 25.000$ more than the inhabitantants of any other region.

  • @ChrisFan890
    @ChrisFan890 Жыл бұрын

    General I am so sorry if I am late I was shopping and my phone is repaired tomorrow. I'm sorry if I missed your notification I'll try next week

  • @tsbarone
    @tsbarone Жыл бұрын

    The unification started in 1848 but the first results arrived only in 1859 with the second indipendence war. With the third one (1866) Veneto was added. Rome was added only on 1870. Trento e Trieste in 1918. It has been a long process. ironically the three main battles have been: Solferino (French victory over Austrian), Sadowa (Prussian victory against Austria) and Sedan (Prussian victory against French which allowed Italy to enter in Rome not anymore defended by French Army).

  • @therealbando
    @therealbando Жыл бұрын

    I can't concentrate on the video because of the world's coolest anthem playing in the background

  • @oneontumetse7900
    @oneontumetse7900 Жыл бұрын

    My favorite city I visited in Italy is Florence but I really loved south Italy maybe because of the touristy stuff to do/warm climate etc. Also as an African it was nice to see social and more outgoing people in the South compared to the North. But I was there for 2 weeks in each area so I can’t be really certain.

  • @eliaprosdocimi5880
    @eliaprosdocimi5880 Жыл бұрын

    To explain the concentration of pollution see also a wind map. During the Cernobyl incident the Padan Planure got some radiation too bringed by the winds. It's the Concave form it has and the fact it's closed on north, west and south by mountains that don't let polluted air escape.

  • @davtio
    @davtio Жыл бұрын

    I'm italian and I can confirm all context of your video. Great job!

  • @peepeetrain8755
    @peepeetrain8755 Жыл бұрын

    Lived in Napoli as a young kid (6-7), wasn't great but looking bad, I feel like I got truly immersed in Italia. I won't forget our weekly pilgrimage to the local Pizza shop, or the many historical locations (I was obsessed with Pompeii haha). Forutunately I moved to somewhere with a much better quality of life (Australia) but my Aussie mum brought Italian cuisine back with us. Props on her for becoming fluent in Napolian Italian and adopting the culinary dishes and skills within 2 years!

  • @dannyesse3043

    @dannyesse3043

    Жыл бұрын

    Much better quality of life in Australia? Lol😂

  • @MinecraftMasterNo1

    @MinecraftMasterNo1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dannyesse3043 Australia is in the top 10 in terms of GDP per capita. Italy is barely in the top 30. Denying the fact that people have more opportunities to make a good living in Australia is just willful ignorance.

  • @giorgiodifrancesco4590

    @giorgiodifrancesco4590

    Жыл бұрын

    It depends on how you want to live. Most Italians would not go to live in your country even if very well paid.

  • @peepeetrain8755

    @peepeetrain8755

    Жыл бұрын

    @@giorgiodifrancesco4590 alot of southern italians, and southern europe would have Family in Australia. And with Australia having far better education, HDI, Wages, Political climate etc than (southern) Italy. your statement would be incorrect

  • @giorgiodifrancesco4590

    @giorgiodifrancesco4590

    Жыл бұрын

    @@peepeetrain8755 You must say "when" they go there. And Naples is not Italy: is a singular reality of Italy. Just as it makes no sense to say that southern Italy is all the same. I wish you to go for a nice tour, leaving the clichés at home. We too have concerns about the fact that Australians are all descendants of English criminals, deportees and that kangaroos roam free on the streets, wearing boxing gloves.

  • @i_dont_have_a_name
    @i_dont_have_a_name Жыл бұрын

    The dialects are lenguage too , many are older that Italian too , they are brother all derivatives from Latin , many "dialect" are too different to understand what they are saying

  • @Rebrado10
    @Rebrado10 Жыл бұрын

    Unification of Italy happened in 1861 when the kingdom of Italy was proclaimed. There was an attempt of unification in 1848 which failed, but also Rome only became part and capital of Italy in 1871

  • @lennygalatioto636
    @lennygalatioto636 Жыл бұрын

    Italy was unified in 1861 when Victor Emmanuel II declared himself king of Italy. Garibaldi invaded Sicily (Kingdom of the Two Sicilies) in 1860. Your video places both of these in 1848. 1848 was the first war of Italian Unification. The process took another 20 years or so to complete. The final piece of the puzzle, Rome, was not annexed until 1870. Additionally, most linguistic scholars consider Italian Dialects to full fledged languages. When Florentine was chosen as “standard” Italian by the newly unified Italian state, all other regional languages were classified as dialects for political expediency. However, overall, a very informative and educational video. BRAVO!

  • @AlejandroSanchez-is2ci
    @AlejandroSanchez-is2ci Жыл бұрын

    Spain had also Milan for your information, more time than France. France only had it for 20 years, meanwhile Spain had it for 170 years.

  • @felicepompa938

    @felicepompa938

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah but french influence really stuck in northern italy, in fact Manzoni's Betrothed was purged of many francesims. While in the south spanish influence was stronger. Neapolitan kept "Teng' " for have and many noble people were mixed with spaniards (Armando Diaz is a neapolitan WW1 general of spanish ancestry)

  • @AlejandroSanchez-is2ci

    @AlejandroSanchez-is2ci

    Жыл бұрын

    @@felicepompa938 thanks , very interesting

  • @Giovis968

    @Giovis968

    Жыл бұрын

    Si pero para nada se mezclaron no nada español desde Roma hasta los Alpes gracias a Dios porque ustedes son unos salvajes

  • @AlejandroSanchez-is2ci

    @AlejandroSanchez-is2ci

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Giovis968 JAJAJAJAJAJAJJAAJA VERY FUNNY BRO

  • @esti-od1mz

    @esti-od1mz

    Жыл бұрын

    And the south had normans and the Anjou for a while... the problem with these videos is that they're simplified.

  • @franco1188
    @franco1188 Жыл бұрын

    another difference: in Sports being Football the most popular in Italy, of 119 years of the italian league (Serie A); 111 times league was won by northern team and only 8 times by a southern team

  • @Sara-fd3dd

    @Sara-fd3dd

    Жыл бұрын

    Just because in the North there are Milan, Juventus and Inter and in the south there's only Napoli

  • @franco1188

    @franco1188

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Sara-fd3dd Bologna-Torino-Genoa-Vercelli won it 30 times combined!!!

  • @Sara-fd3dd

    @Sara-fd3dd

    Жыл бұрын

    @@franco1188 And still in the south there's only Napoli!

  • @antoniousai1989

    @antoniousai1989

    Жыл бұрын

    What do you mean? It's only 3 times. Naples twice and Cagliari once, if you consider Sardinia part of the south. Can't remember another team from the south that won.

  • @antoniousai1989

    @antoniousai1989

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Sara-fd3dd Cagliari too, but again, it depends if you consider Sardinia south or not.

  • @jennyyeh4730
    @jennyyeh4730 Жыл бұрын

    Please do video on unification ! (Il risorgimento)

  • @LarrySurface-ex2lc
    @LarrySurface-ex2lc7 ай бұрын

    I too have been to various parts of Italy and have noticed these differences.

  • @katyoutnabout5943
    @katyoutnabout5943 Жыл бұрын

    I really wish you would have mentioned the Mafia presence in the south. I think, especially when it comes to business and industry, that might actually be the single biggest factor. Historically, the southern Mafia has played a massive role in local politics, that i think it would actually be the top reason why factories chose not to build along the coast, close to ports, in the past 100 years. Why they chose Milan, not Rome or Naples.

  • @yincognito

    @yincognito

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think the Mafia is a cause, I see it more of an effect of the already existing differences. Spain and Greece don't have the Mafia and their situation is roughly similar to southern Italy. Plus, it's not like corruption and crime (even organized one) doesn't exist in the north, these things exist everywhere, just in a different form and at a different scale.

  • @katyoutnabout5943

    @katyoutnabout5943

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yincognito you make good points, every country has a regions with more or less crime. Every country can experience some sort of economic divide. But the Italian mafia is particularly noteworthy because of the massive scope of influence they had/have. The mafia has been around for centuries, and their power over southern italy shouldn’t be overlooked.

  • @yincognito

    @yincognito

    Жыл бұрын

    @@katyoutnabout5943 My point is that it's the suboptimal environment that already was (and still is) present in southern Italy which is the prime cause of this economic divide and the Italian Mafia (which developed and flourished as a result, thus being an effect instead of a cause of it), for a long time. If there wasn't already a failure in providing plenty of opportunities for people to enhance their living standards, such organizations wouldn't have had the conditions to persist like they did. Similarly, take out the Sinaloa cartel from Mexico and they'd still be less developed than the US or Canada. Look at the Communist parties or Western Europe which didn't deviate into dictatorships like in Russia or China, precisely because they lacked a bad environment (widespread poverty, questionable education, traditional religion) for these abusive habits to develop. By comparison, see how even though Italian Mafia was present in the US or New York earlier, it didn't result in economic underdevelopment, because there were plenty of other alternatives for a better living standard. Bottom line, blaming the Mafia for this overlooks the real cause. Give people suited alternatives to make their lives better and you'll see these organizations gradually becoming decorative, like the lordships in the UK nowadays, because they won't be able to exploit the systemic faults that gave them birth in the first place. It's not about overlooking their power and negative influence, it's about not treating them as the root cause and ignoring the real culprit.

  • @mimmoruggieri9323

    @mimmoruggieri9323

    Жыл бұрын

    They are prejudices. The mafia is more present in the north than in the south. Before 1861 the mafia hardly existed in the south, it was used and made to grow to favor the entry of Garibaldi's invaders. Furthermore, from the statistical data (police, prefectures, etc.) there are more and more crimes in the north than in the south.

  • @yincognito

    @yincognito

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mimmoruggieri9323 Indeed, Mafia didn't start as definitive bad guys, they devolved into that. This is emphasized by the fact that practically they represent a shadow "government" / "police" which accumulated power because the state failed at that in certain areas. In a welfare state firmly in control of what it's supposed to be in control of (excluding dictatorship, of course), these things either don't happen or don't cause a significant problem. Other than that, Calciopoli and other similar scandals show that these issues are present in the north as well, albeit, as mentioned, producing less negative consequences due to the higher living standards.

  • @lukasrentz3238
    @lukasrentz3238 Жыл бұрын

    Pollution in the North is also Higher because of Topography. Air often gets trapped (Inversion) in the Winter Months in the Po Valley and pollution accumulates.

  • @dekenlst

    @dekenlst

    Жыл бұрын

    You should tear down a part of the Alps so the air can flow

  • @paulosoares7224
    @paulosoares7224 Жыл бұрын

    What program do you use to edit the videos? PowerPoint?

  • @deusexmacchina
    @deusexmacchina Жыл бұрын

    Regarding the dinner time you have to consider how the weather (especially temperatures) impacts culture. In the south not only the sun set a bit later in winter, but if you consider the impact of 40° or more in a pre-AC mostly outside labour based society the siesta suddenly makes sense... In the south shops (used to) close at lunch and reopen around 16 30 to close again around 20 00, in small town and villages it still happens, to the bafflement of tourists But seriously, going around under the summer in summer can be dangerous, possibly deadly, so the work and the life is postponed by a few hours

  • @elgolafre5832
    @elgolafre5832 Жыл бұрын

    pls do the spanish north-south divide

  • @LadialecticaLadialectica
    @LadialecticaLadialectica Жыл бұрын

    It is truly incredible how similar Spain and Italy are in terms of north and south differences: industry/agriculture, unemployment, religiosity/atheism, climate, distribution of immigrants, etc.

  • @yourealittlebitfat4344

    @yourealittlebitfat4344

    Жыл бұрын

    Ye, being lazy runs in the south.

  • @SteveM-ly7oy
    @SteveM-ly7oy Жыл бұрын

    Could someone tell me please what that place is by the sea at 9mins 46. Thank you.

  • @Aragorn.Strider
    @Aragorn.Strider Жыл бұрын

    6:53 Aosta Valley is at 0.27, the LOWEST here, whereas its neighbour Piedmont (and close Lombardy) are really high. But why? I know there's basically one highway from Aosta to Piedmont and yes lots of mountains around it. But still why?

  • @josueveguilla9069
    @josueveguilla9069 Жыл бұрын

    Why are Northern and Southern California so different from each other?

  • @ZOOMPZ00mp

    @ZOOMPZ00mp

    Жыл бұрын

    only been to northern ca. intelligent people . great weather . meh food

  • @hopsiepike

    @hopsiepike

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s a huge state north to south, with the Bay Area and LA traditionally functioning as separate economies. When it was part of Mexico, Los Angeles was a small town far from San Francisco. Southern California wasn’t big enough to be added as a separate state when it was annexed from Mexico. It needed water from the north to grow, still a point of resentment. Anglo Americans tended to migrate east to west along their latitudes, so there was already a cultural distinction, before LA developed its movie and surfer culture. Yes, there is a casual distain (more in the south) to outright disgust (more in the north) between north and south. Even Mexican immigrants differentiate themselves as Nortenyos or Surenyos.

  • @marcovisentin1265
    @marcovisentin1265 Жыл бұрын

    One other reason of the differences is that the First measures of the just unified Italy were only concentrated in developing the North. One example is the government of Giolitti between the ninteen and twenty century

  • @giuliogiuliani4054
    @giuliogiuliani4054 Жыл бұрын

    sorry but what celts did you refer to for northern Italy? Had they not become relegated to only the British Isles?

  • @commenter4190

    @commenter4190

    Жыл бұрын

    ever heard of the Galli and Gallia Cisalpina?

  • @renatoe9648
    @renatoe9648 Жыл бұрын

    Canada would be interesting anglo vs french or is other factor more important north-south east-west Peru should have an interesting coast-highland-jungle variation there should be something in the regions of Spain or the UK