Croats of Italy
Croats form a part of the permanent population of Italy. Traditionally, there is an autochthonous community in the Molise region known as the Molise Croats, but there are many other Croats living in or associated with Italy through other means, with the most numerous communities in Trieste, Rome, Padua and Milan. In 2010, persons with Croatian citizenship in Italy numbered 21,079.
Croats of Italy could mean any of the following:
- Molise Croats - a long-established Croatian population in the Molise region.
- Ethnic Croats to have relocated to Italy from any region to which Croats may be autochthonous.
Molise Croats
, who were the first Croats to settle in Italy, at the time of the Ottoman expansion in the Balkans, are one of the linguistic minority officially recognised by the Italian Republic. They achieved protection as a minority on 5 November 1996 by an agreement signed between Croatia and Italy. According to 2001 census, there were 2,801 Molise Croats, of which 813 lived in San Felice del Molise, 800 in Acquaviva Collecroce and 468 in Montemitro. The number of Molise Croats is in decline.Other communities
Croats were also recorded in southern Italy, but they assimilated over time, in the provinces of Marche, Campania, Basilicata, Apulia, and elsewhere.Assimilation and Italianization
During the 19th century, the Italianization of Slavic surnames began in Italy. After 1918, this intensified, even before the fascists came to power. In September 1922, Italy signed an international convention on the protection of ethnic, linguistic and religious freedoms of national minorities, which it did not adhere to. With the fascists coming to power, Croatian surnames and toponyms were Italianized, including those in the southern Italy. In 1863, San Vito degli Schiavoni became and remains until today San Vito dei Normanni, although Croats founded it as early as 963.Associations, publications and media
In the region of Molise, there is the Federation of Croatian-Molise Cultural Associations which unifies the Association "Luigi Zara", the Foundation "Agostina Piccoli", the Association "Naš život" and the Association "Naš grad". The main association of all Croats of Italy is the Alliance of Croatian Associations as founded in 2001; this association consists of: the Croatian-Italian Association of Rome, the Croatian Union of Milano, the Croatian Union of Trieste, the Croatian Union of Venetia, the Croatian-Italian Association of Udine and the Association "Luigi Zara". Also, the Club of Friends of Croatia is active in Milano.A Croatian organization that has a longer history in Italy is the Pontifical Croatian College of St. Jerome, a Catholic college. Known as the Collegium Hieronymianum Illyricorum since 1902, the college served Croatian Catholics, before being renamed Pontificium Collegium Chroaticum Sancti Hieronymi in 1971. College publishes Croatian Roman directory. Another Croatian Catholic organization in Italy is the Domus Croatia "Dr. Ivan Merz", an organization of Croatian pilgrims. The Croatian Roman Community also operates of Rome. Organisation "Croatian-Italian mosaic" in Rome hosts international folklore festival "CRoETnO festival".
The Foundation "Agostina Piccoli" and the Association "Naš život" are issuing the bilingual magazine "Riča živa/Parola viva", while the Alliance of Croatian Associations prints also the bilingual magazine "Insieme".
Famous Croats of Italy and Italians with Croatian ancestry
Academia
- Benedetto Cotrugli - merchant, economist, scientist, diplomat and humanist
- Matthew Ferchi - philosopher
- William Klinger - historian
- Serafino Raffaele Minich - mathematician
- Franciscus Patricius - philosopher and scientist
- Fausto Veranzio - polymath and bishop
Arts
- Federico Bencovich - painter from Dalmatia working in Italy.
- Giulio Clovio - illuminator, miniaturist, and painter
- Giovanni Dalmata - sculptor
- Giorgio da Sebenico - sculptor and architect
- Lovro Dobričević - painter
- Niccolò di Giovanni Fiorentino called Nicolas of Florence - Renaissance sculptor and architect
- Francesco Laurana - sculptor
- Martino Rota - painter and engraver
- Giorgio Schiavone, - Renaissance painter, active in North Italy and Dalmatia.
Business
- Sergio Marchionne - Italian-Canadian businessman
Film
- Callisto Cosulich - Italian film critic, author, journalist and screenwriter.
- Gianni Garko - actor, often billed as John Garko and occasionally Gary Hudson
- Sylva Koscina - actress. Born in Zagreb to a Greek father and Polish mother
- Rita Rusić - producer, actress and singer.
- Xenia Valderi - actress. The daughter of a Dalmatian father and German mother
Literature
- Vincenzo Bettiza - novelist, journalist and politician
- Alberto Moravia - novelist and journalist.
- Gian Francesco Biondi - writer
Music
- Andrea Antico - music printer, editor, publisher and composer
- Ivan Mane Jarnović - violinist and composer
- Rancore - rapper. His father is from Croatia and his mother from Egypt.
- Antonio Smareglia - opera composer.
Politics
- Otokar Keršovani - journalist, literary critic, publicist and communist politician.
Science
- Roger Joseph Boscovich - physicist, astronomer, mathematician, philosopher, diplomat, poet, theologian, Jesuit priest, and a polymath
- Giovanni Luppis - inventor
Sports
- Aldo Andretti - race car driver
- Mario Andretti - race car driver
- Saša Bjelanović - footballer
- Antonio Blasevich - footballer and coach
- Tarcisio Burgnich - football
- Gino Gardassanich - football
- Andrea de Adamich - racing car driver
- Gabre Gabric - track and field athlete
- Latino Galasso - rower
- Viktor Galović - tennis player.
- Vittorio Gliubich - Italian rowing coxswain
- Petar Ivanov (rower) - rower
- Ante Katalinić - rower
- Frane Katalinić - rower
- Šimun Katalinić - rower
- Giovanni Martinolich - chess master
- Marcello Mihalich - football player and coach
- Emir Murati - football
- Abdon Pamich - race walker
- Nikola Radulović - basketball
- Max Romih - chess master.
- Stefano Serchinic - race walker
- Roko Šimić - footballer
- Bruno Sorić - rower
- Carlo Toniatti - rower
- Andrea Trinchieri - basketball coach
- Uros Vico - tennis
- Antonio Vojak - football
- Oliviero Vojak - football
Other
- Lidia Bastianich - celebrity chef, television host, author, and restaurateur.
- Ottavio Missoni - fashion designer
- Nina Morić - model
- Marco Polo - explorer
- Pier Paolo Vergerio - Italian papal nuncio and later Protestant reformer.
- Oltremarini - Dalmatian infantry corps organized within the Venetian navy as the elite infantry.
- Umberto Zadnich - serial killer and sex offender