Friuli-Venezia Giulia
Italy is a land of regional differences. An instant glance at Sicily,
Venice and Rome will tell you that Italians speak, live and eat differently
in different regions.
Friuli-Venezia Giulia displays this diversity on a more minute scale.
Like its hybridized name, the northeastern region is a patchwork of
provinces, cities and towns with diverse populations. Its inhabitants
take an enormous amount of pride in their ethnic and cultural makeup,
in the languages they speak and in their ancient religious and folk
traditions. The relatively small Valcanale area represents this cultural
diversity exceptionally well. Its inhabitants speak Italian and the
ancient language Furlan as well as German and Slovenian, which have
seeped through the porous borders that Friuli shares with Austria
and Slovenia. An estimated 50 percent of the regional population speaks
Furlan on a daily basis, and even more speak Slovenian. German is
less prevalent though the tiny communities of Sauris and Timau are
known as German-speaking "ethnic islands." Sauris maintains
the oldest Carnevale celebration in all of the Alps, in which a masked
figure knocks on doors with a broomstick and participants parade through
town wearing ancient wooden masks.
Trieste, the region's largest city, is located on the Adriatic coast.
Thanks to glamorous palazzi and sprawling piazzas built by the Austro-Hungarian
Empire, Trieste has a Central European grandeur unlike any other Italian
city. Ornate Viennese coffeehouses are very popular and have been
for more than a century. Italian writers Italo Svevo, Umberto Saba
and Claudio Magris made Caffè San Marco famous. One-time resident
James Joyce made a habit of having breakfast at Pasticceria Pirona.
Coffee-obsessed
triestini take pride in the local coffee company Illy, whose founder
is credited with having invented the first automatic, pressed-air
espresso machine, which he called the illetta, in 1935.The province
of Gorizia, together with Trieste, composes the formerly separate
region of Venezia Giulia. At one time in its tumultuous history, the
border between Italy and Yugoslavia split the city of Gorizia right
down the middle. Udine and Pordenone exhibit elements of Venetian
influence in their architecture while the rugged northern swath of
the region, Carnia, is dominated by the Dolomite Mountains and parts
of the Alps. Aquileia is considered one of the finest examples of
an early Roman city-it flourished under the rule of Augustus Caesar.
Friuli's name comes from this era in history. The word is an evolution
of Forum Julii, the name Julius Caesar gave to the city of Cividale
in 53 B.C.





