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Trieste seafront Piazza Unità d'Italia Piazza Unità d'Italia by night From left to right: Barcolana near the Victory Lighthouse; a part of the harbour; and a street of the Old City. In 2012, Lonely Planet listed the city of Trieste as the world's most underrated travel destination. [94]
Trieste Airport (IATA: TRS, ICAO: LIPQ) [3] (Italian: Aeroporto di Trieste) is an international airport located 0.3 NM (0.56 km; 0.35 mi) west of Ronchi dei Legionari (Province of Gorizia), [1] near Trieste in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, north-eastern Italy.
The peace settlement brought Trieste into the Kingdom of Italy in 1919. Immigration swelled Jewish numbers to 6,000; Jews were prominent in the city's economy and assimilation spread unchecked. In 1910, the affluent Trieste Jewish community approved the construction of the Great Synagogue of Trieste.
Trieste at the time had a high infant mortality, higher than that of the Italian cities and one of the highest tuberculosis rates in Europe. Those factors further deepened the already increasing gap between the countryside, populated mostly by ethnic Slovenes, and the city proper, with its Italian language and traditions.
Piazza Unità d'Italia, headed by the Trieste City Hall Previous head office of Italia Marittima. Piazza Unità d'Italia (English: Unity of Italy Square) is the main square in Trieste, a seaport city in northeast Italy. Located at the foot of the hill with the castle of San Giusto, the square faces the Adriatic Sea. It is often said to be ...
The Free Territory of Trieste [2] was an independent territory in Southern Europe between Northern Italy and Yugoslavia, facing the north part of the Adriatic Sea, under direct responsibility of the United Nations Security Council in the aftermath of World War II. For a period of seven years, it acted as a free city.