Lombardy (
Italian: Lombardia Italian pronunciation: [lombarˈdiːa],
Western Lombard: Lumbardìa,
Eastern Lombard: Lombardia) is one of the 20 regions of
Italy. The capital is
Milan. One-sixth of Italy's population lives in Lombardy and about one fifth of Italy's
GDP is produced in this region, making it the most populous and richest region in the country.[1]
Major tourist destinations in the region include the historic, cultural and artistic cities of Milan (which is Italy's second top tourist destination),[2]
Brescia,
Mantua,
Pavia,
Cremona and
Bergamo, and the lakes
Garda,
Como, Maggiore and
Iseo.
The official language, as in the rest of Italy, is Italian. The traditional local languages are the various dialects of
Lombard (Western Lombard and Eastern Lombard), as well as some dialects of Emilian, spoken in some parts of the provinces of Mantua, Pavia and Cremona. These are not widely spoken due to intense immigration from other parts of Italy whose local dialects were not intelligible with Italian.
Contents
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Geography
A view of
Valtellina.
Lombardy is bordered by
Switzerland (north:
Canton Ticino and
Canton Graubünden) and by the
Italian regions of Emilia-Romagna (south),
Trentino-Alto Adige/
Südtirol and
Veneto (east), and
Piedmont (west). Three distinct natural zones can be fairly easily distinguished in the Lombardy region: mountains, hills and plains - the latter being divided in
Alta (high plains) and
Bassa (low plains).
The most important mountainous area is an
Alpine zone including the Lepontine and
Rhaetian Alps, (Piz Zupo, 3,996 m), the
Bergamo Alps, the Ortles and
Adamello massifs; it is followed by an
Alpine foothills zone
Prealpi, which include the main peaks are the Grigna
Group (2,410 m),
Resegone (1,875 m) and Presolana (2,521 m). The great Lombard lakes, all of glacial origin, lie in this zone. From west to east these are
Lake Maggiore,
Lake Lugano (only a small part is
Italian), Lake Como,
Lake Iseo, Lake
Idro, then
Lake Garda, the largest in Italy.
South of the
Alps lie the hills characterized by a succession of low heights of morainic origin, formed during the last
Ice Age and small barely fertile plateaux, with typical heaths and conifer woods.
A minor mountainous area lies south of the Po, in the
Appennines range.
Bellagio, on the shores of Lake Como.
The plains of Lombardy, formed from alluvial deposits, can be divided into the Alta - an upper, permeable ground zone in the north and a lower zone characterized - the Bassa - by the so-called line of fontanili (the spring waters rising on impermeable ground). Anomalous compared with the three distinctions already made is the small region of the
Oltrepò Pavese, formed by the Apennine foothills beyond the
Po River. A large number of rivers, all direct or indirect tributaries of the Po, cross the plains of Lombardy. Major rivers, flowing west to east, are the
Ticino, the outlet of Lake Maggiore, the
Olona, the
Lambro, the
Adda, outlet of Lake Como, the
Mincio, outlet of Lake Garda, and the
Oglio, the Lake Iseo outflow. There is a wide network of canals for irrigation purposes
. In the plains, intensively cultivated for centuries, little of the original environment remains. The rare elm, alder, sycamore, poplar, willow and hornbeam woods and heaths are covered now by several protected areas. In the area of the great Alpine foothills lakes, however, grow olive trees, cypresses and larches, as well as varieties of subtropical flora such as magnolias, azaleas, acacias, etc. The mountains area is characterized by the typical vegetation of the whole range of the
Italian Alps. At a lower levels (up to approximately 1,
100 m) oak woods or broadleafed trees grow; on the mountain slopes (up to 2,000--2,
200 m) beech trees grow at the lowest limits, with conifer woods higher up.
Shrubs such as rhododendron, dwarf pine and juniper are native to the summital zone (beyond 2,200 m).
A view of Lake Maggiore.
The climate of this region is continental, though with variations depending on altitude or the presence of inland waters. The continental nature of the climate is more accentuated on the plains, with high annual temperature changes (at Milan an average January temperature is 1.5 °C and 24 °C in July), and thick fog between October and February. The Alpine foothills lakes exercise a mitigating influence, permitting the cultivation of typically
Mediterranean produce (olives, citrus fruit). In the Alpine zone, the valley floor is relatively mild in contrast with the colder higher areas (
Bormio, 1,225 m, --1.4 °C average in
January, 17.3 °C in July). Precipitations are more frequent in the
Prealpine zone (up to 1,500--2,
000 mm annually) than on the plains and
Alpine zones (600 mm to 850 mm annually). The numerous species of endemic flora (the Lombard native species), typical mainly of the Lake Como area, include some kinds of
- published: 20 Oct 2010
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