Dubai Telegraph - Olympic Games in northern Italy have German twist

EUR -
AED 4.291853
AFN 74.20555
ALL 95.817815
AMD 433.455649
ANG 2.091744
AOA 1072.818501
ARS 1638.506826
AUD 1.632748
AWG 2.106487
AZN 1.990357
BAM 1.953347
BBD 2.35407
BDT 143.439249
BGN 1.949423
BHD 0.441046
BIF 3476.725911
BMD 1.168647
BND 1.491028
BOB 8.106819
BRL 5.803267
BSD 1.168797
BTN 111.103472
BWP 15.866075
BYN 3.306048
BYR 22905.488356
BZD 2.351147
CAD 1.591388
CDF 2706.587474
CHF 0.915754
CLF 0.027087
CLP 1066.063434
CNY 7.982153
CNH 7.984544
COP 4357.243268
CRC 531.430334
CUC 1.168647
CUP 30.969155
CVE 110.612191
CZK 24.389204
DJF 207.691682
DKK 7.472507
DOP 69.652174
DZD 154.919394
EGP 62.777052
ERN 17.52971
ETB 183.565314
FJD 2.569626
FKP 0.860383
GBP 0.863052
GEL 3.137761
GGP 0.860383
GHS 13.083022
GIP 0.860383
GMD 85.895285
GNF 10257.799024
GTQ 8.932985
GYD 244.542893
HKD 9.157094
HNL 31.121083
HRK 7.532867
HTG 152.967138
HUF 363.833773
IDR 20359.181045
ILS 3.445114
IMP 0.860383
INR 111.424699
IQD 1530.928048
IRR 1536771.285057
ISK 143.404361
JEP 0.860383
JMD 184.138751
JOD 0.828586
JPY 184.014633
KES 150.9308
KGS 102.163736
KHR 4688.613046
KMF 491.418383
KPW 1051.782626
KRW 1722.925073
KWD 0.360066
KYD 0.974177
KZT 542.229047
LAK 25666.412509
LBP 104478.510829
LKR 373.507738
LRD 214.592902
LSL 19.668377
LTL 3.450711
LVL 0.706903
LYD 7.403358
MAD 10.806479
MDL 20.124727
MGA 4855.72974
MKD 61.629324
MMK 2453.867013
MNT 4179.872431
MOP 9.431855
MRU 46.687326
MUR 54.867673
MVR 18.061438
MWK 2035.196284
MXN 20.443791
MYR 4.630763
MZN 74.688328
NAD 19.668818
NGN 1601.502687
NIO 42.912313
NOK 10.821663
NPR 177.763476
NZD 1.988226
OMR 0.449351
PAB 1.169032
PEN 4.097227
PGK 5.063165
PHP 71.926154
PKR 325.76083
PLN 4.254285
PYG 7266.873964
QAR 4.257374
RON 5.198375
RSD 117.379233
RUB 88.062485
RWF 1706.809477
SAR 4.384993
SBD 9.37941
SCR 15.611293
SDG 701.776103
SEK 10.848785
SGD 1.492579
SHP 0.872513
SLE 28.807263
SLL 24505.946442
SOS 667.878202
SRD 43.77288
STD 24188.640968
STN 24.716892
SVC 10.22911
SYP 129.164732
SZL 19.668031
THB 38.261526
TJS 10.942258
TMT 4.096109
TND 3.372136
TOP 2.813823
TRY 52.845082
TTD 7.940029
TWD 36.926332
TZS 3035.574024
UAH 51.508713
UGX 4386.609027
USD 1.168647
UYU 47.080874
UZS 14021.431015
VES 571.401656
VND 30757.045679
VUV 138.810511
WST 3.173098
XAF 655.134256
XAG 0.015865
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.158328
XCG 2.106954
XDR 0.812946
XOF 652.69255
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.868447
ZAR 19.623401
ZMK 10519.232616
ZMW 21.890509
ZWL 376.303975
  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.87

    -0.04%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.25

    -0.13%

  • NGG

    -0.9800

    87.5

    -1.12%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    23.93

    -0.13%

  • GSK

    -0.7100

    50.9

    -1.39%

  • BTI

    -0.3600

    58.35

    -0.62%

  • RIO

    -1.9500

    98.63

    -1.98%

  • RBGPF

    1.6000

    64.7

    +2.47%

  • BP

    0.5300

    46.94

    +1.13%

  • AZN

    -1.2800

    183.46

    -0.7%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    16.33

    -0.12%

  • BCC

    -3.8000

    74.33

    -5.11%

  • VOD

    -0.1000

    16.05

    -0.62%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    12.93

    -0.39%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    36.36

    +0.03%

Olympic Games in northern Italy have German twist
Olympic Games in northern Italy have German twist / Photo: Odd ANDERSEN - AFP

Olympic Games in northern Italy have German twist

Biathlon fans brush up your Italian -- but also your German, for the events this Winter Olympics will be in South Tyrol in Italy, an autonomous province bordering Austria and Switzerland.

Text size:

The valley of Anterselva, with its snow-capped peaks and verdant pastures, is the most northern of the seven venues for the Games, which run in Italy from February 6 to 22.

The province is known in Italian as Alto Adige, but in English as Bolzano-South Tyrol, and nearly 70 percent of locals speak German, one of three official languages along with Italian and Ladin, a local language spoken in the Dolomites.

The birthplace of tennis great Jannik Sinner, the province enjoys considerable administrative, legislative and fiscal autonomy from Rome and remains deeply committed to upholding its multiculturalism.

The province's president Arno Kompatscher told AFP that place names were bilingual out of "respect for people's sensitivities" in an area with a turbulent history.

In light of that, the province pushed for -- and won -- "an exemption from the International Olympic Committee... because their nomenclature only included one name," Kompatscher said.

As well as the official languages of English and French, and the host language Italian, the Olympic Games is adding German to some of the material published for the 2026 events.

It is the first time organisers have dealt with a host venue that has bilingual place names.

- Forced assimilation -

The region once belonged to the Austro-Hungarian Empire but was ceded to Italy as part of a First World War settlement.

A policy of brutal assimilation followed, implemented from the 1920s onward by the Fascist regime, which encouraged immigration from other Italian regions to South Tyrol and attempted to impose the use of Italian.

The struggle of German-speaking activists for reunification with Austria culminated in bombings targeting Italian infrastructure in the 1950s and 1960s.

Bolzano and neighbouring province Trento were granted the status of autonomous areas in 1972, and in South Tyrol multiculturalism is protected by law.

The Milan-Cortina organising committee confirmed that "on signs and maps, the towns and villages of South Tyrol have been indicated with their official bilingual names" in Italian and German.

"Materials intended primarily for local communities" have also been produced in two languages, including a guide for volunteers, it told AFP.

- 'Little Europe' -

South Tyrol's designation as autonomous ushered in "remarkable economic and cultural development" as well as "a form of self-governance found in few other Italian provinces", tourism historian Hans Heiss told AFP.

Posters reading "Grüß Gott in Tirol" ("Welcome to Tyrol" in German) have been put up at some bus stops by the South Tyrolean Shooting Federation, in collaboration with the South Tyrolean Patriotic League.

"The goal is to draw attention to a historical reality that many are unaware of," Christoph Schmid, the federation's provincial head, told the local press.

On the posters, a QR code links to a page that recounts the history of the region and deplores the "persistent injustice" of the province having been annexed to Italy, without asking the locals their opinion.

South Tyrol's folklore will also be celebrated during the Games.

For the biathlon events in Anterselva, expected to attract many German-speaking tourists, there will "always be people in traditional Austrian costumes," the province's president Kompatscher said.

In Bolzano's central square on Tuesday evening, dozens of musicians in traditional black jackets, round hats for the men, and long skirts for the women, welcomed the arrival of the Olympic flame.

"We want to be a little Europe within Europe, taking up the European slogan of unity in diversity," said President Kompatscher.

That which "perfectly matches the Olympic spirit," Kompatscher said.

I.Mansoor--DT