1
|
In Italy, a province (in Italian: provincia) is an administrative division of intermediate level between municipality (comune) and region (regione).
|
|
A province is composed of many municipalities, and usually several provinces form a region. The region of Aosta Valley is the only one that, strictly speaking, has no provinces: the administrative functions of its province are provided by the corresponding regional government; however, loosely speaking, it is seen as a single province.
As of 2006, there are 109 provinces in Italy, three of which are newly organized, and will be effective only as of 2009. The list below highlights in bold the province whose administrative capital is also the administrative capital of its region. Note that ISO 3166-2:IT lists all two-letter codes for the provinces.
Polizia Provinciale (Provincial Police) is a general term used to identify provincial-level police forces in Italy.
The provinces are listed below alphabetically, by region:
Provinces of Abruzzo.
Province of Aosta Valley.
Provinces of Basilicata.
Provinces of Calabria.
Provinces of Campania.
Provinces of Emilia-Romagna.
Provinces of Friuli-Venezia Giulia.
Provinces of Lazio.
Provinces of Liguria.
Provinces of Lombardy.
Provinces of Marche.
Provinces of Molise.
Provinces of Sardinia.
Provinces of Sicily.
Provinces of Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol.
Provinces of Tuscany.
Provinces of Umbria.
Provinces of Veneto.
| Second-level administrative divisions of countries in Europe |
|---|
Albania · Austria · Belgium · Bulgaria · Croatia · Czech Republic · Denmark · Estonia · Finland · France · Germany · Greece · Hungary · Iceland · Italy · Kazakhstan · Latvia · Lithuania · Luxembourg · Malta · Moldova · Netherlands · Norway · Poland · Portugal · Romania · Russia · Serbia · Slovakia · Slovenia · Spain · Sweden · Switzerland · Turkey · Ukraine · United Kingdom |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia