2006
DOI: 10.5195/cbp.2006.128
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“Istria Is Ours, and We Can Prove It”: An Examination of Istrian Historiography in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries

Abstract: Istrian historiography written throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries tends to refl ect the often contentious discourse between Italian irredentists and Slavic nationalists relating to the peninsula’s nature and belonging. On the one hand, Italian historians and polemicists suggest that Istria and Istrianity were primarily Italian, and therefore the region should be part of an Italian state. Until the end of the Trieste Crisis in 1954, many Italians continued to debate the nature of the region and i… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Istria has not been excluded from these changes, although there do not seem to be radically different interpretations of Istrian history among Croatian scholars of the past and the present, in the cultural, social, political and economic sense. However, historians of younger generations, like Dukovski and D' Alessio, interpret regional history in the light of regional coexistence and cooperation (Ashbrook, 2006),³² which is in line with the modern approaches and concepts in examining the contact areas in Europe (Pelikan, 2012, p. 282;Verginella, 2010Verginella, , p. 2012). In addition, scholars pointed out some research assumptions of the national-political historical paradigm, like 'defining key controversial topics in which "national historiography" is included in each national discourse and where the interpretations are the most ideological and consequently controversial' (Pelikan, 2012, p. 283; see also Verginella, 2010).…”
Section: Region Of Istria: a Brief Historical Overviewmentioning
confidence: 61%
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“…Istria has not been excluded from these changes, although there do not seem to be radically different interpretations of Istrian history among Croatian scholars of the past and the present, in the cultural, social, political and economic sense. However, historians of younger generations, like Dukovski and D' Alessio, interpret regional history in the light of regional coexistence and cooperation (Ashbrook, 2006),³² which is in line with the modern approaches and concepts in examining the contact areas in Europe (Pelikan, 2012, p. 282;Verginella, 2010Verginella, , p. 2012). In addition, scholars pointed out some research assumptions of the national-political historical paradigm, like 'defining key controversial topics in which "national historiography" is included in each national discourse and where the interpretations are the most ideological and consequently controversial' (Pelikan, 2012, p. 283; see also Verginella, 2010).…”
Section: Region Of Istria: a Brief Historical Overviewmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…The Italian part (especially politicians and intellectuals) expressed the need to preserve and strengthen the role of the Latin and Roman legacies and diminish the Slavic cultural traces in the region's past, which made interethnic relations more difficult.¹¹ After w w i and the annexation of Istria to Italy, especially after Mussolini seized power in 1922, this turned into state repression in order to facilitate assimilation and denationalisation of Croats and Slovenes. Numbers show that these measures were not completely successful¹² -see Scotti (2008), D' Alessio (2006 and Mat-¹⁰ See also Ashbrook (2006); Klaić (2014;. ¹¹ Šetić (2008, p. 106), according to Bertoša, identified economic, political, cultural and mental dimensions of the crack among the Istrian nations.…”
Section: Region Of Istria: a Political Geography Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…According to the Treaty of Rapallo signed on 12 November 1920, almost all territory of the former Austrian Littoral, including Istria, was annexed to the Kingdom of Italy (Lipušček, 2012;Šuligoj, 2015a). A great socio-economic crisis in the Pula and the whole peninsula (Marsetič, 2006b;2006a), which, together with the state fascist terror, led to an increased emigration of the Slavic population and Italian antifascists (Dukovski, 2010;Hrobat Virloget & Čebron Lipovec, 2017, p. 47;Violante, 2009, p. 98); Slavic rebels as well as native local Italians of different political ideologies were persecuted by the fascists due to their common work in an antifascist coalition movement (Ashbrook, 2006;Violante, 2009). Moreover, systematic 'ethnic refinement' of the population was upgraded by the organised immigration of the 'true Italians' from other parts of the kingdom, which additionally influenced the change in the ethnic structure in Istria.…”
Section: Brief Historical Background: Traumatic 20th Century In Istriamentioning
confidence: 99%