- Comune
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This article is about the administrative division. For the non-profit collective, see Comunes Collective.
In Italy, the comune (plural comuni) is the basic administrative division, and may be properly approximated in casual speech by the English word township or municipality.
Contents
Importance and function
The comune provides many of the basic civil functions: registry of births and deaths, registry of deeds, contracting for local roads and public works, etc.
It is headed by a mayor (sindaco) assisted by a legislative body, the Consiglio Comunale, and an executive body, the Giunta Comunale. Mayor and members of Consiglio Comunale are elected together by resident citizens: the coalition of the elected Mayor (who needs an absolute majority in the first or second round of voting) gains the three fifths of the Council's seats. The Giunta Comunale is chaired by mayor who appoint others members, called assessori. The offices of the comune are housed in a building usually called the Municipio, or Palazzo Comunale. Since the start of 2009 there have been 8,100 comuni in Italy; they vary considerably in area and population.
For example, the comune of Rome (Lazio) has an area of 1,307.71 km² and a population of 2,761,477, and is both the largest and the most populated comune in Italy; Fiera di Primiero, in the province of Trentino, is the smallest comune by area, with only 0.15 km², and Pedesina (province of Sondrio) is the smallest by population, with only 34 inhabitants. The smallest non-alpine comune in Italy is Montelapiano (CH), the fourth is Carapelle Calvisio (AQ), both in the mountainous region of Abruzzo.
The density of comuni varies widely by province and region: the province of Bari, for example, has 1,564,000 inhabitants in 48 municipalities, or over 32,000 inhabitants per municipality; whereas the Aosta Valley has 121,000 inhabitants in 74 municipalities, or 1,630 inhabitants per municipality – roughly twenty times more communal units per inhabitant. There are inefficiencies at both ends of the scale, and there is concern about optimizing the size of the comuni so they may best function in the modern world, but planners are hampered by the historical resonances of the comuni, which often reach back many hundreds of years, or even a full millennium: while provinces and regions are creations of the central government, and subject to fairly frequent border changes, the natural cultural unit is indeed the comune, – for many Italians, their hometown: in recent years especially, it has thus become quite rare for comuni either to merge or to break apart.
Many comuni also have a Polizia Municipale (municipal police) which is responsible for public order duties. Traffic control is their main function in addition to controlling commercial establishments to ensure they open and close according to their license.
Subdivisions
A comune usually comprises:
- a principal town or village, that almost always gives its name to the comune; such a town is referred to as the capoluogo (“head place”, or “capital”; c.f. the French chef-lieu) of the comune; the word comune is also used in casual speech to refer to the town hall.
- other outlying areas called frazioni (singular: frazione, abbreviated fraz., literally “fraction”), each usually centred on a small town or village. These frazioni have usually never had any independent historical existence, but occasionally are former smaller comuni consolidated into a larger. They may also represent settlements which predated the capoluogo: the ancient town of Pollentia, for instance, today known as Pollenzo, is a frazione of Bra. In recent years the frazioni have become more important thanks to the instituction of the "Consiglio di Frazione", a local form of government which can interact with the comune and show it the local needs, requests and claims. Yet smaller places are called località (literally “localities” and often, as in the phonebook, abbreviated Loc.).
- other smaller administrative divisions called municipio or circoscrizione or rione or quartiere or terziere or sestiere or contrada which are similar to borough.
Sometimes, a frazione might be more populated than the capoluogo; and very occasionally, due to unusual circumstances or to the depopulation of the latter, the town hall and its administrative functions move to one of the frazioni: but the comune still retains the name of the capoluogo.
In some cases, a comune might not have a capoluogo but only some 'frazioni': in these cases, it is called a "comune sparso" (sparse municipality) and the frazione which houses the town hall is called "sede municipale" (compare county seat).
Homonymy
There are not many perfect homonymous Italian municipalities. There are only eight cases in 16 comuni:[1]
- Brione: Brione, Lombardy and Brione, Trentino
- Calliano: Calliano, Piedmont and Calliano, Trentino
- Castro: Castro, Apulia and Castro, Lombardy
- Livo: Livo, Lombardy and Livo, Trentino
- Peglio: Peglio, Lombardy and Peglio, Marche
- Samone: Samone, Piedmont and Samone, Trentino
- San Teodoro: San Teodoro, Sardinia and San Teodoro, Sicily
- Valverde: Valverde, Lombardy and Valverde, Sicily
This is mostly due to the fact the name of the province or region was appended to the name of the municipality in order to avoid the confusion. Remarkably two province capitals share the name "Reggio" : Reggio nell'Emilia, the capital of the Reggio Emilia province, in the Emilian part of the Emilia-Romagna region, and Reggio Calabria, the capital of the Calabria province. Many other towns or villages are likewise partial homonyms (e.g. Anzola dell'Emilia and Anzola d'Ossola).
See also
- Circoscrizione
- Communes of France
- Contrada
- Frazione
- List of comuni of Italy by region and province
- Alphabetical list of comuni of Italy
- Località
- Medieval commune
References
External links
Media related to Municipalities of Italy at Wikimedia Commons The Wiktionary definition of comune
Articles on third-level administrative divisions of countries Albania · Algeria · Angola · Argentina · Belgium · Benin · Bhutan · Burkina Faso · Burma · Burundi · Cambodia · Cameroon · Chad · Chile · China · Costa Rica · Côte d'Ivoire · Democratic Republic of the Congo · East Timor · England · Ecuador · Estonia · Ethiopia · Finland · France · Germany · Guinea · Greece · Haiti · India · Indonesia · Italy · Japan · Kenya · Liberia · Lebanon · Lesotho · Lithuania · Luxembourg · Mali · Mozambique · Nepal · Northern Ireland · Niger · Panama · Papua New Guinea · Peru · Philippines · Portugal · Scotland · Senegal · Sierra Leone · Slovakia · South Africa · Spain · Sri Lanka · Switzerland · Tajikistan · Thailand · Ukraine · United States · Vietnam · Wales · Zimbabwe
Table of administrative divisions by countryCategories:- Municipalities of Italy
- Comuni of Italy
- Administrative divisions
- Subdivisions of Italy
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