ALTERNATE NAMES: Tyroleans LOCATION: Tyrol (Tirol); western Austria and northern Italy POPULATION: 1,708,000 LANGUAGE: German, Italian, Ladin (or Ladinian) RELIGION: Roman Catholic. INTRODUCTION. Tyrol (or Tirol) is a name for a historical region in Western Central Europe, covering the area in the eastern Alps in western Austria and northern Italy.
Other now-Italian parts of the former county. East Tyrol, occasionally East Tirol ( German: Osttirol ), is an exclave of the Austrian federal state of Tyrol, separated from North Tyrol by parts of Salzburg State and parts of Italian South Tyrol ( Südtirol, Italian: Alto Adige ). It is congruent with the administrative district ( Bezirk) of Lienz .
7. Get Your Art Fix at the Tyrolean State Museums. Innsbruck is home to a number of museums of international repute, particularly those that fall under the Tyrolean State Museums umbrella. A must-see is the Tyrolean Folk Art Museum (Tyroler Volkskunstmuseum) adjoining the Hofkirche in the new Abbey (Neues Stift). Tyrol (Tirol or Tirolo) was originally a county, headed by the ‘Counts of Tirol’. When the original dynasty of counts died out in 1363, control of the Tyrol was taken over by the royal Habsburgs. In fact, from that point, the title of the ‘Count of Tirol’ was sometimes assumed by the Holy Roman Emperor himself. Neumarkt (literally "new market"; German: [ˈnɔɪ̯markt] ⓘ; Italian: Egna) is a comune (municipality) and a village in South Tyrol in northern Italy, located about 25 kilometres (16 mi) south of the city of Bolzano. It is a member of the I Borghi più belli d'Italia ("The most beautiful villages of Italy") association. The Tyrolese Grey cattle is a dual purpose breed of cattle. The breed is very good for both milk and meat production. It is a typical alpine cattle breed from Tyrol in Austria and South Tyrol in Italy. The breed is also known by some other names such as Tyrolean Grey, German: Tiroler Grauvieh and Italian: Grigio Alpina. Tyrolese Grey cattle are Slovenia Has The Cheapest Alps. Switzerland and Austria are both stunning, mostly German-speaking countries nestled in Europe's stunning Alps. Switzerland may be famous for its cheese, banks, and infamously high prices, while Austria is famous for its hills being alive with the sound of music and the stunning old city of Vienna.South Tyrol belonged to Austria for five centuries, before it was annexed by Italy after the First World War. It was then occupied by the Germans in the Second World War, before being restoredIn fact, Germany viewed the Tyrolean activities as a threat to its annexation of all of Austria, and therefore intervened in Tyrol. For a time, Italy considered the option of allowing an independent state of Tyrol – but the Italians would have accepted the existence of such a state only in the form of an Italian protectorate.
Mountainous Tirol — in Austria's western panhandle — is a winter sports mecca known for its alpine panoramas. In the region's capital, Innsbruck, the Golden Roof glitters, and a mountain peak is in every view. Just up the valley, neighboring Hall is also charming, with fewer crowds. Farther west lies sleepy little Reutte, just over the border from the best of the Bavarian castles, and in
The Dolomites straddle the northeastern border between Italy and Austria, running through the Italian provinces of Belluno, Alto Adige (also called South Tyrol), and Trentino. The highest point of the mountain rises nearly 11,000 feet above sea level.
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