

Country, south-central Europe. It comprises the boot-shaped peninsula extending into the Mediterranean Sea as well as
Sicily,
Sardinia, and a number of smaller islands. Area: 116,343 sq mi (301,328 sq km). Population (2005 est.): 57,989,000. Capital:
Rome. The people are overwhelmingly Italian. Language: Italian (official). Religion: Christianity (predominantly Roman Catholic). Currency: euro. More than three-fourths of Italy is mountainous or highland country. The
Alps stretch from east to west along Italy's northern boundary, and the
Apennines stretch southward the length of the peninsula. Most of the country's lowlands lie in the valley of its major river, the
Po. Three tectonic plates converge in southern Italy and Sicily, creating intense geologic activity; southern Italy's four active volcanoes include Mount
Vesuvius and Mount
Etna. The economy is based largely on services and manufacturing; exports include machinery and transport equipment, chemicals, textiles, clothing and shoes, and food products (olive oil, wine, fruit, and tomatoes). Italy is a republic with two legislative houses. The chief of state is the president, and the head of government is the prime minister. Italy has been inhabited since Paleolithic times. The
Etruscan civilization arose in the 9th century BC and was overthrown by the Romans in the 4th3rd centuries BC (see
Roman Republic and Empire). Barbarian invasions of the 4th5th centuries AD destroyed the Western Roman Empire. Italy's political fragmentation lasted for centuries but did not diminish its impact on European culture, notably during the
Renaissance. From the 15th to the 18th century, Italian lands were ruled by France, the
Holy Roman Empire, Spain, and Austria. When Napoleonic rule ended in 1815, Italy was again a grouping of independent states. The
Risorgimento successfully united most of Italy, including Sicily and Sardinia by 1861, and the unification of peninsular Italy was completed by 1870. Italy joined the Allies during
World War I, but social unrest in the 1920s brought to power the Fascist movement of
Benito Mussolini, and Italy allied itself with Nazi Germany in
World War II. Defeated by the Allies in 1943, Italy proclaimed itself a republic in 1946. It was a charter member of
NATO (1949) and of the
European Community (now embedded in the European Union). It completed the process of setting up regional legislatures with limited autonomy in 1970s. After World War II it experienced rapid changes of government but remained socially stable.
Source: Encyclopedia Britannica