Provinces of Italy
| Provinces of Italy Province d'Italia (Italian) | |
|---|---|
| Category | Regionalised unitary state |
| Location | Italian Republic |
| Number | 110 |
| Populations | 81,415 (province of Isernia) – 4,231,451 (Metropolitan City of Rome Capital) |
| Areas | 212.50 km2 (82.05 sq mi) (province of Trieste) – 7,397.86 km2 (2,856.33 sq mi) (South Tyrol) |
| Government |
|
| Subdivisions | |
The provinces (Italian: province [proˈvintʃe]; sing. provincia [proˈvintʃa] ⓘ) are the second-level administrative divisions of the Italian Republic, on an intermediate level between a municipality (comune) and a region (regione). Since 2015, provinces have been classified as "institutional bodies of second level".[1]
There are currently 110 institutional bodies of second level in Italy, including 82 ordinary provinces, 2 autonomous provinces, 4 regional decentralization entities, 6 free municipal consortia, and 15 metropolitan cities, as well as the Aosta Valley region (which also exercises the powers of a province).
Italian provinces (with the exception of the current Sardinian provinces) correspond to the NUTS 3 regions.[2]
- ^ "Addio alle vecchie province, è legge il Ddl Delrio". Il Sole 24 Ore. 3 April 2014. Retrieved 15 August 2014.
- ^ "Glossario PAC" (in Italian). Retrieved 28 April 2022.