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Revision as of 21:40, 10 September 2005 editOrzetto (talk | contribs)3,163 edits Some rearrangement← Previous edit Revision as of 21:50, 10 September 2005 edit undoOrzetto (talk | contribs)3,163 edits Previous Existence of the NameNext edit →
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=== Previous Existence of the Name === === Previous Existence of the Name ===
The term "Padania" was present in ] before, but was so rare that most people (including Northern Italians) had never heard of it, and most assumed it was made up by the Northern League. The term ''padano'' (padanian), that before was a neutral adjective for the ''pianura padana'', can today be used to indicate people or issues close to the Northern League. The term "Padania" was present in ] before, but was so rare that most people (including Northern Italians) had never heard of it, and most assumed it was made up by the Northern League. The term ''padano'' (padanian), that before was a neutral adjective for the ''pianura padana'', can today be used to indicate people or issues close to the Northern League.

Supporters of the Northern League are adamant that ''Padania'' is not a word invented by Umberto Bossi, but one that was and is currently used . However, most Italians, including northerners, invariably connect the word with the League. A for <tt>Padania</tt> indicates that most referenced pages are associated with the Northern League in one way or another.


=== Popular Support === === Popular Support ===

Revision as of 21:50, 10 September 2005

File:Padanien Flagge.png
File:FIAV 32.png Flag Ratio: 1:2
Padania's flag, the Sun of the Alps, proposed by the Northern League

Padania is a name used to indicate a not-well-defined area of Northern Italy. Its usage has today strong political implications, and is associated to the Northern League.

Territory

Map of Italy, with one possible definition of Padania (in the sense used by the Northern League, including Emilia-Romagna but excluding Tuscany) highlighted

In the narrowest sense, it would be the valley of the River Po (In Latin, Padus). The term was however used sparingly if at all, since pianura padana was preferred in most geography textbooks and in atlases.

When the Northern League decided to push for a secession of richer Northern Italy from the rest of the country, the League's leader Umberto Bossi gave the name Padania to the areas he meant would secede. The new "country" had a flag, a national anthem, a newspaper (La Padania), a "parliament" in Mantua, which and held elections (recognized by no one except the Northern League).

The actual boundaries of Padania, in this political meaning, are unclear and somewhat depending on the political stance taken by the League from time to time. Whereas most League supporters would expect Padania to include Emilia-Romagna and possibly Tuscany, these regions have a long history of support for left-wing parties, and the League has a negligible presence there. The League has its strongest electoral base in Lombardy (especially Varese province, where Bossi and the League were born), and in Veneto.

Previous Existence of the Name

The term "Padania" was present in Italian before, but was so rare that most people (including Northern Italians) had never heard of it, and most assumed it was made up by the Northern League. The term padano (padanian), that before was a neutral adjective for the pianura padana, can today be used to indicate people or issues close to the Northern League.

Supporters of the Northern League are adamant that Padania is not a word invented by Umberto Bossi, but one that was and is currently used . However, most Italians, including northerners, invariably connect the word with the League. A Google search for Padania indicates that most referenced pages are associated with the Northern League in one way or another.

Popular Support

The Northern League currently controls only 2 of over 100 Italian provinces, namely Sondrio in Lombardy and Treviso in Veneto. Most would expect that, were a referendum for the independence of Padania to be held, it would be lost.

National Anthem

Many have mocked the Northern League for choosing the "Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves" from Verdi's Nabucco, Va' pensiero, which was originally written as a song for Italian unification, whereas the League's objective is exactly the opposite.

Computer virus

A file-infecting computer virus from 1999 also bears the name Padania, and carries a pro-Padania message in its code. An earlier, significantly less important, MS-DOS computer virus is also named Padania.

Reference

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