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GORZ AND GRADISCA

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 263 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GORZ AND
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GRADISCA
  , a county and crownland of Austria, bounded- E. by Carniola, S. by Istria, the Triestine territory and the Adriatic, W. by Italy and N. by Carinthia . It has an
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area of 1140 sq. m . The coast
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line, though extending for 25 m., does not
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present any harbour of importance . It is fringed by alluvial deposits and lagoons, which are for the most
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part of very
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modern formation, for as
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late as the 4th or 5th centuries
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Aquileia was a
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great seaport . The harbour of
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Grado is the only one accessible to the larger kind of
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coasting craft . On all sides, except towards the south-west where it unites with the Friulian
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lowland, it is surrounded by mountains, and about four-sixths of its area is occupied by mountains and hills . From the Julian
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Alps, which
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traverse the province in the north, the country descends in successive terraces towards the sea, and may roughly be divided into the upper highlands, the
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lower highlands, the hilly
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district and the lowlands . The
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principal peaks in the Julian Alps are the
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Monte Canin (8469 ft.), the Manhart (8784 ft.), the Jalouc (8708 ft.), the Krn (7367 ft.), the Matajur (5386 ft.), and the highest
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peak in the whole range, the Triglav or Terglou (9394 ft.) . The Julian Alps are crossed by the Predil Pass (3811 ft.), through which passes the principal road from Carinthia to the Coastland . The
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southern part of the province belongs to the
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Karst region, and here are situated the famous cascades and grottoes of Sankt Kanzian, where the
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river Reka begins its subterranean course . The principal river of the province is the Isonzo, which rises in the Triglav, and pursues a strange zigzag course for a distance of 78 m. before it reaches the Adriatic . At Gorz the Isonzo is still 138 ft. above the sea, and it is navigable only in its lowest section, where it takes the name of the Sdobba .

Its principal affluents are the

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Idria, the Wippach and the Torre with its tributary the Judrio, which forms for a short distance the boundary between Austria and Italy . Of
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special
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interest not only in itself but for the frequent allusions to it in classical literature is the Timavus or Timavo, which appears near Duino, and after a very short course flows into the Gulf of Trieste . In ancient times it appears, according to the well-known description of Virgil (Aen. i . 244) to have rushed from the mountain by nine
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separate mouths and with much noise and commotion, but at present it usually issues from only three mouths and flows quiet, and still . It is strange enough, however, to see the river coming out full formed from the rock, and capable at its very source of bearing vessels on its bosom . According to a probable hypothesis it is a continuation of the above-mentioned river Reka, which is lost near Sankt Kanzian . Agriculture, and specially viticulture, is the principal occupation of the population, and the
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vine is here planted not only in
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regular vineyards, but is introduced in long lines through the ordinary fields and carried up the hills in terraces locally called ronchi . The rearing of the
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silk-
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worm, especially in the lowlands, constitutes another great source of revenue, and furnishes the material for the only extensive industry of the country . The manufacture of silk is carried on at Gorz, and in and around the
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village of Haidenschaft . Gorz and
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Gradisca had in 1900 a population of 232,338, which is
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equivalent to 203 inhabitants per square mile . According to
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nationality about two-thirds were Slovenes, and the remainder Italians, with only about 2200 Germans . Almost the whole of the population (99.6%) belongs to the
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Roman Catholic Church .

The

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local
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diet, of which the archbishop of Gorz is a member ex-officio, is composed of 22 members, and the crownland sends 5 deputies to the Reichsrat at Vienna . For administrative purposes the province is divided into 4 districts and an autonomous
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municipality, Gorz (pop . 25,432), the capital . Other principal places are Cormons (5824), Monfalcone (5536), Kirchheim (5699), Gradisca (3843) and Aquileia (2319) . Gorz first appears distinctly in
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history about the close of the loth century, as part of a district bestowed by the emperor
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Otto III. on John, patriarch of Aquileia . In the 11th century it became the seat of the Eppenstein
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family, who frequently
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bore the title of
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counts of Gorizia; and in the beginning of the 12th century the countship passed from them to the Lurngau family which continued to exist till the
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year 1500, and acquired possessions in Tirol, Carinthia, Friuli and Styria . On the
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death of Count Leonhard (12th
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April 1500) the
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fief reverted to the house of Habsburg . The countship of Gradisca was
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united with it in 1754 . The province was occupied by the French in 1809, but reverted again to Austria in 1815 . It formed a district of the administrative province of Trieste until 1861, when it became a separate crownland under its actual name .

End of Article: GORZ AND GRADISCA
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