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Croats of Italy
Total population
c. 23,000[1][2]
Languages
Italian, Croatian, Slavomolisano
Religion
Mostly Roman Catholicism
Related ethnic groups
Croats
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Subgroups
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Croats form a part of the permanent population of Italy (Croatian: Hrvati u Italiji, Italian: Croati in Italia). Traditionally, there is an autochthonous community in the Molise region known as the Molise Croats, but there are many other Croats living in or associated with Italy through other means, with the most numerous communities in Trieste, Rome, Padua and Milan. In 2010, persons with Croatian citizenship in Italy numbered 21,079.[1]
Croats of Italy could mean any of the following:
Molise Croats - a long-established Croatian population in the Molise region.
Ethnic Croats to have relocated to Italy from any region to which Croats may be autochthonous (e.g. Republic of Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and other countries).
^ ab"Statistiche demografiche ISTAT". Archived from the original on 1 July 2013. Retrieved 11 April 2012.
^"Hrvatska manjina u Talijanskoj Republici" (in Croatian). Ministry of Foreign Affairs and European Integration. Archived from the original on 17 February 2013. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
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