Pictures from Google Image Search

Tiroleans

Encyclopedia of World Cultures | 1996 | | Copyright 1996 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Tiroleans

ETHNONYM: Tyroleans


Orientation

The Tirol is an alpine province of western Austria, bounded by Germany to the north and Italy to the south. "Tirol" was originally a family name, derived from a castle near Merano in what is now Italy. In 1248, the counts of Tirol received lands from the bishop of Brixen, and by 1271 they had nearly replaced the power of the church throughout the region. In 1363, control of the area passed to the Habsburgs, with whom it remained until 1918. The region was effectively Catholicized during the Counter-Reformation. After World War I, Italy received South Tirol, with its large German-speaking population, and has retained it to this day. The principal towns of Tirol are Innsbruck, Kufstein, Lienz, and Solbad Hall. The population of the region is just under 600,000.

The majority of Tiroleans live in nucleated communities, generally located in river valleys, surrounded by the lands on which they earn their livelihoods. In each village one finds shops, administrative institutions, a school, and a church.


Economy

Tiroleans are predominantly pasture farmerslargely of wheat and ryeand livestock breeders, with some dairying and silviculture as well. While agriculture and stock raising have long been dominant, the location of the Tirolcontrolling passes between the Mediterranean and transalpine Europemade commerce an important factor in the economy as well. One of the most important commercial centers of the area historically has been located at Bozen, in South Tirol, since the Middle Ages. There is some mining in the region: coal, iron, lead, zinc, copper, and magnesite. Also important to the modern Tirolean economy are textile mills and some other small, specialized industries, particularly those to do with the tourist trade.

Agriculture is based on the privately owned family farm, ownership of which passed from one generation to the next impartibly, generally along the male line and according to the principle of primogeniture. Noninheriting siblings had three basic alternatives: to stay on as dependents of the heir, if the land was able to support them; to hire themselves out to other farms in the region; or to migrate in search of employment in the lowland towns or beyond. Until recently, agriculture retained its traditional subsistence orientation, but production for market has in the last several decades gained in importance, and nearly all households are now to some degree dependent on cash income.


Kinship, Marriage, and Family

Kinship terminology specifies lineal relations, while merging into collective terms all those individuals who stand in collateral relationship to the household head. There are special terms for first and second cousins.

Only through marriage does an individual acquire full recognition as an adult in the community. Marriages in the Tirol tend to be village-endogamousindeed, most Marriages occur between individuals of the same neighborhood within the village. It is within the neighborhooda group of four to six of the local farm propertiesthat the closest relations of interhousehold cooperation and friendship arise, and intermarriage between such households serves to strengthen these bonds. Individuals who did not inherit land have great difficulty in marrying, for they are wholly dependent on their inheriting sibling for their support. A man generally did not marry until he was financially able to support a wife. Long courtships were the rule, and they depended on the approval of the bride by the siblings of the marrying male. A dowry is required and generally consists of furnishings for the marital household. It is often the bride-to-be herself, rather than her family, who earns the money to be invested in the dowry. The wedding is an event of villagewide import, celebrated in the church. Upon marriage, the wife usually comes to live in the farm household of her husband; it is far less common for a man to go to live on the bride's family estate. Information on divorce is unavailable.

With marriage, a new domestic unit is established, with the husband serving also as head of householdexcept on the rare occasion when a noninheriting sibling marries. Generally speaking, however, dependent male siblings who remain on the family farm remain unmarried, so this circumstance does not arise with any great frequency. The household consists of the heir to the farm, his wife, their unmarried children, and any siblings of the heir that the farmstead can employ and who choose to stay on. The Tirolean tradition of impartibility according to the principle of primogeniture serves to keep the major portion of an estate's land undivided, but it is not absolutely applied. Smaller parcels of land can be, and are, divided among a number of heirs. At times, a firstborn son is unwilling to wait until his father relinquishes control of the family estate and so leaves the farmstead. In addition, even those who are excluded from inheriting ownership of the property may be bequeathed rights to a living from the land (i.e., rights to ownership of a room within the house and usufruct rights of a portion of the land itself).

The early socialization of the Tirolean child is the responsibility of the mother. The family is adult-centered rather than child-centered, and children are taught early on to conduct themselves politely, even formally, in the presence of adults. Discipline is not harsh, but it relies principally on sending the misbehaving child from the room. Play is unstructured, and in early childhood, boys and girls may play Together. By the age of 7 or 8, however, children are expected to begin to assume some of the responsibilities of adults, taking on chores appropriate to their sex. Herding is a boy's pursuit, housework is a girl's, and both are expected to help in the fields, especially during harvest times. Children begin school at about the age of 6, and are required to attend until they reach the age of 14. Most children do not go on beyond this point, but opportunities do exist for high-school education and beyond.


Sociopolitical Organization

The basic social unit of the Tirol is the neighborhood, consisting of four to six neighboring farm households. Cooperative tasks are organized within this group under the leadership of the several household heads, who share ties of friendship and trust through long association with one another. The hierarchical relations that characterize the farm household, with the owner-heir at the head, have implications beyond simple household and interhousehold activities as well. Those who serve as head of household also tend to monopolize political activity in the village, hold village-council office, and dominate the decision-making processes regarding Village concerns. Tirol communities enjoy self-government; each one has its own mayor, elected community council, and regulatory committees.


Religion

Tirol is a Catholic region, and it has been so since the Counter-Reformation. Local communities provide a Residence and farm lands for the local priest. Attendance at mass and membership in ecclesiastical organizations are expected of all members of the community. Baptism, confession, and communion are important rituals, and marriage is consecrated by the local priest. Each of the religious organizations (there are separate ones for married and unmarried men, and married and unmarried women) sponsor special masses over the course of the year. At the approach of death, the priest provides the sacrament of extreme unction.


Bibliography

Cole, John W., and Phillip S. Katz (1973). "Knecht to Arbeiter: The Proletarianization Process in South Tyrol. " In Studies in European Society: The Worker-Peasants in Europe, 39-66. The Hague: Mouton.

Cole, John W., and Eric R. Wolf (1974). The Hidden Frontier: Ecology and Ethnicity in an Alpine Valley. New York: Academic Press.


Crowe, Patricia W. (1981). "Community Size and Social Relationships: A Comparison of Urban and Rural Social patterns in Tirol." Anthropological Quarterly 54:210-229.

NANCY E. GRATTON

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

Gratton, Nancy. "Tiroleans." Encyclopedia of World Cultures. The Gale Group, Inc. 1996. Encyclopedia.com. 16 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Gratton, Nancy. "Tiroleans." Encyclopedia of World Cultures. The Gale Group, Inc. 1996. Encyclopedia.com. (December 16, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3458000717.html

Gratton, Nancy. "Tiroleans." Encyclopedia of World Cultures. The Gale Group, Inc. 1996. Retrieved December 16, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3458000717.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Geography: a sense of place: why in the world should you study geography? Because it's everywhere!(what do I do with)
Magazine article from: Career World, a Weekly Reader publication; 9/1/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...are directly or indirectly related to geography. Here are some career areas in which a knowledge of geography is useful. Business. "Many companies...and retail rely on a familiarity with geography. Government. Geography is a natural...
"GEOGRAPHY IS TWINNED WITH DIVINITY": THE LAUDIAN GEOGRAPHY OF PETER HEYLYN.
Magazine article from: The Geographical Review; 1/1/2000; ; 700+ words ; ABSTRACT. This critical history of geography looks to the political concepts that...incorporation of these concepts into geography. Peter Heylyn, who politicized his...recover the politics of early modern geography as contemporaries might have understood...
Geography in History Education: Effective Integration Strategies and Examples
Magazine article from: Social Studies Review; 4/1/2004; ; 700+ words ; "As Geography without History seemeth a carkasse without motion; so History without Geography wandreth as a Vagrant without: a certaine...Us (1980), recognized the importance of geography. He noted that the integration of geographical...
Theorizing economic geographies of Asia
Magazine article from: Economic Geography; 4/1/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...constructing both leading theories in economic geography and the "other geographies" or "distant geographies" perhaps should not...surprising in light of the institutionalization of geography as an academic discipline (see Johnston 1997...
Geography in a Changing South Africa: Progress and Prospects.
Magazine article from: The Geographical Journal; 3/1/1995; ; 700+ words ; ...manifestations will remain written in the geography of South Africa for many decades to come. Thus the discipline of geography has potentially a particularly important...and current state, and status, of geography in South Africa. Eighteen papers...
Enlightment Geography: The Political Languages of British Geography, 1650-1850.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Geographical Review; 10/1/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...rehabilitate obscure geographies and geographers, finding...studied the history of geography, for rescue and rehabilitation...case of early modern geography, the evidence is several...marketed, and read as geographies. Anyone familiar with...making the meaning of geography very clear. ...
Geography of war: the significance of physical and human geography principles.
Magazine article from: Focus on Geography; 6/22/2009; ; 700+ words ; ...and historical studies. The geography of war is a complex yet important...the basic definitions of geography can be correlated into the...economic, and political geographies. Physical geography refers to the physical features...
Geography's Public Image Impacts GIS.
Magazine article from: GEO World; 7/1/2001; ; 700+ words ; ...perceive an urgent need to improve geography's public image. Unfortunately...in that endeavor is uncertain. Geography's image obviously matters to these...methodological underpinnings that geography has been developing for 2,500...
Geography bee expands horizons
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 7/12/1998; ; 700+ words ; ...fourth-grade, strutted their geography knowledge before peers and parents...was the third annual Burbank World Geography Bee, held in the auditorium...to get the children interested in geography," says principal Rose Feinberg...
GEOGRAPHY EDUCATION NEGLECTED IN STATE
News Wire article from: The Hindustan Times; 4/20/2006; 700+ words ; ...GUWAHATI, April 20 -- The future of geography education in Asom is not quite promising...or math skills, but sans knowledge of geography their world is one where space, time...concerns hold no meaning. At present geography has lost its place in the syllabus of...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

geography
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition ...social geography (including urban geography, another 20th-century ramification...geographic information systems, and military geography. Historical geography (which reconstructs geographies of the past and attempts to trace the...
Geography
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History GEOGRAPHY GEOGRAPHY. As the study of the earth's surface, geography is among the most concrete and accessible of all the sciences. Yet the very definition of geographical knowledge has been highly contested throughout the nineteenth and twentieth...
human geography
Book article from: A Dictionary of Sociology human geography Geography is generally defined as the science which describes the earth's...In the case of the latter the sub-discipline of social or human geography is particularly pertinent. Human geography was pioneered by the...
Morse, Jedidiah, Geographies of
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History MORSE, JEDIDIAH, GEOGRAPHIES OF MORSE, JEDIDIAH, GEOGRAPHIES OF. The first edition of Geography Made Easy by Jedidiah Morse, a New England...in 1784. The little book was the first geography published in the United States. As the...
Geography, Teaching of
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of Education GEOGRAPHY, TEACHING OF Geography, like history, is not defined by the uniqueness of its content...contrasts information within the framework of chronology, while geography organizes its information within the context of the spatial environment...

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: