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== Transportation ==
== Transportation ==
The Italian port cities of [[Bari]], [[Brindisi]], [[Ancona]], [[Venice]] and [[Triest]] in the [[Adriatic Sea]]'s Italian coast are connected in an every day basis via passenger Ferries and Freight Ferries, with the Greek port cities of [[Corfu]], [[Patra]], [[Igoumenitsa]] and [[Kalamata]], allowing for better transport times by skipping the [[Balkan peninsula]].
The Italian port cities of [[Bari]], [[Brindisi]], [[Ancona]], [[Venice]] and [[Triest]] in the [[Adriatic Sea]]'s Italian coast are connected in an every day basis via passenger Ferries and Freight Ferries, with the Greek port cities of [[Corfu]], [[Patras|Patra]], [[Igoumenitsa]] and [[Kalamata]], allowing for better transport times by skipping the [[Balkan peninsula]].


== See also ==
== See also ==

Revision as of 20:58, 11 April 2015

Greek-Italian relations
Map indicating locations of Greece and Italy

Greece

Italy

Greco-Italian relations refer to bilateral foreign relations between Greece and Italy. Due to the strong historical friendship and the deep cultural ties between the two nations, Greece and Italy enjoy very close diplomatic relations.[1] More than two millennia of shared heritage and Greco-Italian relations strengthened the bonds between the two countries, which today are regarded as perfect and have led to the political statement "One Face, One Race" (Italian: Una Faccia Una Razza; [Μια Φάτσα Μια Ράτσα] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)).[2][3] The two countries are EU states, UN and NATO member states, and cooperate in many other multilateral organizations such as the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, the World Trade Organization, and the Union for the Mediterranean.

Greece and Italy are leading supporters of the integration of all the Balkan states to the Euro-Atlantic family, and promoted "Agenda 2014", proposed by the Greek Government in 2004 as part of the EU-Western Balkans Summit in Thessaloniki, to integrate the Western Balkan states into the European Union by the year 2014, when Greece and Italy assumed the rotating Presidency of the European Union for the first and second halves of 2014, respectively.

Italy is a main trading partner of Greece, both in exports and imports and many Greek products are exported to the Italian market, such as Olive Oil, and the two countries cooperate in the fields of energy and tourism.

History

Greek and Italian volunteers in the Greco-Turkish War in 1897.

The historical ties between the two nations date back to the ancient times, when Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome laid the foundations of the Western Civilization. The subsequent common heritage also has strengthened further the bonds between the two people. After the Fall of Constantinople, many Greek intellectuals fled to Italy and brought with them many works and documents, which played a major role in fuelling the Renaissance. In modern times, both countries established diplomatic relations in 1861, immediately upon Italy’s unification.

Shortly after the Dodecanese islands gained independence from the Ottoman Empire in 1912, Italy occupied them as the Italian Islands of the Aegean. Starting in 1936, the Italian administration pursued a policy of Italianization.

In 1923, a boundary dispute between Greece and Albania was referred to a commission of the League of Nations chaired by the Italian general Enrico Tellini. The Greek delegate accused Tellini of favoring Albania. When Tellini was killed by unknown assailants, Italian and Albanian sources blamed Greece. In the following dispute, Italy attacked Corfu and occupied it for a month until Greece capitulated to Italy's demands. This is known as the Corfu incident.

Italy, an Axis power, invade Greece in the Greco-Italian War of 1940-41, but it was only with German intervention that the Axis succeeded in controlling Greece. Italian forces were part of the Axis occupation of Greece.

Italy ceded the Dodecanese to Greece as part of the Treaty of Peace following World War II in 1947. Today, Greeks live in Italy and Italians live in Greece.

Diplomatic missions

Greece has an embassy in Rome, general consulates in Milan and Naples, a consulate in Venice, and honorary consulates in Trieste (General), Turin (General), Ancona, Catania, Livorno, Bari, Bologna, Brindisi, Florence, Palermo, Perugia, and a Port Consulate in Genova.

Italy has an embassy in Athens, and honorary consulates in Alexandroupoli, Kefalonia, Chania, Chios, Corfu, Corinth, Ioannina, Heraklion, Kavala, Larissa, Patras, Rhodes, Thessaloniki, Santorini, and Volos.

Bilateral relations & cooperation

Foreign Minister of Italy Giulio Terzi di Sant'Agata and Foreign Minister of Greece Dimitris Avramopoulos in Rome in August 2012
Greece–Italy pipeline. A map showing the approximate locations of natural gas pipelines through Greece to Italy

Both countries are full members of many international organizations, including NATO, the European Union, the Council of Europe, the OECD and the . Greece is one of Italy's main economic partners and they co-operate in many fields, including judicial, scientific and educational, and on the development of tourism, an important sector in both countries. There are regular high-level visits between the two countries,[4] such as the visit of the Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras to Italy in July 2014,[5][6] and there are frequent contacts between the two countries ministries and agencies on various matters concerning individual sectors. Projects currently in running between the two countries include the Greece–Italy pipeline (which is part of the Interconnector Turkey-Greece-Italy pipeline (ITGI)), and the Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP).

Ethnic minorities

Greeks have lived in southern Italy for centuries, and are called Griko. There are Italians in Corfu.

Una faccia una razza

The phrase Italian: Una Faccia Una Razza or [Μια Φάτσα Μια Ράτσα] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help) (lit. 'one face, one race') is often used to describe the cultural closeness of the two peoples.[7][8]

Agreements

  • Economic Cooperation (1949)
  • Avoidance of double Taxation (1964)
  • Delimitation of Continental Shelf Boundaries (1977)
  • Protection of the Ionian Sea Marine Environment (1979)
  • Cooperation against Terrorism, Organised Crime, and Drug Trafficking (1986)

Notable Visits

  • January 2006; State Visit of President of the Hellenic Republic Mr. Karolos Papoulias to Rome.
  • December 2006; Visit of the Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi to Athens.
  • March 2007; Official Visit of Greek Foreign Minister Dora Bakoyannis to Rome.
  • August 2007; Meeting of Greek Foreign Minister with Italian counterpart Massimo D'Alema in Rome.
  • September 2008; State visit of President of the Italian Republic Mr. Giorgio Napolitano to Athens.
  • August 2012; Visit of the Greek Prime Minister Mr. Antonis Samaras to Rome.
  • September 2012; Visit of President of the Hellenic Republic Mr. Karolos Papoulias to Italy.

Transportation

The Italian port cities of Bari, Brindisi, Ancona, Venice and Triest in the Adriatic Sea's Italian coast are connected in an every day basis via passenger Ferries and Freight Ferries, with the Greek port cities of Corfu, Patra, Igoumenitsa and Kalamata, allowing for better transport times by skipping the Balkan peninsula.

See also

References

External links