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Italian Canadians

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Canadian citizens of Italian descent
Ethnic group
Italian Canadians
Italo-Canadiens (French)
italocanadesi (Italian)
Total population
1,546,390 (total population)
204,070 (by birth)
1,342,320 (by ancestry)
2021 Census[1]
4.3% of Canada's population.
Regions with significant populations
Greater Toronto Area,Hamilton,Niagara Region,London,Guelph,Windsor,Ottawa–Gatineau,Barrie,Sault Ste. Marie,Greater Sudbury,Thunder Bay,Greater Montreal,Greater Vancouver
Languages
Religion
PredominatelyRoman Catholicism
Related ethnic groups
OtherItalians,Sicilian Americans,Corsican Americans
Italian Canadians as percent of population by province/territory

Italian Canadians orItalo-Canadians (French:Italo-Canadiens;Italian:italocanadesi) areCanadian-born citizens who are fully or partially ofItalian descent, whose ancestors wereItalians who migrated to Canada as part of theItalian diaspora, or Italian-born people in Canada. According to the2021 Census of Canada, 1,546,390Canadians (4.3% of the total population) claimed full or partial Italian ancestry.[1] They comprise a subgroup of Southern European Canadians which is a further subgroup ofEuropean Canadians. Thecensus enumerates the entire Canadian population, which consists ofCanadian citizens (by birth and bynaturalization),landed immigrants and non-permanent residents and their families living with them inCanada.[2] Residing mainly incentral urban industrial metropolitan areas, Italian Canadians are the seventh largest self-identifiedethnic group in Canada behindFrench,English,Irish,Scottish,German andChinese Canadians.

Italian immigration to Canada started as early as the mid 19th century. A substantial influx of Italian immigration to Canada began in the early 20th century, primarily from ruralsouthern Italy, with immigrants primarily settling inToronto andMontreal. During theinterwar period afterWorld War I, new immigration laws in the 1920s limited Italian immigration. DuringWorld War II, approximately 600 to 700 Italian Canadian men wereinterned between 1940 and 1943 as potentially dangerousenemy aliens with allegedfascist connections.

A second wave of immigration occurred after the World War II, and between the early 1950s and the mid-1960s, approximately 20,000 to 30,000 Italians immigrated to Canada each year, many of the men working in the construction industry upon settling.Pier 21 inHalifax, Nova Scotia was an influential port of Italian immigration between 1928 until it ceased operations in 1971, where 471,940 individuals came to Canada fromItaly, making them the third largest ethnic group to immigrate to Canada during that time period. In the late 1960s, the Italian economy experienced a period of growth and recovery, removing one of the primary incentives for emigration. The importance of the family unit of Italian Canadians has provided a central role in the adaptation of newer socioeconomic realities. In 2010, the Government of Ontario proclaimed the month of June as Italian Heritage Month, and in 2017, the Government of Canada also declared the month of June as Italian Heritage Month across Canada.

History

[edit]
Italian immigrants lay cobblestones onKing Street inToronto, 1903
A grocery store owned by an Italian family inLittle Italy, Montreal, 1910
Sign ofMirador, a restaurant inMontreal owned by an Italian immigrant, 1948

The first explorer to coastal North America was the VenetianJohn Cabot (Giovanni Caboto), making landfall inCape Bonavista,Newfoundland and Labrador, in 1497.[3] His voyage to Canada and other parts of the Americas was followed by his sonSebastian Cabot (Sebastiano Caboto) andGiovanni da Verrazzano. Immediately after theunification of Italy, the young nation experienced the phenomenon of emigration on a massive scale. While until that time the migratory destinations had been mostly European, starting in the second half of the 19th centurytransatlantic emigration to theAmericas emerged, in the direction of lands that became typical destinations for Italians.[4] The first Canadiancensus enumerating the population was not conducteduntil 1871. At this time, there were only 1,035 people of Italian origin that lived in Canada.[5] A number of Italians were imported, often as "soldiers of fortune" and "men of letters", to work asnavvies in the construction of theCanadian Pacific Railway.[6] In 1904, 3,144 of the 8,576 seasonal Canadian Pacific Railway workforce were Italian men.[7] Italian workers in that period, as described by Lucy di Pietro, a manager of the Association for the Memory of Italo-Canadian Immigrants, were seen "as transients and judged, according to the stereotype, as warm-blooded people with violent and criminal dispositions". Italians were among the immigrants considered "undesirable", as expressed inCanada's first law concerning immigration, dating back to 1869. This law provided for certain categories of foreigners deemed more "desirable", precisely, for reasons of cultural affinity or stereotypes related to labor industriousness, favoring workers from Great Britain or Northern European countries. Italians were usually referred to by the nicknamenavvies, short fornavigator,[8] a term coined in England to refer to laborers and which from 1830 onwards was applied in a derogatory sense to those who worked on tunnel or railway construction in uncomfortable conditions.

A substantial influx ofItalian immigration to Canada began in the early 20th century when over 60,000 Italians moved to Canada between 1900 and 1913.[9] These were largely peasants fromsouthern Italy and agrarian parts of the northeast (Veneto andFriuli).[7] In 1905, theRoyal Commission appointed to Inquire into the Immigration of Italian Labourers toMontreal and alleged Fraudulent Practices of Employment Agencies was launched into deceptive tactics used bypadroni, labour brokers that recruited Italian workers for Canadian employers.[10] These numbers were dwarfed in comparison to those of the United States, however, where about four million Italians immigrated between 1880 and 1920.[7] Italian Canadians primarily immigrated toToronto andMontreal.[11] In Toronto, the Italian population increased from 4,900 in 1911, to 9,000 in 1921, constituting almost two percent of Toronto's population.[12]Italians in Toronto andin Montreal soon establishedethnic enclaves, especiallyLittle Italies in Toronto andin Montreal. Smaller communities also arose inVancouver,Hamilton,Niagara Falls,Guelph,Windsor,Thunder Bay,Sault Ste. Marie,Ottawa andSherbrooke. Many also settled in mining communities inBritish Columbia (Trail),[13][14]Alberta (Crowsnest Pass),[15]Cape Breton Island (Inverness),[16] andNorthern Ontario (Sault Ste. Marie andFort William).[17]

This migration was largely halted afterWorld War I, new immigration laws in the 1920s, and theGreat Depression limited Italian immigration. Approximately 40,000 Italians came to Canada during theinterwar period, predominantly from southern Italy where an economic depression and overpopulation had left many families in poverty.[9] DuringWorld War II, Italian Canadians were regarded with suspicion and faced a great deal of discrimination. As part of theWar Measures Act, 31,000 Italian Canadians were labelled as "enemy aliens" with allegedfascist connections, and between 1940 and 1943, approximately 600 to 700 of these Italian Canadian men were arrested and sent tointernment camps, such asCamp Petawawa—in what was the period ofItalian Canadian internment. While many Italian-Canadians had initially supported fascism andBenito Mussolini's regime for its role in enhancing Italy's presence on the world stage, most Italians in Canada did not harbour any ill will against Canada and few remained committed followers of the fascist ideology.[18][9] In 1990, former prime ministerBrian Mulroney apologized for the war internment of Italian Canadians to a Toronto meeting of theNational Congress of Italian Canadians.[19] In May 2009,Massimo Pacetti introduced bill C-302, an "Act to recognize theinjustice that was done to persons of Italian origin through their "enemy alien" designation and internment during the Second World War, and to provide forrestitution and promote education on Italian Canadian history [worth $2.5 million]", which was passed by theHouse of Commons on April 28, 2010;[20]Canada Post was also to issue a commemorative postage stamp commemorating the internment of Italian Canadian citizens,[21] however, Bill C-302 did not pass through the necessary stages to become law.[22] In 2021, prime ministerJustin Trudeau formally apologized for the war internment of Italian Canadians, in the House of Commons.[23]

A second wave occurred after World War II when Italians, especially from the more southern regions,Lazio,Abruzzo,Molise,Apulia,Campania,Calabria, andSicily regions, left the war-impoverished country for opportunities in a young and growing country.[7] A small number ofIstrian Italians andDalmatian Italians also immigrated to Canada during theIstrian-Dalmatian exodus, leaving their homelands, which were lost to Italy and annexed toYugoslavia after theTreaty of Peace with Italy, 1947.[24] Between the early 1950s and the mid-1960s, approximately 20,000 to 30,000 Italians immigrated to Canada each year,[9][25] surpassing those who went to the United States during the same period.[26] Between 1946 and 1967, more than 90 percent of Italian immigrants took advantage of the sponsorship system whereby they were admitted into Canada if sponsored by relatives residing in Canada that would assume the financial responsibility for them during their settlement period.[7] In 1948, relations between Canada and Italy were formalized through the opening of a Canadian embassy in Rome and an immigration office.[27] In the late 1960s, the Italian economy experienced aperiod of growth and recovery, removing one of the primary incentives for emigration.[9] In 1967, the sponsorship system was restricted, instead basing immigrant selection on labour-market considerations, also decreasing the influx of Italian immigration.[7] 90 percent of the Italians who immigrated to Canada after World War II remained in Canada, and decades after that period, the community still had fluency in the Italian language.[28] There has been an overall decline in theuse of the Italian language in Canada since 2001.

Pier 21 inHalifax, Nova Scotia was an influential port of Italian immigration between 1928 until it ceased operations in 1971, where 471,940 individuals came to Canada from Italy, making them the third largest ethnic group to immigrate to Canada during that time period.[29]

The rapid growth of the metropolitan areas that had attracted Italian immigrants, created a strong demand for construction work, and by the 1960s, more than 15,000 Italian men worked in Toronto's construction industry, representing one third of all construction workers in the city at that time.[9] Others started small businesses such as barber shops, grocery stores and bakeries that created Italian ethnic enclaves.[7][30] Italian women who entered the workforce often worked in the garment and clothing industry.[7] The importance of thefamily unit of Italian Canadians has provided a central role in the adaptation of newer socioeconomic realities.[7] A mid-1960s study conducted in Montreal found that two in three Canadian-born Italians had their nearest relative living in the same building as them or within a five-minute walking distance, and that more than half of those sampled had chosen to buy a house in a given area due to familiarity and because relatives and other Italian Canadians lived in the vicinity.[7] 75 percent of Italians that immigrated after World War II were employed in low-income occupations, but by the mid-1980s, the children of immigrants had achieved a level of higher education comparable to the national average.[6] By the 1980s, 86 percent of Italian Canadians owned a home, compared to 70 percent of the general population.[6]

Canada thus began a multicultural policy that resulted in a strengthening of the identity of the different ethnic groups. Among them, the Italian one experienced a strong socio-cultural transformation due to multiple factors. As the mistrust caused by the fascist period ceased, Italians were able to improve their living conditions, with an increase in the social mobility of young Italian-Canadians. The second generation, better educated, began to abandon the manual jobs traditionally performed by their parents in favor of jobs for which a good level of education was necessary. Many of these young people began to speak English as their first language, moving away from the customs of their parents in a process of constructing their own specific Italian-Canadian identity, different from the category of "Italian citizens residing in Canada" or "population of Italian origin". Thus, a new identity profile was born that originated from the fusion of two cultures to become something else and evolve in its own way.[31]

In 2010, theGovernment of Ontario passed Bill 103 withroyal assent proclaiming the month of June as Italian Heritage Month.[32] On May 17, 2017, theMinister of Canadian HeritageMélanie Joly passed a unanimous motion, Motion 64, in the House of Commons to recognize the month of June as Italian Heritage Month across Canada — a time to recognize, celebrate and raise awareness of the Italian community in Canada, one of the largest outside of Italy.[33]

In 2019, Canada received the 11th highest number of Italian emigrants, and among non-European countries was the fourth highest after Brazil, the United States and Australia.[34] Compared to the past, the skills of migrants have changed as today there are many researchers, skilled workers and entrepreneurs. In 2018, more than half of the Italian citizens who moved abroad (53 percent) had medium-high educational qualifications: 33,000 high school graduates and 29,000 college graduates.[35][36] Highly qualified people are in demand in Canada in areas that are lacking in the territory, particularly in information and communication technologies.[37]

Demographics

[edit]

Ethnicity

[edit]

As of the 2021 census, 1,546,390 Canadian residents stated they hadItalian ancestry, comprising 4.3 percent of Canada's population, marking a 2.6 percent decrease from the 1,587,970 population of the 2016 census.[1] From the 1,587,970, 671,510 were single ethnic origin responses, while the remaining 874,880 were multiple ethnic origin responses. The majority live in Ontario, over 900,000, (seven percent of the population), while over 300,000 live in Quebec (four percent of the population) — constituting for almost 80 percent of the national population.

Canadians of Italian ethnicity
YearPopulation (single and multiple
ethnic origin responses)
% of total ethnic
population
Population (single ethnic
origin responses)
Population (multiple ethnic
origin responses)
Total % change
1871[5]1,0350.03%N/AN/AN/A
1881[5]1,8490.04%N/AN/A+78.6%
1901[5]10,8340.2%N/AN/A+485.9%
1911[38]45,4110.6%N/AN/A+319.2%
1921[5]66,7690.8%N/AN/A+47.0%
1931[5]98,1730.9%N/AN/A+47.0%
1941[5]112,6251.0%N/AN/A+14.7%
1951[5]152,2451.1%N/AN/A+35.2%
1961[39]459,3512.5%N/AN/A+201.7%
1971[5]730,8203.4%N/AN/A+59.1%
1981[7]747,9703.1%N/AN/A+2.3%
1991[40]1,147,7804.1%750,055397,725+53.5%
1996[41]1,207,4754.2%729,455478,025+5.2%
2001[42]1,270,3704.3%726,275544,090+5.2%
2006[43]1,445,3354.6%741,045704,285+13.8%
2011[44]1,488,4254.5%700,845787,580+3.0%
2016[45]1,587,9704.6%695,420892,550+6.7%
2021[1]1,546,3904.3%671,510874,880−2.6%
Canadians of Italian ethnicity byprovince and territory (1991–2006)
Province/territoryPopulation (1991)[40]% of total ethnic population (1991)Population (1996)[41]% of total ethnic population (1996)Population (2001)[42]% of total ethnic population (2001)Population (2006)[43]% of total ethnic population (2006)
Ontario701,4307.0%743,4257.0%781,3456.9%867,9807.2%
Quebec226,6453.3%244,7403.5%249,2053.5%299,6554.0%
British Columbia111,9903.4%117,8953.2%126,4203.3%143,1603.5%
Alberta61,2452.4%58,1402.2%67,6552.3%82,0152.5%
Manitoba17,9001.6%17,2051.6%18,5501.7%21,4051.9%
Nova Scotia11,9151.3%11,2001.2%11,2401.3%13,5051.5%
Saskatchewan8,2900.8%7,1450.7%7,5650.8%7,9700.8%
New Brunswick4,9950.7%4,6450.6%5,6100.8%5,9000.8%
Newfoundland and Labrador1,7400.3%1,5050.3%1,1800.2%1,3750.3%
Prince Edward Island6650.5%5150.4%6050.4%1,0050.7%
Yukon4401.6%5451.8%5001.8%6202.0%
Northwest Territories5100.9%5250.8%4001.1%6101.5%
NunavutN/A[a]N/AN/AN/A950.4%1250.4%
Canadians of Italian ethnicity byprovince and territory (2011–2021)
Province/territoryPopulation (2011)[44]% of total ethnic population (2011)Population (2016)[45]% of total ethnic population (2016)Population (2021)[1]% of total ethnic population (2021)
Ontario883,9907.0%931,8057.0%905,1056.5%
Quebec307,8104.0%326,7004.1%316,3203.8%
British Columbia150,6603.5%166,0903.6%162,4853.3%
Alberta88,7052.5%101,2602.5%98,7302.4%
Manitoba21,9601.9%23,2051.9%22,8351.8%
Nova Scotia14,3051.6%15,6251.7%16,5751.7%
Saskatchewan9,5301.0%11,3101.1%10,8301.0%
New Brunswick7,1951.0%7,4601.0%8,2501.1%
Newfoundland and Labrador1,8250.4%1,7100.3%2,2900.5%
Prince Edward Island9550.7%1,2000.9%1,6551.1%
Yukon7252.2%9152.6%7101.8%
Northwest Territories5451.3%5051.2%4451.1%
Nunavut2150.7%1750.5%1600.4%
Canadians of Italian ethnicity (greater than 10,000) bymetropolitan area andcensus agglomeration (1991–2006)
Metropolitan areaPopulation (1991)[40]% of total ethnic population (1991)Population (1996)[41][47]% of total ethnic population (1996)Population (2001)[48]% of total ethnic population (2001)Population (2006)[49]% of total ethnic population (2006)
Toronto CMA[b]387,65510.1%414,3109.8%429,3809.2%466,1559.2%
Montreal CMA163,8309.2%220,9356.7%224,4606.6%260,3457.3%
Greater Vancouver58,4653.8%64,2853.5%69,0003.5%76,3453.6%
Hamilton CMA51,320[c]11.4%62,035[d]10.0%67,685[e]10.3%72,440[f]10.6%
Niagara Region43,04010.9%44,51511.0%44,64512.0%48,85012.7%
National Capital Region30,2654.5%34,3503.4%37,4353.6%45,0054.0%
Greater Calgary22,8103.2%23,8852.9%29,1203.1%33,6453.1%
Windsor20,32010.6%29,27010.6%30,68010.1%33,72510.5%
Greater Edmonton17,7802.9%20,0202.3%22,3852.4%28,8052.8%
Greater Winnipeg14,4602.3%15,2452.3%16,1052.4%18,5802.7%
Sault Ste. Marie16,93020.8%16,48020.0%16,31521.0%17,72022.4%
Thunder Bay14,26512.5%15,09512.1%15,39512.8%17,29014.3%
London13,4554.4%15,5704.0%17,2904.1%20,3804.5%
Greater Sudbury12,2107.6%11,9907.5%12,0307.8%13,4158.6%
Oshawa CMA[g]N/AN/A11,6754.4%13,9904.8%18,2255.6%
GuelphN/AN/AN/AN/A11,1359.6%12,1109.6%
Kitchener-Cambridge-WaterlooN/AN/A10,2402.5%11,3652.8%13,6753.1%
BarrieN/AN/AN/AN/AN/AN/A10,3305.9%
Canadians of Italian ethnicity (greater than 10,000) bymetropolitan area andcensus agglomeration (2011–2021)
Metropolitan areaPopulation (2011)[50]% of total ethnic population (2011)Population (2016)[51]% of total ethnic population (2016)Population (2021)[52]% of total ethnic population (2021)
Toronto CMA[b]475,0908.6%484,3608.3%444,7557.2%
Montreal CMA263,5657.0%279,7957.0%267,2406.3%
Greater Vancouver82,4353.6%87,8753.6%83,2003.2%
Hamilton CMA75,900[h]10.7%79,725[i]10.8%80,165[j]10.4%
Niagara Region48,53012.6%49,34512.4%50,21011.8%
National Capital Region47,9754.0%53,8254.1%55,9453.8%
Greater Calgary36,8753.1%42,9403.1%41,6202.8%
Windsor30,8809.8%33,17510.2%37,6659.1%
Greater Edmonton29,5802.6%33,8002.6%32,2352.3%
Oshawa CMA[g]20,2655.8%22,8706.1%22,7455.5%
London20,2104.3%22,6254.6%22,7554.3%
Greater Winnipeg18,4052.6%19,4352.6%19,0602.3%
Sault Ste. Marie16,00520.4%16,02520.9%14,94519.8%
Thunder Bay15,57513.1%16,61014.0%16,61513.7%
Kitchener-Cambridge-Waterloo14,8603.2%18,6503.6%19,4753.4%
Greater Sudbury13,1158.3%13,5008.3%12,9357.7%
Guelph12,9159.3%14,4309.6%14,0758.6%
Barrie11,4156.2%14,4607.4%16,1907.7%
Victoria10,5353.1%11,6653.3%12,7503.3%

Language and immigration

[edit]
Main article:Italian language in Canada

As of 2021, of the 1,546,390 Italian Canadians, 204,070 are Italian born immigrants,[53] with 319,505 claimingItalian as theirmother tongue.[54] There has been an overall decline in the use of the Italian language since 2001.

Italian mother tongue speakers in Canada
YearPopulation% of non-official language mother
tongue speakers in Canada
% of all language mother tongue
speakers in Canada
% of Italian Canadians
1991[55]449,66012.7%1.7%39.2%
1996[56]484,50010.5%1.7%40.1%
2001[57]469,4859.0%1.6%37.0%
2006[58]455,0407.4%1.5%31.5%
2011[59]407,4856.2%1.2%27.4%
2016[60]375,6455.1%1.1%23.7%
2021[54]319,5054.1%0.9%20.7%
Italian immigrant population to Canada
PeriodPopulation% of total
Canadian immigration
1901–1910[7]58,1043.5%
1911–1920[7]62,6633.7%
1921–1930[7]26,1832.1%
1931–1940[7]3,8982.4%
1941–1950[7]20,6824.2%
1951–1960[7]250,81215.9%
1961–1970[7]190,76013.5%
1971–1978[7]37,0873.1%
Italian immigrant population in Canada
YearPopulation% of immigrants
in Canada
% of Canadian
population
1986[61]366,8209.4%1.5%
1991[61]351,6158.1%1.3%
1996[61]332,1106.7%1.2%
2001[62]315,4555.8%1.1%
2006[63]296,8504.8%0.9%
2011[64]260,2503.6%0.8%
2016[65]236,6353.1%0.7%
2021[53]204,0702.4%0.6%

Religion

[edit]
Religious affiliation of Italian Canadians
Religious group2001[66][k]2021[67][l]
Population% of Italian Canadians% of Canadian populationPopulation% of Italian Canadians% of Canadian population
Christianity1,152,98590.8%5.3%1,099,49071.1%5.7%
Islam1,5600.1%0.3%3,7150.2%0.2%
Irreligion109,5158.6%2.2%427,34027.6%3.4%
Judaism2,9350.2%0.9%5,4800.4%1.6%
Buddhism1,0650.08%0.4%1,6400.1%0.5%
Hinduism4000.03%0.1%3950.03%0.05%
Indigenous spirituality6000.05%2.0%5450.04%0.7%
Sikhism1300.01%0.05%3650.02%0.05%
Other1,1750.09%3.4%7,4300.5%3.2%
Christian denominations of Italian Canadians
Christian denomination2001[66][k]2021[67][l]
Population% of Italian Canadians% of Canadian populationPopulation% of Italian Canadians% of Canadian population
Catholic1,015,72588.1%7.9%945,99586.0%8.7%
Orthodox5,7200.5%1.2%10,8801.0%1.8%
Protestant113,4559.8%1.3%76,0906.9%1.7%
Other Christian18,0851.6%2.3%66,5256.1%2.4%

Income

[edit]
Income of Italian Canadians
YearMedian personal income% change% of Canadian median income
1996[68]$19,961N/A+5.7%
2016[69]$36,452+82.6%+6.6%

Italian Canadian culture, media and education

[edit]
Main article:Italian language in Canada § Italian culture in Canada

Notable Italian-Canadian films have includedAlmost America,Caffè Italia, Montréal,Corbo,Enigmatico,From the Vine,Mambo Italiano,The Saracen Woman (La Sarrasine) andRicardo Trogi's semi-autobiographical tetralogy of1981,1987,1991 and1995.

Depictions of Italian Canadians in television have included the seriesCiao Bella,Fugget About It andIl Duce canadese.

In literature, the novels ofNino Ricci, particularly hisGovernor General's Award-winning 1990 novelLives of the Saints, are the best-known depictions of Italian-Canadian culture.

Notable Italian Canadians

[edit]
Main article:List of Italian Canadians

Italian districts in Canada

[edit]

Alberta

[edit]

Greater Montreal area

[edit]

Ottawa

[edit]

Nova Scotia

[edit]

Hamilton, Ontario

[edit]

Greater Toronto Area

[edit]

Windsor, Ontario

[edit]

British Columbia

[edit]

Manitoba

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Before it separated officially from theNorthwest Territories on April 1, 1999, via theNunavut Act.[46]
  2. ^abSeeItalian Canadians in the Greater Toronto Area for more detailed information. Unlike theGreater Toronto Area, the Toronto CMA does not include the Halton municipality ofBurlington, and some Durham municipalities, those beingScugog andBrock, as well as those within the Oshawa CMA (Oshawa,Whitby, andClarington). It does, however, include some municipalities outside the Greater Toronto Area, those being theDufferin County municipalities ofMono andOrangeville, and theSimcoe County municipalities ofBradford West Gwillimbury andNew Tecumseth. The Greater Toronto Area, comprises the whole of theRegional Municipality of York,Regional Municipality of Durham,Regional Municipality of Halton,Regional Municipality of Peel and theCity of Toronto.
  3. ^Includes pre-amalgamatedHamilton-Wentworth Regional Municipality (Hamilton (36,145, 11.4% of total population),Stoney Creek (10,150, 20.3% of total population),Glanbrook (630, 6.5% of total population),Ancaster (2,175, 9.9% of total population),Dundas (900, 4.1% of total population),Flamborough (1,320, 4.5% of total population)),Burlington (6,325, 4.9% of total population) andGrimsby (1,140, 6.2% of total population)
  4. ^Includes pre-amalgamatedHamilton-Wentworth Regional Municipality (Hamilton (35,635, 11.1% of total population),Stoney Creek (10,705, 19.7% of total population),Glanbrook (1,040, 9.9% of total population),Ancaster (2,475, 10.6% of total population),Dundas (1,155, 5.0% of total population),Flamborough (1,815, 5.3% of total population)),Burlington (7,715, 5.6% of total population) andGrimsby (1,495, 7.6% of total population)
  5. ^Includes post-amalgamatedHamilton-Wentworth Regional Municipality intoHamilton (56,265, 11.6% of total population),Burlington (9,520, 6.4% of total population) andGrimsby (1,905, 9.1% of total population)
  6. ^IncludesHamilton (58,800, 11.8% of total population),Burlington (11,430, 7.0% of total population) andGrimsby (2,215, 9.4% of total population)
  7. ^abIncludes the municipalities ofOshawa,Whitby, andClarington. SeeItalian Canadians in the Greater Toronto Area for more detailed information.
  8. ^IncludesHamilton (60,535, 11.9% of total population),Burlington (12,755, 7.4% of total population) andGrimsby (2,610, 10.4% of total population)
  9. ^IncludesHamilton (62,335, 11.8% of total population),Burlington (14,235, 7.9% of total population) andGrimsby (3,155 11.8% of total population)
  10. ^IncludesHamilton (61,195, 10.9% of total population),Burlington (15,545, 8.5% of total population) andGrimsby (3,425 12.0% of total population)
  11. ^abReligious breakdown proportions based on "Italian" ethnic or cultural origin response on the2001 census.[66]
  12. ^abReligious breakdown proportions based on "Italian" ethnic or cultural origin response on the2021 census.[67]

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Further reading

[edit]
  • Audenino, P.; Tirabassi, M. (2008).Migrazioni italiane. Storia e storie dell'Ancien régime a oggi. Milan: Bruno Mondatori. pp. 43–48.
  • Avveduto, S. (December 2004).La mobilità delle alte qualifiche in Europa, Canada e USA in Studi emigrazione, anno XLI. pp. 889–910.
  • Colantonio, Frank (1997).From the Ground up: an Italian Immigrant's Story. Toronto, Ont.: Between the Lines. 174 p., ill. with b&w photos.
  • Fanella, Antonella (1999),With heart and soul: Calgary's Italian community, University of Calgary Press,ISBN 1-55238-020-3,archived from the original on 2024-04-20, retrieved2020-11-12
  • Marisa De, Franceschi (1998),Pillars of lace: the anthology of Italian-Canadian women writers, Guernica,ISBN 1-55071-055-9,archived from the original on 2024-04-20, retrieved2020-11-12
  • Harney, Nicholas De Maria (1998),Eh, paesan!: being Italian in Toronto, University of Toronto Press,ISBN 0-8020-4259-7,archived from the original on 2024-04-20, retrieved2020-11-12
  • Gabaccia, Donna R. (2009).L'Italia fuori d'Italia, in Storia d'Italia Annali 24. Migrazioni. Turin: Einaudi. pp. 226–230.
  • Gebbia, A. (2008).Gli italiani in Canada: storia e cultura, in Semestrale di studi e ricerche in geografia.
  • Harney, Nicholas DeMaria. "Ethnicity, Social Organization, and Urban Space: A Comparison of Italians in Toronto and Montreal" (Chapter 6). In: Sloan, Joanne (editor).Urban Enigmas: Montreal, Toronto, and the Problem of Comparing Cities (Volume 2 of Culture of Cities).McGill-Queen's Press (MQUP), January 1, 2007.ISBN 0773577076, 9780773577077. Start p.178.

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