Psayrer: BERGE IM FEUER (Livesendung Grand Prix Hallenstdion Zürich)

Englisch: Holiday for body, mind and soul at the Hotel Gurschler This means arriving, assuming, turning off and experiencing beautiful things. Here you can feel the warmth, enjoy nature and recharge your batteries. Feel the peace and find yourself ... Just feel gratitude for every moment of being Klaus Gurschler Website: http://www.sonnenhotels.it/ Facebook:   / klaus.gurschler   South Tyrol (Italian Alto Adige, Sudtirolo, Ladin South Tyrol), officially the Autonomous Province of Bolzano - South Tyrol, is the northernmost province of Italy and, together with the province of Trento, forms the autonomous region of Trentino-Alto Adige. Since the entry into force of the extended autonomy in 1972, South Tyrol has been granted comprehensive self-administration rights and is referred to as "autonomous province" or "land". The area is located in the middle of the Alps and has a population of about 520,000, its capital is Bolzano. Alto Adige is a region of Italy with a strong regional culture. This is due to the Bavarian and Romanesque settlement as well as to the historically grown ties to the German linguistic and cultural area, especially to the northern neighbor of Austria, to which it belonged until 1919. The European unification movement allows cross-border cooperation with the other parts of the historic region of Tyrol, which has been at the beginning of institutional integration since the establishment of the Europaregion Tirol-Südtirol-Trentino. In terms of linguistic-cultural differentiation, the population is currently composed of more than 62% German-speaking and approximately 23% Italian-speaking South Tyroleans. About 4% of the population, mainly in the Dolomites, belong to the Ladin language group. Internal and external European migration has led to a further diversification of the population composition, especially since the 1990s. In many parts rural South Tyrol is one of the most prosperous areas in Italy and the European Union. Economically, the country located at the Brenner Transitute was for a long time primarily agrarian. Since the second half of the 20th century, services such as trade, transport and tourism have played an important role.