Villa Opicina Opčine |
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Frazione | |
Location of Villa Opicina Opčine in Italy |
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Coordinates: 45°41′15″N 13°47′19″E / 45.68750°N 13.78861°ECoordinates: 45°41′15″N 13°47′19″E / 45.68750°N 13.78861°E | |
Country | Italy |
Region | Friuli-Venezia Giulia |
Province | Trieste (TS) |
Comune | Trieste |
Elevation | 330 m (1,080 ft) |
Population (2015) | |
• Total | 8,009 |
Demonym(s) | Opicinesi |
Time zone | CET (UTC+1) |
• Summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+2) |
Postal code | 34151 |
Dialing code | (+39) 040 |
Patron saint | Bartholomew the Apostle |
Villa Opicina, also spelled Opicina (Slovene: Opčine, Triestine: Opcina), is a town in north-eastern Italy, close to the Slovenian border at Fernetti (Slovene: Fernetiči). The first town in Slovenia after the border is Sežana, which is also where the first railway station in Slovenia is located near the small town of Villa Opicina. It is a frazione of the comune of Trieste, the provincial and regional capital.
It is located on the Carso Plateau 3 miles north of Trieste, a seaport on the Adriatic Sea.
The railway station serves trains entering Italy from Slovenia, but does not provide a direct service to Trieste. The Opicina Tramway, a unique hybrid tramway and funicular railway links Villa Opicina village with Piazza Oberdan in Trieste city centre. There are also buses which link Villa Opicina railway station, the village center and Trieste.
It is mostly inhabited by a Slovene minority in Italy. According to the last Austrian census of 1911, over 89% of the population was of Slovene ethnicity. In the following decades, this number fell significantly: according to the census of 1971, just above half of the population of the settlement belonged to the Slovene speaking community, while the rest were mostly Italian speakers.
In the last three decades, immigration from the city of Trieste and other predominantly Italian-speaking areas have most probably reduced the Slovene speakers to a minority. However, Slovene language is still widely used in the settlement, both in private and public life. Most of the official signs are bilingual, Italian and Slovene.