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Sesto San Giovanni


FieldValue
nameSesto San Giovanni
official_nameComune di Sesto San Giovanni
native_namelmo
image_skylineSesto San Giovanni.jpg
image_shieldSesto San Giovanni-Stemma.svg
coordinates
regionLombardy
metropolitan_cityMilan (MI)
frazioniRondò-Torretta, Rondinella-Baraggia-Restellone, Isola del Bosco-delle Corti, Pelucca-villaggio Falck, Dei Parchi-Cascina de' Gatti-Parpagliona
mayor_partyCenter-Right
mayorRoberto Di Stefano
area_total_km211.7
population_footnotes
population_total78843
population_as_of2025
population_demonymSestesi
elevation_m140
istatsaint = St. John the Baptist
day24 June
postal_code20099
area_code02
website

Sesto San Giovanni (; , ), locally referred to as just Sesto (), is a comune (municipality) in the Metropolitan City of Milan, in the Italian region of Lombardy. It was awarded with the honorary title of città (city) by decree of 10 April 1954, signed by President Luigi Einaudi.

History

Main article: History of Sesto San Giovanni

An unimportant agglomerate of buildings until the 19th century, Sesto San Giovanni grew during the end of the 19th century and in the early 20th century, becoming the site of several industries, including companies such as Falck, Campari, Magneti Marelli and Breda. In that period the population increased rapidly, from 5,000 inhabitants in 1880 to 14,000 in 1911.

After World War II, Sesto became populated by many migrants from other parts of Italy, leading to an increased population of 95,000 inhabitants in 1981. Sesto used to be referred to as the "Stalingrad of Italy", due to the strong historical presence of the Italian Communist Party and to its resistance to fascism in World War Two.

Sesto San Giovanni received the honorary title of city by presidential decree on 10 April 1954.

Because of its diverse and growing industries, Sesto has drawn many immigrants. Census statistics from 2016 state that 17% of the population is composed of immigrants.

In the 1990s, Sesto San Giovanni suffered an economic crisis, and most of the larger companies in the town closed their premises. The town partially succeeded in converting its economy from steel production to service industries. Several large companies opened offices in Sesto, such as ABB Group, Wind, Impregilo and Oracle Corporation.

On 23 December 2016, Anis Amri, perpetrator of Berlin truck attack was shot fleeing in the city by the police.

Sesto San Giovanni was previously a left-wing working-class city, in contrast to Milan, which was a more right-leaning (DC, FI, Lega) business city. From 1946 to 2017, all city mayors came from left-wing parties. However, in 2017, it broke the tradition and elected Roberto di Stefano of Lega as mayor, whilst Milan has swung more left-wing in the same timeframe.

Demographics

Sport

Sesto San Giovanni is represented by professional football club Pro Sesto 1913, founded in 1913. Having played in the top division in its early years, the club has oscillated between the second and third tiers of the pyramid.

They play at the Stadio Ernesto Breda which they share with local American football players and Inter Milan's women's and youth teams.

People

  • Ferdinando Terruzzi (1924–2014), track cyclist
  • Nicolás Cotugno (born 1938), former Roman Catholic Archbishop of Montevideo, Uruguay
  • Teresa Sarti Strada (1948–2009), co-founder of Emergency
  • Gino Strada (1948–2021) war surgeon and founder of Emergency, a UN-recognized international humanitarian organisation that gives free medical treatment to victims of war
  • Massimo Carrera (born 1964), footballer and coach
  • Marco Saligari (born 1965), cyclist
  • Barbara Fusar-Poli (born 1972), figure skater
  • Fabio Macellari (born 1974), footballer
  • Franco Masetto (born 1942), footballer
  • Gianandrea Noseda (born 1964), international symphony conductor
  • Sfera Ebbasta (born 1992), Italian rapper

International relations

Twin towns — sister cities

Sesto San Giovanni is twinned with:

  • Saint-Denis, France
  • Zlín, Czech Republic
  • Goiânia, Brazil

References

References

  1. "Monthly Demographic Balance". [[Italian National Institute of Statistics.
  2. "Statistiche demografiche ISTAT".
  3. Ghiglione, Giorgio. (2018-05-22). "The fall of 'Italy’s Stalingrad': symbol of left wages war on migrants and poor". The Guardian.
  4. Coman, Julian. (2022-09-22). "‘Times have changed’: Italian town once run by communists poised to vote far right". The Guardian.
  5. (1971-10-24). "Popolazione residente e presente dei comuni. Censimenti dal 1861 al 1971". [[National Institute of Statistics (Italy).
  6. "Dashboard Permanent census of population and housing". [[National Institute of Statistics (Italy).
  7. "Gemellaggi e patti d'amicizia". Sesto San Giovanni.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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