settlers first began arriving into these regions in a wave of immigration lasting from approximately 1875 to 1914. These settlers were mainly from Veneto, a region in Northern Italy, where Venetian was spoken, but also from Trentino and Friuli-Venezia Giulia. In the south of Brazil these immigrants settled as smallholders in the region of Encosta da Serra. There they created three settlements: Conde D'Eu, Dona Isabel, and Campo dos Bugres. As more people arrived, the Italian settlement expanded beyond these localities. Approximately 100,000 immigrants from Northern Italy arrived between 1875 and 1910. As time went by, a uniquely southern Brazilian dialect emerged. Veneto became the basis for Italian-Brazilian regionalism. Talian has been very much influenced not only by other Italian languages but also Portuguese, the national language of Brazil; this can be seen in the employment of numerous non-Venetian loanwords. It has been estimated that there have been 130 books published in Talian, including works of both poetry and prose. Like Riograndenser Hunsrückisch, the main German dialect spoken by southern Brazilians of German origin, Talian has suffered great deprecation since the 1940s. At that time, then-President Getúlio Vargas started a campaign of nationalization to try to force non-Portuguese speakers of Brazil to "better integrate" into the national mainstream culture. Speaking Talian or German in public, especially in education and press, was forbidden.
Current status
Talian was a long time ago mainly spoken in the southern Brazilian states of Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina and Paraná, as well as in Espirito Santo. Nowadays, there are approximately 3 million people of Italian ancestry in Rio Grande do Sul, about 30% of the local population, and approximately 1.7 million people in Espirito Santo, which accounts for 65% of the local population. All talians adopted in the past portuguese as their mother tongue. According to some estimates, there are up to one million italian descendants; Ethnologue reported 4,000,000 italian descendants in the year 2006 but this numbers don't reflect absolutely the number of Talian speakers. During the "Estado Novo" period of the government of Getúlio Vargas, the use of Talian was declared illegal. As a result of the traumas of Vargas' policies, there is, even to this day, a stigma attached to speaking these languages. In fact, the vast majority do not even understand talian and the few people who understand a little bit Talian have Portuguese as their mother tongue. In 2009, the legislative assemblies of the states of Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina approved laws declaring the Talian dialect to be an integral part of the historical heritage of their respective states. In 2009, the city ofSerafina Corrêa, in the State of Rio Grande do Sul, elected Talian as co-official language, alongside Portuguese. Finally, in 2014 Talian was declared to be part of the cultural heritage of Brazil by the National Institute of Historic and Artistic Heritage. According to the figure given at this time, there would be about 500,000 active speakers in 133 towns. Newspapers in the Talian-speaking region feature articles written in the language. There are approximately 500 radio programs broadcast in Talian.
Municipalities in Brazil that have co-official Talian language
Antônio Prado, Rio Grande do Sul
Bento Gonçalves, Rio Grande do Sul
Camargo, Rio Grande do Sul
Caxias do Sul, Rio Grande do Sul
Fagundes Varela, Rio Grande do Sul
Flores da Cunha, Rio Grande do Sul
Guabiju, Rio Grande do Sul
Ivorá, Rio Grande do Sul
Nova Erechim, Santa Catarina
Nova Pádua, Rio Grande do Sul
Nova Roma do Sul, Rio Grande do Sul
Paraí, Rio Grande do Sul
Serafina Corrêa, Rio Grande do Sul
Brazilian states with Talian as linguistic heritage officially approved statewide