Moesa Region

District in Switzerland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Moesa Region is one of the eleven administrative districts in the Canton of the Grisons (or in German: Graubünden) in Switzerland. It had an area of 473.74 square kilometers (182.91 sq mi) and a population of 8,770 (as of 31 December 2020).[1]. It was created on 1 January 2017 as part of a reorganization of the Canton.[2]

More information Municipality, Population (31 December 2020) ...
Municipalities in the Moesa Region
Municipality Population
(31 December 2020)[1]
Area (km2)[3]
Buseno91 11.15
Castaneda278 3.96
Rossa151 58.89
Santa Maria in Calanca115 9.31
Lostallo840 50.86
Mesocco1,323 164.77
Soazza324 46.42
Cama589 15
Grono1,397 37.12
Roveredo (GR)2,597 38.79
San Vittore864 22.06
Calanca201 37.72
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Quick Facts Regione Moesa (Italian), Country ...
Moesa Region
Regione Moesa (Italian)
District
Flag of Moesa Region
Coat of arms of Moesa Region
Country Switzerland
Canton Graubünden
Area
  Total
473.74 km2 (182.91 sq mi)
Population
 (2020)
  Total
8,770
  Density19/km2 (48/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Municipalities12
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The region borders with the Viamala Region to the north, with Italy to the east (Lombardy: Province of Sondrio and of Como) and with the Canton of Ticino (districts of Bellinzona to the southwest, Riviera and Blenio) to the west.

Politics

Administrative division

Santa Maria in Calanca
Castle of Mesocco
Village of San Bernardino, Mesocco
Roveredo

The Moesa region is divided into 12 municipalities:

More information Emblem, Name of the municipality ...
Emblem Name of the municipality Inhabitants
31 December 2,020
Surface
in km2
BusenoBuseno9111.15
CalancaCalanca20137.72
CamaCama58915.00
CastanedaCastaneda2783.96
GronoGrono134036.41
LostalloLostallo84050.86
MesoccoMesocco1,323164.76
RossaRossa15158.88
RoveredoRoveredo2,59738.79
Santa Maria in CalancaSanta Maria in Calanca1159.31
San VittoreSan Vittore86422.06
SoazzaSoazza32446.42
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Demography

The Moesa region has about 8500 inhabitants, mostly Italian-speaking, and is part of Italian-speaking Graubünden and Italian-speaking Switzerland.[4] It is linked economically to the Canton of Ticino; linguistically, however, a Lombard Alpine dialect is spoken that is heavily influenced by Germanic terms.

References

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