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Italy's postal code system is called CAP (''Codice di Avviamento Postale'', literally: Postal Expedition Code). CAP are routing information for all the Italian cities and towns which have just a single CAP each; 28 city centres have a specific CAP. Vatican City and San Marino also use the Italian postal code system. Italian CAP postal codes have an optional prefix of "I-" (or "IT-", or none at all, depending on where the mail originates) followed by five digits. The region name is not used in the postal address, but the ''provincia'' is included as the 2-letter abbreviation of the province's capital. Thus, a Mario Rossi living on Via Giuseppe Garibaldi, 10 in the town of Buccinasco in the province of Milan will be addressed as follows: :Mario Rossi :Via Giuseppe Garibaldi, 10 :20090 BUCCINASCO MI :ITALY The town of Buccinasco is in the province of Milan (MI); the region (Lombardy) is not included in the address. The 2-letter abbreviation of the provincial capital is usually not included in addresses for large towns characterised by multi-CAP in their city centres. Thus, a Mario Rossi living at Via Dante, 10 in the city of Rome in the province of Rome will be addressed as follows: :Mario Rossi :Via Dante, 10 :00194 ROMA :ITALY Neither the province of Rome (RM) nor the region (Lazio) is included in the address. ==List of postal codes in Italy (including Vatican City and San Marino)== # Provisional code MD modified in VS from December 2006. ( *) In Sardinia in 2005, 4 new provinces were created (and the borders of existing provinces modified). The CAP of 2006 approved new provincial prefixes for postal codes in the affected areas but did not modify the existing numeric suffixes of the postal codes. In December 2006, the Italian government approved the codes of the new Sardinian provinces, changing those of Medio Campidano from MD to VS. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「List of postal codes in Italy」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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