She had never been to Calabria before. Her grandfather left the village in 1912 with a cardboard suitcase and enough lire for a one-way ticket to New York. But when Maria walked into the main piazza of a hilltop village of barely 300 people, an old man looked up from his espresso and said, “Sei una Di Maio?”
The surname. He recognised the surname.
Maria had been researching her roots for three years. She had never expected this.

A Hundred Years of Leaving
Between 1880 and 1920, more than four million Italians emigrated to America. Most came from the south — from the sun-baked villages of Sicily, the rugged hills of Calabria, the crowded streets of Campania.
They left because of poverty, drought, and a lack of opportunity. But they didn’t leave because they wanted to.
Many carried soil from their village in their pockets. They named their children after the saints back home. They cooked the same dishes on different continents, trying to hold on to something that kept slipping away.
What the Villages Remember
These places didn’t forget.
In the civil registry of a Sicilian comune, you’ll find birth records going back to the 1800s. The surnames match the ones on headstones in Brooklyn and Boston. On some doors in rural Calabria, there are old brass plaques still bearing the names of families who left a century ago.
The houses stand. The churches stand. The piazzas still fill in the evening for the passeggiata. Life continued — but the village remembers who left.
Many mayors have begun to reach out. They post in Italian-American online communities, invite descendants to ancestral festivals, and in some cases offer abandoned houses for symbolic prices to those willing to restore them. The full story of these villages and their relationship with America is one of the most remarkable in modern Italian history.
The Moment the Surnames Match
Travellers who make this journey describe the same feeling: standing in a foreign country that somehow feels like home.
“I walked into the bar and gave my surname to the barman,” one visitor wrote. “He put down the glass, walked out from behind the counter, and hugged me. His grandmother and my great-grandmother were sisters.”
These meetings happen more often than you’d expect. In a village of a few hundred people, surnames repeat across generations. Everyone knows the family histories. Your great-grandparents are not forgotten — they’re still talked about.
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Italy Is Welcoming Descendants Back
Italy has one of the most generous citizenship-by-descent laws in the world. It’s called jure sanguinis — citizenship by blood. If any of your Italian ancestors never formally became a citizen of another country before a certain date, you may qualify.
Thousands of Italian-Americans are now pursuing this route. Some are moving back entirely. Others visit each year, staying in a village house that has been in the family for 200 years, now restored and loved again.
For those planning this kind of journey, this guide to planning an Italian heritage trip covers exactly how to find your comune, access civil records, and prepare for the visit.
How to Start Looking
The search usually starts with a single document — a ship manifest, a naturalisation record, a grandmother’s birth certificate with a village name you can barely read.
From there, it’s more straightforward than you might expect. The Ellis Island immigration database is searchable by name and arrival year. Italian comuni are legally required to hold civil records — births, marriages, deaths — going back to 1809, and most will respond to written requests from descendants.
The village your family came from is almost certainly still there. The name is in the register. The house may still be standing.
More Than a Holiday
Most people who make this trip say the same thing afterwards: it changed something in them. Not because Italy is beautiful — though it is — but because they understood for the first time what their ancestors gave up to give them a better life.
Standing on a hilltop in Calabria, looking out over the same valley your great-grandmother looked out over every morning of her childhood, is not a tourist experience. It’s something closer to a homecoming.
The village isn’t just a place on a map. It’s part of who you are. And it’s still there — bells ringing on Sunday morning, old men in the piazza, your surname in the register — waiting to be found.
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