Two-digit postcode areas Italy (defined through the first two postcode digits)

Codice di avviamento postale (Italian for 'Postal Routing Code'; CAP) is the Italian post code numeric system, created in 1967. It consists of five digits: the first two denote the administrative province (sometimes shared by two or more provinces for those that have been split after 1967); the third indicates if the town is the chief town of the province (odd number, usually 1 or 9, e.g. 07100 for Sassari) or not (even, usually 0 or 8, e.g. 10015 for Ivrea); the last two designate the specific town or village, (only in provinces created after 1992) the delivery post office, or, in large cities like Rome, Milan, Naples, or Venice, the urban postal district (usually 00 or 70 in minor provincial chief towns). San Marino and the Vatican City are integrated into the Italian postcode system.

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Postal codes in Switzerland and Liechtenstein

Service, January 6, 2020 Spedire una lettera a Campione? Attenzione al codice postale, Giorgio Doninelli, tio.ch, 31 December 2019 Helvetia Philatelic Society

CAP

a funding mechanism used by humanitarian aid organisations Codice di Avviamento Postale, literally Postal Expedition Code, Italy's postal code system

Postal code

country-specific: CAP: The standard term in Italy; CAP is an acronym for codice di avviamento postale ('postal expedition code'). CEP: The standard term in Brazil;

List of postal codes

codes were still being used widely. Italy 1 July 1967 IT NNNNN Codice di avviamento postale (CAP). Also used by San Marino (prefix SM) and Vatican City (prefix

Garbagna Novarese farmsteads

Google Books. Direzione Generale delle Poste (1863). Dizionario geografico-postale d'Italia pubblicato dalla Direzione Generale delle Poste del Regno (in