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REGIONI D’ITALIA Regions of Italy

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REGIONI D’ITALIARegions of Italy

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Fast Facts Italy has 20 regions or “States”. Each

region has its own traditions, dialect (form of Language) and its own history. As well as this each region also has unique culinary (cooking) traditions, architecture, geography (how the countryside looks) Italy is like many small countries within one nation. The following slide contains a map displaying the twenty modern regions of Italy.

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Italy’s Historical Regions

The development of Italy’s regions can be traced as far back as ancient Roman times, right through the medieval times, to the modern times. Italy as a “Nation” is young- just like Australia. Infact it was only united after a brief civil war which was lead by the famous Italian general “Garibaldi”, and the capital of the nation Rome was proclaimed in 1870. (For a comparison, Australia was united as a nation in 1901).

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General Giuseppe Garibaldi

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Medieval Italian States

Red: Duchy of Savoy; Yellow: Republic of Genoa; White: Duchy of Milan; Dark Green: Venetian Republic; Frost: Grand Duchy of Tuscany; Dark Gray: Papal States; Blue: Kingdom of Naples(Under the control of the Spanish Hapsburg Crown); Orange: Kingdom of Sicily(Under the control of the Spanish Hapsburg Crown); Pink: Sardinia(Annexed to Hapsburg Spain).

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Before Unification

As you can see in the previous slide, before Italy was united as a nation in 1870 with the capital of Rome, you can think of Italy being like a giant “Cake” that was divided up between the Pope and the catholic Church (The Roman/Papal states), foreign powers- such as France and Spain- And other local overlords and rulers, such as the Medici in Florence and the Sforza in Milan, and smaller independent republics- such as the maritime republic of Venice, which had its own ceremonial head of state like the Pope known as the “Doge”.

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Venetian Doge.

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Piemonte

General Garibaldi’s assistant and Torino’s governor Cavour came from Piemonte.

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Piemonte- Home of FIAT

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Valle D’Aosta

Bilingual region of Italy (French/Italian) that has both Italian and Frankish History.

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Aosta

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Aosta is also famous for its medieval castles.

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Trentino Alto-Adige

Trentino Alto-Adige is an autonomous region of Italy separated into 2 separate halves- Trentino, the southern half with the capital city of Trento (Trent), and Alto-Adige in the north, with the capital city of Bolzano. The two separate parts of the region take it in turns to govern the region. In Alto-Adige the population speaks fluent German, and before the end of World War 1, Trentino-AltoAdige was a region of Austria, but was ceded to Italy after the war.

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Trentino Mountain Range- The Dolomites.

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Trentino-Alto Adige has excellent Skiing.

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Trento

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Council of Trent

The Council of Trent (Latin: Concilium Tridentinum) was an Ecumenical Council of the Roman Catholic Church. It is considered to be one of the Church's most important

councils. It convened in Trent (then capital of the Prince-Bishopric of Trent of the Holy Roman Empire, in Italy) between December 13, 1545, and December 4, 1563 in twenty-five sessions for three periods.

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Council of Trent

The Council issued condemnations on what it defined as Protestant heresies and defined Church teachings in the areas of Scripture and Tradition, Original Sin, Justification, Sacraments, the Eucharist in Holy Mass and the veneration of saints. It issued numerous reform decrees.By specifying Catholic doctrine on salvation, the sacraments, and the Biblical canon, the Council was answering Protestant disputes.The Council entrusted to the Pope the implementation of its work; as a result, Pope Pius IV issued the Tridentine Creed in 1565; and Pope Pius V issued in 1566 the Roman Catechism, in 1568 a revised Roman Breviary, and in 1570 a revised Roman Missal, thus standardizing what since the 20th century has been called the Tridentine Mass (from the city's Latin name Tridentum), and Pope Clement VIII issued in 1592 a revised edition of the Vulgate.

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Bolzano (Bozen- Sud Tyrol)

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Bolzano

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Friuli Venezia Giulia

Another Autonomous region of Italy. It’s Capital Trieste, was the busiest port of the old Austrian empire before being ceded to Italy after world war 1. It is also composed of 2 smaller historical regions “Friuli” and “Venezia Giulia” which in English is known as “Julian March”- named after the Julian Alps, local to the region.

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Trieste

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Lombardia

Lombardia was named after the german tribe the “Lombards” who settled the region after the fall of the Roman Empire in the 5th Century AD. It is also home to Italy’s most contraversial separatist right-wing political party “The Northern League” (circa 1990) who claim that the rich industrious north of Italy should separate and from the more impoverished agricultural south, claiming mythical Celtic origins, and they have named this land “Padania”.

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Padania and the Northern League

The geographical map of (invented??) Padania and the flag proposed by the separatist Northern League.

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Lombardia’s Capital- Milano

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Santa Maria Della Grazia - Milano

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Santa Maria Della Grazia- Home of Leonardo’s “The Last Supper”

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Milano- Castello Sforzesco

Castello Sforzesco- a 13th Century Palace built for Milan’s then ruling family, the Sforza.

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La Scala- Milan’s Opera House

La Scala is the most famous Opera house in the world, perhaps more so than Sydney’s. The Italians invented Opera in the 1600s.

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Milan- Fashion Capital of Italy (and Europe?)

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Milan Fashion- Continued

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Modern Architecture in Milan- “Torre Velasca” (Velasca Tower)

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Modern Art in Milan- This sculpture is a testament to the tenacity of the Lombard

People.

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Lombardia- Lake Como and Lake Garda

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Veneto

Capital City- Venice “Venezia’. Venice is famous for it’s masked “Carnivale” and its long proud tradition of glass works.

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GONDALIERS

St Mark’s Square, Venice

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Rialto Bridge, Venice.

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Aerial Map of Venice

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Grand Canal, Venice.

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Venetian Gondalas.

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St. Mark’s Cathedral, Venice.

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Venetian “Carnivale”

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Venetian Glass Works

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FRIULI VENEZIA GIULIA- VERONAHome of Shakespeare’s “Romeo

and Juliette”. Below- The House of Romeo e Giulietta- Messages of

Love.

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Romeo and Juliette’s House, Verona.

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Verona

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Previous Slides- Verona’s intact and ancient Roman Amptheatre.

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Liguria Apart from it’s capital city Genova

(Genoa in Italian), Liguria is also famous for it’s second city “La Spezia” and the mountaineering-hiking trail which passes through 5 small towns known as the “Cinque Terre” (5 lands)

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Genoa’s Cathedral, circa 1200.

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Genoa

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Medieval Genoa

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Genoa’s Famous Landmark lighthouse

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Genoa’s famous Theatre “Carlo Felice”

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Modern/Ancient Genoa

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La Spezia

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5 Terre- Hiking Map

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5 Terre

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Emilia Romagna

Emilia Romagna’s Capital city Bologna, is famous for inventing “Spaghetti Bolognese” which they simply call “Ragu”. Parma, another city in Emilia Romagna, invented Parmasan cheese. Modena, yet another city, is famous for inventing Balsamic vinegar. Bologna in the medieval times, had many towers that dominated its skyline, but now only 2 principle towers remain. Bologna is also famous for its covered archways.

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Bologna

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Bologna’s Unfinished Cathedral

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Inside Bologna’s Towers

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Bologna’s Archways

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Parma

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Modena

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Toscana

Tuscany, and it’s capital, Florence, are the heart of the Italian renaissance, the standard Italian language, as well as many Italian geniuses such as Dante Alighieri (the 14th Century Italian version of Shakespeare- he wrote the famous novel “L’inferno”) (Hell) which was used as the basis for the italian language. Leonardo Da Vinci, Michealangelo, Brunelleschi, Petrarca, Botticelli and many other renaissance masters were based here. Tuscany is also home to the leaning tower of Pisa, and the ancient Roman ruins of Arezzo.

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Florence

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Ponte Vecchio- Old Bridge, the only bridge in Florence not burnt by the Nazis during World

War 2.

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Renaissance Florence

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Botticelli’s Birth of Venus, which hangs in the Uffizi Gallery.

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Michelangelo’s Davide, which hangs in the academy of fine arts.

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Uffizi Gallery, with old government house behind.

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Cascini Gardens, created for Florence’s ruling family the Medici in the 15th Century.

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Palazzo Pitti- The Pitti family were the rival family of the Medici in Florence.

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Pisa- an entirely separate and autonomous tuscan city state during the middle ages.

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University of Pisa.

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Arezzo.

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Roman Ruins- Arezzo

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Cortona- Etruscan (Pre-roman) Ruins.

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Marche

Lesser Known Region of Italy- Main feautres- it’s capital city Ancona (below)and and the Appenine Mountains, which make part of its geography.

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Ancona

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Appenine Mountains

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Umbria

Umbria is the only “Landlocked” region of Italy- it has no coast line. It is the setting of a famous American Movie “My house in Umbria (2003) starring Maggie Smith. It’s capital Perugia, is home to a famous Italian University for foreigners, and the Patron Saint Francis of Assisi, lived in nearby Assisi, and he invented the Franciscan order of Monks and was one of the first people to write sacred music of the western tradition (Laude/Cantici) in the 13th century.

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My House In Umbria

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Perugia

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Ancient Roman Acqueducts in Perugia

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More of Perugia

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St. Michael Archangel Church, Perugia

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Rocca Paolina Ruins, Perugia

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Perugia, again.

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Medieval Perugia

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Perugia, University for Foreigners

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Umbrian countryside

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St. Francis of Assisi

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Assisi

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Assisi

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Lazio Lazio is the heart of the ancient Latin world and the Roman Empire, with

Rome as the state capital. Rome was founded on the Mythical tale of twins Romulus and Remus, who suckled from a she-wolf after they were abandoned by their mother. The Roman empire sought to re-create the glory of the even earlier Greek classical states, and modern Italian, French, Spanish and Romanian all developed from Latin. It is height, the Roman empire controlled nearly all of Europe, the Mediterranean and North Africa- except Germany, which was ruled by barbaric tribes. London was originally a Roman outpost called “Londinium”. The Roman empire was partly democratic with it’s own Forum (the ruins still remain in Rome) and at other times was ruled by a series of emporers known as “Caeser”. This is where the term “Ceaser Salad” comes from. The Colosseum was famous for staging shows and battles for the citizens of Rome, using gladiators, and at times filling the venue with water to stage ship battles. Before the Roman Empire converted to Christianity in the 4th Century AD, Christians were often thrown to the Lions here. Istanbul, Capital of Modern Turkey, was also a part of the Roman Empire and was originally called “Constantinople”, after the famous Roman Emporer, Constantine. When the Roman empire became to large, it split in half, and the eastern half was called the “Byzantium Empire”, and it out-lived it’s eastern half for nearly 1000 years, before being overrun by the Islamic Turks. From roughly 350-1453 however, the Byzantine empire and Constantinople (Istanbul) was a Christian Empire, and kept the light of Christian Civilisation alive after the collapse of the western Roman Empire in the 5th century AD and the beginning of what is known as the “middle” ages.

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Romulus and Remus

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Rome

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Spanish Steps, Rome.

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Roman Forum

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Colosseum, Rome.

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Trevi Fountain, Rome.

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Palatine Ruins, Rome.

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Roman Catacombs.

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How ancient Rome might have looked.

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Vatican City, Rome (St Peter’s Cathedral). The Pope lives here.

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The View of Rome from St. Peters

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Inside the Colosseum, underground tunnels.

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Aerial View of the Colosseum and the Palatine.

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Aerial Model of Ancient Rome, which had perhaps over 1 million citizens.

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Aerial View of St Peters and the Vatican City.

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Roman Forum at Dusk.

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The Palatine looking towards the Colosseum.

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Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel, in the Vatican city.

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Abruzzo

Abruzzo was the home of a shocking earthquake in 2009 in the capital L’Aquila that killed over 200 students because university dorm-room buildings were constructed using dodgy Mafia-labour. Apart from that it is well known for good skiing in the Appenine mountain range, its national parks and its wine producing.

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L’Aquila

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Basilica of Santa Maria di Collemaggio

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Abruzzo’s Faultline.

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L’aquila- before the Earthquake.

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Molise

Molise is one of the smallest and least populated regions of Italy, and has mainly an agricultural economy and some fantastic ruins.

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Campania

Campania is the region that’s famous for giving the world the Mafia known locally in Naples as the “Camorra”, and Naples, the city that invented the Pizza. In Naples “Napoli” you will also find more ancient underground Roman Ruins. The bay of Naples is seated infront of the Volcano Mt. Vesuvius, which in Ad.59 erupted and buried the ancient city of Pompeii, however leaving beautifully preserved city structures and plaster casts of its victims.

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Napoli

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How Naples looked after the Garbage Collectors went on Strike

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Pompeii

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APOLLO TEMPLE

Before the Eruption, and Asfter.

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Latin Inscription, Pompeii Ampitheatre

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Puglia

Puglia is one of Italy’s direst and flattest regions, though also one of the most industrialized southern regions. Puglia is home to the “Trulli” at the town Alberobello (BeautifulTree)- conical round shaped houses, as well as four major cities- Foggia, Lecce, Brindisi and Bari.

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Foggia

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Lecce

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Brindisi

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Bari

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Trulli- Albero Bello

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Basilicata

A small mountainous agricultural region renowned for its traditional crafts such as weaving, woodwork and pottery. It’s capital is called Potenza.

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Potenza

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Calabria

Calabria contains Italy’s first settled city, Reggio Calabria, originally called Rhegion, a greek, Pre-latin settlement. This is also the ancient meaning of the modern english word “region”. The greeks settled here until they were defeated by the romans in the 3rd century AD. The famous greek mathematician Pythagoras and his followers are also said to have settled at Crotone, another city of the region.

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Reggio Calabria

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Reggio Cathedral

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Spanish Castello Aragonese

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Pythagoras- Who lived in Crotone

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Crotone

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Sicilia

Sicily is also an ancient greek settlement, but at times as nearly taken over by muslim raiders in the middle ages. They left their heritage there in the form of architecture. Sicily’s capital, Palermo, is home to some wonderful baroque architecture, and its own local mafia known as the “Cosa Nostra” or “Our Thing”. It is one of the least developed regions of Italy.

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Palermo

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Greek Ruins Sicily

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Sardegna

Sardegna’s history goes back as far as the stone age. In English it’s called “Sardinia”. This is where the name for the fish “Sardines” comes from. Someone said to be from Sardinia is called a “Sardo”. Sardegna’s is also home to the famous Emerald coast, where Europe’s billionaire’s go to play and a cup of coffee can cost over $200!!!

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Cagliari- Sardegna’s Capital

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Roman Ampitheatre-Cagliari

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St. Anna’s Church, Cagliari

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Elephant Tower, Cagliari

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Desert near Cagliari

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Sardo Ruins

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Emerald Coast, Sardegna.

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Sardegna, Tomb of the Giants

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FINE.

This concludes the end of our exploration of what is surely one of the most fascinating countries on earth. I hope you enjoyed your trip into marvel and wonder.

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