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| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Italian Regions PIEMONTE (PIEDMONT) Official Website: www.regione.piemonte.it The region is mostly mountains and hills, on the north-western border of Italy with France and Switzerland; surrounded by some of the highest mountains in Europe, such as the Gran Paradiso and Monte Rosa, it is occupied to the East by the Pianura Padana, crossed by the largest river in Italy, the Po, and its many tributaries. Most of the population live in the plain, especially in the wide metropolitan area of Turin, Novara and Vercelli where a great many mechanical and car industries are located. Thanks to the great abundance of water agriculture is very important, the main products being rice, wine, maize, potatoes and the precious white truffle. Tourism is also especially lively in the winter resorts in the Alps. But in spite of the advanced industrialization and modernity of the cities, the Piedmontese are very conservative as far as their traditions are concerned, and folk festivals are still widely attended. The Provinces of Piemonte Province of Torino (TO), Province of Alessandria (AL), Province of Asti (AT), Province of Biella (BI), Province of Cuneo (CN), Province of Novara (NO), Province of Verbano-Cusio-Ossola (VB), Province of Vercelli (VC) History The most ancient inhabitants of the region were the Celts and Liguri, who were then occupied by the Romans. The barbarian invasions of the 5th century completely destroyed the region, and only under the Lombards civilized life was re-established. Important Lombard dukedoms rose in Novara, Ivrea, Asti, Tortona and Torino. After the Frankish invasion of the late 8th century AD the feudal system was introduced and many monasteries established. Then in the 11th century, as in the rest of Italy, the rise of free Communes began, among them Asti, Chieri, Ivrea, Novara, Torino, Tortona, Cuneo, Mondovì, Vercelli, Alba, Savigliano, which often fought against the powerful Marquises of Monferrato. In the latter half of the 13th century the Communes sided with Charles of Anjou, and the Angevin rule lasted throughout the following century. During the Renaissance the mighty Visconti family ruled over Alba, Alessandria, Asti, Bra, Novara, Tortona, Vercelli, while the Savoy family (the dynasty at the head of united Italy in 1860) from Southern France started to spread in the region. In 1559, after a war between France and Spain, the Cateau-Cambrésis Treaty gave part of Piemonte to the Savoy Duke Emanuele Filiberto and to the Marquis of Monferrato, leaving to France the cities of Saluzzo, Torino, Chieri, Pinerolo, Chivasso, Asti and to Spain the city of Vercelli. Then in the 18th century, while the European monarchies were all involved in the Succession Wars, the Savoy were able to unify the region. Then in the early 19th century the Italian Risorgimento found fertile ground and the support of the monarchs and of some enlightened ministers, like Camillo Benso Count of Cavour, who was finally able to weave the network of alliances necessary to allow the rise of the Italian State. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Italian Genealogy HOW TO FIND Places of your Ancestors and Living Relatives in ITALY Here are Step-by-Step, Detailed, and Useful Suggestions: 1- Go to PAGINE BIANCHE.it Web Site, by clicking HERE. 2- In the "Cognome o nome Azienda" box, Write the Family Name, or the Last Name of your Ancestors, and of your Living Relatives in ITALY. 3- In the "Nome" box, Write the First Name of your Ancestors, and of your Living Relatives in ITALY, or Leave it Blank, if you are Looking for the Family Name in ITALY. 4- In the "Dove" box, Write the Name of the Birth Town, or Province, or Region of your Ancestors, and of your Living Relatives in ITALY. 5- Click on the button "Cerca": a List of Persons with that Family Name, with their full names, addresses, and telephone numbers will appear! 6- Save, and/or Print their full names, addresses, and telephone numbers, and Towns, and/or Provinces that you have found, where they are living in ITALY! They are your "Potential" Living Relatives, and the "Potential" Towns, and/or Provinces of Birth of your Ancestors in ITALY! 7- Then, click on the LINKS here below, to Know HOW TO OBTAIN Information and Extracts, Acts, Certificates of your ITALIAN Ancestors, and/or HOW TO CONTACT your Living Relatives in ITALY! HOW TO OBTAIN Information and Documents of your Ancestors in ITALY HOW TO CONTACT your Living Relatives in ITALY |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Italian Recipes Fettuccine Cacciatore Ingredients 8 ounces fettuccine, uncooked 2 teaspoons oil 1 pound boneless skinless chicken breasts, cut into bite-size pieces 1 cup green pepper strips 1 cup sliced mushrooms 1 (14.5 ounce) can diced tomatoes, undrained 1/4 cup KRAFT Zesty Italian Dressing 1/2 cup KRAFT Shredded Italian Mozzarella/Parmesan Cheese Blend 1/2 cup chopped fresh basil leaves Cooking Directions Cook pasta as directed on package. Meanwhile, heat oil in large skillet on medium-high heat. Add chicken; cook and stir until no longer pink. Add peppers and mushrooms; cook 3 min., stirring occasionally. Stir in tomatoes with their liquid and the dressing. Reduce heat to medium-low; simmer 5 min. or until chicken is cooked through. Drain pasta. Toss pasta with the chicken mixture; sprinkle with cheese and basil. Yield 4 servings -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Italian Companies M.V. Agusta MV Agusta Motor S.p.A. Type: Private Founded: 1945 Headquarters: Varese, Italy Claudio Castiglioni, President Industry: Motorcycle Products: MV Agusta, Cagiva Parent: Harley Davidson Official Website: www.mvagusta.it MV Agusta is a motorcycle manufacturer founded in 1945 near Milano (Milan) in Cascina Costa, Italy. History 750 America 1954 MV Agusta CSTL 175 Turismo Lusso The company began as an offshoot of the Agusta aviation company which was formed by Count Giovanni Agusta in 1923. The Count died in 1927, leaving the company in the hands of his wife and sons, Domenico, Vincenzo, Mario and Corrado. Count Vincenzo Agusta together with his brother Domenico formed MV Agusta (the MV stood for Meccanica Verghera) at the end of the Second World War as a means to save the jobs of employees of the Agusta firm and also to fill the post-war need for cheap, efficient transportation. They produced their first prototype, ironically called "Vespa 98", in 1945. After learning of that that the name had already been registered by Piaggio for its Vespa motorscooter, it was referred to simply by the number “98”. The company successfully manufactured small-displacement, quintessential Café racer style motorcycles (mostly 125-150 cc) through the 1950s and 1960s. In the 60s small motorcycle sales declined, and MV started producing larger displacement cycles in more limited quantities. A 250 cc, and later a smart 350 cc twin were produced, and a 600 cc four- cylinder evolved into a 750 cc which is still extremely valuable today. Following the death of Count Domenico Agusta in 1971 the company declined and by 1980, it stopped producing motorcycles altogether. Resurrected by Cagiva F4 750 Oro Cagiva purchased the MV Agusta name trademarks in 1991 and in 1997 it introduced the first new MV Agusta motorcycle. The new bikes were four-cylinder 750 cc sports machines (the F4 range), which included a series of limited production run models, such as the all black paint work SPR model ("Special Production Racing") which was featured in the movie "I, Robot (film)" and in 2004, they introduced their first 1000 cc bike. 2004 marked the end of production for the 750 sports machines, with a limited production of 300 SR ("Special Racing") model in the traditional red and silver livery. MV Agusta also made a limited number of F4 750 cc and F4 1000 cc "Ayrton Senna" editions in memory of the late Formula One Champion of the same name (who was an avid Ducati and MV Agusta collector) in aid of the Instituto Ayrton Senna, his charity foundation in Brazil for children and young people. 300 models of each were made in the early 2000's. They also produce a range of 750 and 910 "naked" bikes called the Brutale. Production is somewhat limited, as it is the policy of the company to produce an elite machine similar to Ferrari in motor cars. They do not compete directly with Japanese manufacturers, whose motorcycles typically sell for considerably less than the cost of an MV Agusta. Rather they compete with other Italian models such as Ducati sports bikes the 996, 998, 999, 1098, and the naked Monster. In 2005, MV Agusta introduced the Tamburini 1000, which is named after its creator, Massimo Tamburini, who previously worked for Moto Guzzi, and most recently Ducati. Cycle World and Australian Motorcycle News magazine named it the best sportbike in the world. Tamburini designed the Ducati 916 sports bike (predecessor of the 748 and 996 series) which marked the return of Ducati as a successful motorcycle manufacturer over the last decade. The MV Agusta F4 refined the innovative design of the 916. In recent publications, the MV Agusta has been highly praised as one of the best handling motorcycles ever created[citation needed] and the 2008 F4 312R model is known to be the world's fastest production motorcycle. Claimed power of the new F4 312R model is 183HP, although dyno tests suggest it is more in the range of 172- 175, in stock performance mode, a condition generally resolved by simple after market adjustments. In 1999 the Cagiva group was restructured for strategic purposes and MV Agusta become the main brand comprising Cagiva and Husqvarna. Purchase and sale by Proton Heavily indebted, the manufacturer was bought by Malaysian carmaker Proton in December 2004 for 70 million euro. In December 2005 however, Proton decided to cut its ties with MV Agusta and sold it to GEVI SpA, a Genoa-based financing company related to Carige, for a token euro excluding debt. In 2006 that financing company, GEVI SpA, with 65% of the share capital, had refinanced MV Agusta, and by so doing allowed the company to continue, and brought MV Agusta ownership back to Italy. Husqvarna sale to BMW In July 2007 MV Agusta Motor S.p.A, sold the Husqvarna motorcycle brand to BMW Motorrad for an undisclosed amount. Accorting to MV Agusta president Claudio Castiglioni, the sale was a strategic step to concentrate all of the company's resources in order to expand MV Agusta and Cagiva presence in the international markets having more financial resources for new models development. Acquisition by Harley-Davidson Following years of stalled ownership, many customers were demanding a re-design of the outdated and geriatric F4 model, but the financial status of the company did not allow it. On July 11, 2008 Harley-Davidson announced they had signed a definitive agreement to acquire the MV Agusta Group for $109M USD (€70M). The purchase has sparked much interest and hope for a new direction for the company. The acquisition was completed on August 8th. Racing Grand Prix Racing Agostini "Ago" MV Agusta 350 Four Cylinder Count Vincenzo and Domenico Agusta had a passion for mechanical workings and for motorcycle racing. They were determined to have the best Grand Prix motorcycle racing team in the world and spared no expense on their passion. They achieved this goal by hiring some of the best riders of the time, namely Carlo Ubbiali, John Surtees, Mike Hailwood, Giacomo Agostini, Phil Read, and others, and having the best engineers, most notably Arturo Magni. The three and four cylinder race bikes were known for their excellent road handling. The fire-engine red racing machines became a hallmark of Grand Prix racing in the 1960s and early 1970s, winning 17 consecutive 500 cc World Championships, and 63 World Championships overall. With the death of Count Domenico Agusta in 1971, the company lost its guiding force. The company won their last Grand Prix in 1976, and by the 1980 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, they were out of racing. Between 1948 and 1976 MV Agusta motorcycles have won over 3000 races. In 1948 the company built a 125 cc two stroke single and entered Franco Bertoni in the Italian Grand Prix. Bertoni won the event held in Monza and instantly put the new motorcycle manufacturer on the map. In 1949 the 125 cc or Ultra light weight class gained new prestige. More motorcycle manufacturers were competing in the inaugural World Championships that were held in Switzerland, Holland and Italy. The Mondial 125 cc Dohc design dominated the 1949 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season. The MV riders placed 9th and 10th in the final standings. 1950 and 1951 were development years , as the company adopted the 125 Dohc four stroke engine. Racing efforts only produced a fifth place finish at Assen Dutch TT in 1950. The 1951 results were only slightly better. MV Racing engine 125cc In 1950 Arturo Magni and Piero Remor joined the company after working with Gilera. Magni was the chief mechanic and Remor was chief designer. 1952 saw the introduction of telescopic forks , full width alloy brake hubs and a sleek fuel tank on the 125 race bike. Power was 15 bhp @ 10,800 rpms. Britain's Cecil Stanford piloted the new MV 125 to a Isle of Man TT victory and went on to win the 1952 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season In 1953 the race engineers adopted the Earl-type forks to help with handling problems on the works racers. The 1953 season saw the introduction of the 350 Four. MV’s racing efforts now included the 500cc, 350cc and 125cc class. With the success of the 52’ season , independent or “privateer” riders could now purchase a “catalog” version of the 125 Dohc , now available through the company. The Sport Competizione racer had many of the same features as the factory bike. These included a multi-plate clutch , gear-driven oil pump , Dell'Orto 27mm SS1 carburetor and remote float chamber. The bike was nick-named “The Boy Racer”. The mid 1950’s saw the introduction of the 175cc class. MV Agusta produced the 175 CSS for street use and also developed a 175cc production racer for privateer racing. The 175cc was very popular in Britain in the mid fifties. Racers like , Micheal O’Rourke, Derek Minter and Bob Keeler raced the 175 and 125 Sport Competizione around Europe with a great deal of success. The marketing strategy of “race it on Sunday , sell it on Monday” was employed . 1957 the young Mike Hailwood raced the MV 175cc . Later , Hailwood would become the one of the most successful motorcycle racers of all time. For racing , early MV racing engines had the right side casting removed for instant access to the gear box. The 1950’s had notable MV Agusta racers like Bill Lamos, Nello Pagani , Ray Amm , Fortunato Libanori , Luigi Taveri , Umberto Mosseti and Remo Venturi that brought many victories to MV Agusta racing. In late 1955 , MV approached and signed John Surtees. Surtees , in his inaugural season with MV Agusta won the 1956 500c World Championship on the Quattro Cilindri. From 1958-1960 , John Surtees would go on to win an additional six World Championships for MV in the 350cc and 500cc classes. The 1960’s 500cc World Championships were dominated by MV Agusta , with riders Gary Hocking , Mike Hailwood and Giacomo Agostini. In 1968 , Agostini won the 350cc World Championship title , followed by five consecutive years of 350cc World Championships for MV. Return to Racing Daytona International Podium, MV Agusta F4 Although there were no factory racing efforts , independent or ”privateer” teams were racing the F4 750. In 2003 , Big Show Racing , Chicago Illinois; fielded an F4 750 in the Formula USA , Daytona International Speedway 200 Mile Team Challenge. The team placed second overall with riders Larry Denning and Aaron Risinger piloting the bike. In May 2007, the company confirmed its return to racing in the 2008 Superbike World Championship.Carl Fogarty's English based Team Foggy Racing was going to run the team. Fogarty however abandoned the plans to return to the Superbike World Championship because of lack of sponsorship. MV Agusta's racing program for 2008 will see MV Agusta compete in the Italian Superbike Championship and, depending on the level of competitiveness achieved, in select rounds in the Superbike World Championship. Luca Scassa will be the only factory backed rider. His bikes will be developed directly by the MV Agusta racing department in Schiranna, Varese Italy. MV Agusta motorcycles will also compete in the Australian Superbike Championship, the German Superbike Championship, the British Superbike Championship, the French Superbike Championship and the Endurance World Championship. Production Models 1946-1980 98cc 1946-1949 125 Twin 1947 125 3-Speed 1948-1949 125 TEL 1949-1954 125 CSL Scooter 1949-1951 1956 Pullman 125cc 250 1947-1951 125 Motore Lungo 1950-1953 125 CGT Scooter 1950-1952 500 Turismo 1950 Ovunque Scooter 1951-1954 150 1952-1953 175 CS 1953-1959 Pullman 1953-1956 125 Turismo Rapido 1954-1958 48 Moped 1955-1959 1952 150cc Turismo Superpullman 1955-1957 300 Twin 1955 Raid 250cc-300cc 1956-1962 Ottantatre 83cc 1958-1960 175 A B 1958-1959 125 TREL. Centomila 1959-1963 150 4T 1959-1970 Chicco Scooter 1960-1964 Tevere 235 1959-1960 Checca ( 83cc-99cc-125cc ) 1960-1969 Liberty 50cc 1962-1969 1972 MV Agusta 350 Germano 50cc 1964-1968 Arno 166 GT 1964-1965 125 GT-GTL 1964-1973 125 Regolarita 1965-1970 250 Twin 1966-1971 Four Cylinder series 1965-1980 600 tourer 750 GT 750SS 750 Sport (drum brake)1972-74 750 Sport (Disc brake)1974 750 Sport America 1975-78 850SS MV Agusta 350B Sport 1970-1974 350 Ipotesi 1975-1980 125 Sport 1975-1980 Race Models 1946-1976 MV Agusta Racing 98/125 Two Stroke 1946-1949 125 Twin-Cam 1950-1960 500cc Shaft Drive Four MV Agusta 125 Sohc 1953-1956 175 Twin-Cam 1955-1958 250 Single 1955-1959 350 Twin 1957 250 Twin 1959-1966 500cc Four 500cc Six Cylinder 1957-1958 125 Disc Valve 1965 350cc Three Cylinder 1965-1973 MV Agusta 500 Three 1966-1974 350cc Six Cylinder 1969 350cc Four Cylinder 1971-1976 500cc Four Cylinder 1973-1976 Models , 1998 - Current Brutale Brutale 1078RR Brutale 910S Brutale 910R Brutale 750S F4 F4 1000 R / R 1+1 F4CC F4 R312 F4 750 S / 1+1 F4 1000 S / 1+1 Limited Editions F4 Tamburini F4 1000 Senna Brutale ORO F4 SPR Brutale America F4 AGO Brutale Gladio F4 Mamba F4 Corse A limited production edition of the F41000R known as the F4 CC, named after Claudio Castiglioni (the managing director of MV Agusta), is the most expensive production motorcycle with a manufacturer's suggested retail price of $120,000 USD. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Italian Provinces Province of BIELLA Region PIEMONTE (PIEDMONT) Official Website: www.provincia.biella.it The Province of Biella eas established in 1992, and is renowned for its fine landscapes and its role in the rise of industries in Piedmont. It is an ancient destination of pilgrimages, with sanctuaries, such as the Oropa (a World Heritage Site), Graglia and San Giovanni d'Andorno sanctuary. The province capital Biella is known as the Italian Manchester d'Italia, because of the great number of textile mills that rose here during the 19th century. Info: Area: 914 km² -- Population: about 185,000 inhabitants -- Zip/postal codes: 13900 -- Phone Area Codes: 015 -- Car Plate: BI -- Communes: 82 communes The Comuni in the Province of Biella Ailoche | Andorno Micca | Benna | Biella | Bioglio | Borriana | Brusnengo | Callabiana | Camandona | Camburzano | Campiglia Cervo | Candelo | Caprile | Casapinta | Castelletto Cervo | Cavaglià | Cerreto Castello | Cerrione | Coggiola | Cossato | Crevacuore | Crosa | Curino | Donato | Dorzano | Gaglianico | Gifflenga | Graglia | Lessona | Magnano | Massazza | Masserano | Mezzana Mortigliengo | Miagliano | Mongrando | Mosso | Mottalciata | Muzzano | Netro | Occhieppo Inferiore | Occhieppo Superiore | Pettinengo | Piatto | Piedicavallo | Pollone | Ponderano | Portula | Pralungo | Pray | Quaregna | Quittengo | Ronco Biellese | Roppolo | Rosazza | Sagliano Micca | Sala Biellese | Salussola | San Paolo Cervo | Sandigliano | Selve Marcone | Soprana | Sordevolo | Sostegno | Strona | Tavigliano | Ternengo | Tollegno | Torrazzo | Trivero | Valdengo | Vallanzengo | Valle Mosso | Valle San Nicolao | Veglio | Verrone | Vigliano Biellese | Villa del Bosco | Villanova Biellese | Viverone | Zimone | Zubiena | Zumaglia ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Province of CUNEO Region PIEMONTE (PIEDMONT) Official Website: www.provincia.cuneo.it The eastern area of the province, a territory of gentle, fertile hills called "Langhe" is renowned for its vineyards and castles. The main center of the Langhe area is Alba, the world capital ot truffles, and the seat of the celebrated Ferrero factory, producer of Nutella, Rocher and Kinder chocolate brands. Info: Area: 6,903 km² -- Population: about 560,000 inhabitants -- Zip/postal codes: 12100, 12010-12089 -- Phone Area Codes: 0171 -- Car Plate: CN -- Communes: 250 communes The Comuni in the Province of Cuneo Acceglio | Aisone | Alba | Albaretto della Torre | Alto | Argentera | Arguello | Bagnasco | Bagnolo Piemonte | Baldissero d'Alba | Barbaresco | Barge | Barolo | Bastia Mondovì | Battifollo | Beinette | Bellino | Belvedere Langhe | Bene Vagienna | Benevello | Bergolo | Bernezzo | Bonvicino | Borgo San Dalmazzo | Borgomale | Bosia | Bossolasco | Boves | Bra | Briaglia | Briga Alta | Brondello | Brossasco | Busca | Camerana | Camo | Canale | Canosio | Caprauna | Caraglio | Caramagna Piemonte | Cardè | Carrù | Cartignano | Casalgrasso | Castagnito | Casteldelfino | Castellar | Castelletto Stura | Castelletto Uzzone | Castellinaldo | Castellino Tanaro | Castelmagno | Castelnuovo di Ceva | Castiglione Falletto | Castiglione Tinella | Castino | Cavallerleone | Cavallermaggiore | Celle di Macra | Centallo | Ceresole Alba | Cerreto Langhe | Cervasca | Cervere | Ceva | Cherasco | Chiusa di Pesio | Cigliè | Cissone | Clavesana | Corneliano d'Alba | Cortemilia | Cossano Belbo | Costigliole Saluzzo | Cravanzana | Crissolo | Cuneo | Demonte | Diano d'Alba | Dogliani | Dronero | Elva | Entracque | Envie | Farigliano | Faule | Feisoglio | Fossano | Frabosa Soprana | Frabosa Sottana | Frassino | Gaiola | Gambasca | Garessio | Genola | Gorzegno | Gottasecca | Govone | Grinzane Cavour | Guarene | Igliano | Isasca | La Morra | Lagnasco | Lequio Berria | Lequio Tanaro | Lesegno | Levice | Limone Piemonte | Lisio | Macra | Magliano Alfieri | Magliano Alpi | Mango | Manta | Marene | Margarita | Marmora | Marsaglia | Martiniana Po | Melle | Moiola | Mombarcaro | Mombasiglio | Monastero di Vasco | Monasterolo Casotto | Monasterolo di Savigliano | Monchiero | Mondovì | Monesiglio | Monforte d'Alba | Montà | Montaldo di Mondovì | Montaldo Roero | Montanera | Montelupo Albese | Montemale di Cuneo | Monterosso Grana | Monteu Roero | Montezemolo | Monticello d'Alba | Moretta | Morozzo | Murazzano | Murello | Narzole | Neive | Neviglie | Niella Belbo | Niella Tanaro | Novello | Nucetto | Oncino | Ormea | Ostana | Paesana | Pagno | Pamparato | Paroldo | Perletto | Perlo | Peveragno | Pezzolo Valle Uzzone | Pianfei | Piasco | Pietraporzio | Piobesi d'Alba | Piozzo | Pocapaglia | Polonghera | Pontechianale | Pradleves | Prazzo | Priero | Priocca | Priola | Prunetto | Racconigi | Revello | Rifreddo | Rittana | Roaschia | Roascio | Robilante | Roburent | Rocca Cigliè | Rocca de' Baldi | Roccabruna | Roccaforte Mondovì | Roccasparvera | Roccavione | Rocchetta Belbo | Roddi | Roddino | Rodello | Rossana | Ruffia | Sale delle Langhe | Sale San Giovanni | Saliceto | Salmour | Saluzzo | Sambuco | Sampeyre | San Benedetto Belbo | San Damiano Macra | San Michele Mondovì | Sanfrè | Sanfront | Santa Vittoria d'Alba | Sant'Albano Stura | Santo Stefano Belbo | Santo Stefano Roero | Savigliano | Scagnello | Scarnafigi | Serralunga d'Alba | Serravalle Langhe | Sinio | Somano | Sommariva del Bosco | Sommariva Perno | Stroppo | Tarantasca | Torre Bormida | Torre Mondovì | Torre San Giorgio | Torresina | Treiso | Trezzo Tinella | Trinità | Valdieri | Valgrana | Valloriate | Valmala | Venasca | Verduno | Vernante | Verzuolo | Vezza d'Alba | Vicoforte | Vignolo | Villafalletto | Villanova Mondovì | Villanova Solaro | Villar San Costanzo | Vinadio | Viola | Vottignasco ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Province of NOVARA Region PIEMONTE (PIEDMONT) Official Website: www.provincia.novara.it The geographical borders of the province between the Ticino and Sesia rivers is the main feature of the territory, and explains both the economy and the history of the human settlements in the area. The Ticino river, naturally navigable since antiquity, was a main communication route and allowed to reach as far as Venice. History After the Roman period and the Lombard rule, an important stage in the life of the province was the presence of the church: in the 9th century AD the Franks organized the territory in "pievi" (parishes) all subject to the bishop of Novara. In 1354 Galeazzo II Visconti was appointed as feudal lord of the territory, which he divided into four districts called "squadre" (Sesia, Agogna, Inferiore and Ticino) for a more thorough control of taxes and mercenary troops. In 1361 the province was sacked by a Societas Anglicorum, armies of English mercenaries, also called the White Army from the colors of the uniforms, led by condottiere Albert Sterz, finally defeated by Luchino dal Verme. In July 1468 Galeazzo Maria Sforza married Bona di Savoia, and this wedding marked the beginning of the Savoy influence. A terrible plague in the years 1629 and 1630 stormed the area, already decimated by a famine in the two previous years. When the plague was over, there was a gradual rise in population and improvements in the agricultural techniques. Finally the Spanish domination ended in 1706, when the area came under Austrian control, to pass finally under the Savoy in 1734. The new rulers introduced administrative and social reforms, which paved the way to the more important agricultural reform of the 1850's under the influence of the wise minister and entrepreneur Camillo Benso Count of Cavour (1810-61), one of the greatest political figures in Italian history. Cavour ordered the construction of canals in the plain of Novara, and introduced the reforms and projects that he had already successfully tried on his own lands, and developed the cultivation of rice, of which the province is one of the major rice producers. Info: Area: 1,339 km² -- Population: about 350,000 inhabitants -- Zip/postal codes: from 28010 to 28100 -- Phone Area Codes: 011, 0161, 0163, 0321, 0322, 0323, 0331 -- Car Plate: NO -- Communes: 88 communes The Comuni in the Province of Novara Agrate Conturbia | Ameno | Armeno | Comune of Arona | Barengo | Bellinzago Novarese | Biandrate | Boca | Bogogno | Bolzano Novarese | Borgo Ticino | Borgolavezzaro | Borgomanero | Briga Novarese | Briona | Caltignaga | Cameri | Carpignano Sesia | Casalbeltrame | Casaleggio Novara | Casalino | Casalvolone | Castellazzo Novarese | Castelletto sopra Ticino | Cavaglietto | Cavaglio d'Agogna | Cavallirio | Cerano | Colazza | Comignago | Cressa | Cureggio | Divignano | Dormelletto | Fara Novarese | Fontaneto d'Agogna | Galliate | Garbagna Novarese | Gargallo | Gattico | Ghemme | Gozzano | Granozzo con Monticello | Grignasco | Invorio | Landiona | Lesa | Maggiora | Mandello Vitta | Marano Ticino | Massino Visconti | Meina | Mezzomerico | Miasino | Momo | Nebbiuno | Nibbiola | Comune of Novara | Oleggio | Oleggio Castello | Orta San Giulio | Paruzzaro | Pella | Pettenasco | Pisano | Pogno | Pombia | Prato Sesia | Recetto | Romagnano Sesia | Romentino | San Maurizio d'Opaglio | San Nazzaro Sesia | San Pietro Mosezzo | Sillavengo | Sizzano | Soriso | Sozzago | Suno | Terdobbiate | Tornaco | Trecate | Vaprio d'Agogna | Varallo Pombia | Veruno | Vespolate | Vicolungo | Vinzaglio ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Province of VERBANO-CUSIO-OSSOLA Region PIEMONTE (PIEDMONT) Official Website: www.provincia.verbania.it The Province of Verbano-Cusio-Ossola is the northernmost province in Piedmont, has a surface area of 2,255 sq km, with a total population of about 160,000 inhabitants. It is administratively divided into 77 Municipalities. The province was established in 1992 with territory from the Province of Novara, its central seat is in the town of Verbania but province offices are also in Baveno, Crevoladossola, Domodossola and Gravellona Toce. The territory includes Lake Verbano with the famous Borromee Isles and the smaller lakes of Mergozzo and Orta, and natural areas like the National Park of Val Grande, the Alpe Veglia and Alpe Devero Parks, as well as Alpine valleys of exceptional beauty, like the Val Formazza. From the area of Macugnaga there is also the most spectacular view of the Monte Rosa massif, whose Dufour Peak is the second highest mountain in Europe. The Comuni in the Province of Verbano-Cusio- Ossola Comune of Antrona Schieranco | Anzola d'Ossola | Arizzano | Arola | Aurano | Baceno | Bannio Anzino | Baveno | Bee | Beura Cardezza | Bognanco | Brovello Carpugnino | Calasca Castiglione | Cambiasca | Cannero Riviera | Cannobio | Caprezzo | Casale Corte Cerro | Cavaglio Spoccia | Ceppo Morelli | Cesara | Cossogno | Craveggia | Crevoladossola | Crodo | Cursolo Orasso | Domodossola | Druogno | Falmenta | Formazza | Germagno | Ghiffa | Gignese | Gravellona Toce | Gurro | Intragna | Loreglia | Macugnaga | Malesco | Masera | Massiola | Mergozzo | Miazzina | Montecrestese | Montescheno | Nonio | Oggebbio | Omegna | Ornavasso | Pallanzeno | Piedimulera | Pieve Vergonte | Premeno | Premia | Premosello Chiovenda | Quarna Sopra | Quarna Sotto | Re | San Bernardino Verbano | Santa Maria Maggiore | Seppiana | Stresa | Toceno | Trarego Viggiona | Trasquera | Trontano | Valstrona | Vanzone con San Carlo | Varzo | Verbania | Viganella | Vignone | Villadossola | Villette | Vogogna ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Province of VERCELLI Region PIEMONTE (PIEDMONT) Official Website: www.provincia.vercelli.it Before 1859 the province included also the areas of Biella and Casale. In the 1870's the provinces of Vercelli, Ivrea, Savona and Lodi were suppressed, and Vercelli was included in the province of Novara. The province was reestablished on 2 january 1927. It appears divided into two areas, the northern Valsesia, and the southern area around the city of Vercelli. The economy was always based on the cultivation of rice of many qualities, a lively building sector and, in more recent decades, tourism in the northern skiing areas of the Valsesia. Info: Area: 2,088 km² -- Population: about 180,000 inhabitants -- Zip/postal codes: from 13010 to 13100 -- Phone Area Codes: 015, 0161, 0163 -- Car Plate: VC -- Communes: 86 communes The Comuni in the Province of Vercelli Alagna Valsesia | Albano Vercellese | Alice Castello | Arborio | Asigliano Vercellese | Balmuccia | Balocco | Bianze' | Boccioleto | Borgo d'Ale | Borgosesia | Borgo Vercelli | Breia | Buronzo | Campertogno | Carcoforo | Caresana | Caresanablot | Carisio | Casanova Elvo | Cellio | Cervatto | Cigliano | Civiasco | Collobiano | Costanzana | Cravagliana | Crescentino | Crova | Desana | Fobello | Fontanetto Po | Formigliana | Gattinara | Ghislarengo | Greggio | Guardabosone | Lamporo | Lenta | Lignana | Livorno Ferraris | Lozzolo | Mollia | Moncrivello | Motta Dei Conti | Olcenengo | Oldenico | Palazzolo Vercellese | Pertengo | Pezzana | Pila | Piode | Postua | Prarolo | Quarona | Quinto Vercellese | Rassa | Rima San Giuseppe | Rimasco | Rimella | Riva Valdobbia | Rive | Roasio | Ronsecco | Rossa | Rovasenda | Sabbia | Salasco | Sali Vercellese | Saluggia | San Germano Vercellese | San Giacomo Vercellese | Santhia' | Scopa | Scopello | Serravalle Sesia | Stroppiana | Tricerro | Trino | Tronzano Vercellese | Valduggia | Varallo | Vercelli | Villarboit | Villata | Vocca ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Italian Language Simple Prepositions Preposizioni Semplici di (d’) of, from a at, to, in da from, by in in con with su on per for tra, fra between Examples: Vive a Roma. (She lives in Rome.) L’aereo arriva da Londra. (The airplane arrives from London.) Abita in California. (He lives in California.) Parlo con Andrea. (I’m talking with Andrea.) I libri sono su un banco. (The books are on a desk.) La penna è tra i quaderni. (The pen is between the notebooks.) La chiamata è per Teresa. (The call is for Teresa.) The preposition di expresses possession as well as place of origin: Di chi è questa rivista?—È di Lucia. Whose magazine is this?—It’s Lucia’s. Di dov’è James?—È di Miami. Where is James from?— He’s from Miami. The English to and in are translated by the Italian preposition a when used with the name of a city or a small island. Vado a Venezia. (I am going to Venice.) Abitano a Venezia. (They live in Venice.) Vanno a Capri. (They are going to Capri.) Abitano a Ischia. (They live in Ischia.) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Italian History Italo-Venezuelani (Italian-Venezuelans) Notable Italo-Venezuelani (Italian-Venezuelans) Jaime Lusinchi Pompeo D'Ambrosio Johnny Cecotto Total Population: 310,000 of whom 213,000 with Italian citizenship (census 1971) Regions with Significant Populations: Caracas, Valencia, Maracaibo, Puerto La Cruz, Maracay, Merida and surrounding areas. Languages: Italian, Spanish Religion: Roman Catholic Italo-Venezuelani (Italian-Venezuelans) are the Venezuelan citizens of Italian descent. The word may refer to someone born in Venezuela of Italian descent or to someone who has emigrated to Venezuela from Italy. Among European Venezuelans, Italians are the largest groups of immigrants to settle in the country. History Before the discovery of huge deposits of oil in Venezuela, during the first half of the XX century, the emigration of Italians to Venezuela was very limited. Only a few hundreds (like Agostino Codazzi) moved to Venezuela from Italy during the colonial times and the Simon Bolivar era. But in the 1940s and 1950s the Venezuelan President Marcos Pérez Jiménez promoted the European immigration to his depopulated country, and so more than 300,000 Italians moved in (even if many returned later to Italy). The Italians in the 1961 Venezuelan census were the biggest European community in Venezuela (ahead of the Spanish). In 1976 the "Dirección de Estadísticas" of Venezuela registered 210,350 Italians residents and 25,858 Italians "naturalizaded" (who got Venezuelan citizenship). Marisa Vannini calculated that in the eighties the Italo-Venezuelani (Italian-Venezuelans) were nearly 400,000, including (and in addition to the Italians emigrated from Italy) more that 120,000 descendants of second generation. Actually, the Italian language in Venezuela is influencing with some modisms and loanwords the Venezuelan Spanish and is experiencing a notable revival between the Italo-Venezuelani (Italian-Venezuelans) of second and third generation. Santander Laya-Garrido estimated that the Venezuelans with at least one grandparent from Italy can be nearly one million at the beginning of the XXI century (like the former president of Venezuela, Raul Leoni, whose grandfather was an Italian mason refugee of the XIX century). Actually the Italians resident in Venezuela are reduced to less than 50,000 due mainly to demographic mortality and to their return to Italy (because of a Venezuelan political and economic crisis in the 2000s). Italian Population in Venezuela Census Year Venezuelan population Italian population % Italians over foreigners % Italians over total population 1881 2,075,245 3,237 6.6 0.15 1941 3,850,771 3,034 6.3 0.07 1950 5,091,543 136,705 31.1 3.01 1961 7,523,999 113,631 24.6 1.51 1971 10,721,522 213,000 22.3 1.99 2001 23,054,210 49,337 4.86 0.04 Professions of the Italo-Venezuelani (Italian-Venezuelans) Initially the agriculture was one of the main activities of the Italian Community in Venezuela. In the fifties entire Italian families were moved from Italy to special agricultural areas, like in the "Colonia Turén" of the Portuguesa region. But most of the Italians concentrated in commercial, building and services activities during the second half of the XX century. In those sectors the Italians reached the top levels of the Venezuelan economy. The main Italian newspapers of the community are Il Corriere di Caracas and La Voce d'Italia, both published in the Capital, while the main Italian school is the Agustin Codazzi of Caracas (with courses from elementary to high school). Since 2002, the Italian Government has become the promoter for a provision which makes it mandatory to teach the Italian language as a second language in a consistent number of public and private schools within Venezuela. Indeed, the Italo-Venezuelani (Italian-Venezuelans) have obtained significant results in the contemporary society of Venezuela. The Italian Embassy calculates that 1/4 of the Venezuelan industries, not related to the oil sector, are directly or indirectly owned and/or managed by Italo-Venezuelans. Daniela Di Giacomo, Miss International 2006 In the Italian community, actually one of the most important in Venezuela, there are Presidents of Venezuela (like Jaime Lusinchi and Raul Leoni), entrepreneurs (like ing. Delfino, who with his "Constructora Delpre" made in Caracas the tallest skyscrapers of South America: Parque Central Complex), managers (like Pompeo D'Ambrosio), sportmen (like Johnny Cecotto), artists (like Franco De Vita), beauty pageants (like Daniela Di Giacomo and Nina Sicilia), and many others personalities. Notable Italian-Venezuelans Jaime Lusinchi. President of Venezuela (1984-1989) Raul Leoni. President of Venezuela (1963-1968) Agostino Codazzi. Geographer, Cartographer, Military Officer, Governor Renny Ottolina. Artist, TV Anchor, Politician Pompeo D'Ambrosio. Financial Manager, Vice-President of Bank Johnny Cecotto. Sportman (moto & race cars) Daniela Di Giacomo. Miss International 2006 Ivan Palazzese. Sportman (moto) Franco De Vita. Artist, Singer, Composer, Pianist Marco Scutaro. International Baseball Player Italo Pizzolante. Poet, Composer, Musician Viviana Gibelli. TV Host and Actress Geographical Distribution and Origin The Italians moved to Venezuela mainly from the poor regions of South Italy (like Sicily), but even from the north (Emilia-Romagna and Veneto). Areas where the Italian Community is Concentrated The Italian Consulate in Caracas stated that in 1977 - of 210,350 Italians residents in Venezuela - 39,855 were from Sicily, 35,802 from Campania, 20,808 from Abruzzi, 18,520 from Puglia, but even 8,953 from Veneto, 7,650 from Emilia-Romagna and 6,184 from Friuli-Venezia Giulia. The Italians are concentrated mainly in the north-central region of Venezuela around Caracas. The Consulate stated that in the same 1977 there were 98,106 Italians in the Distrito Federal of Caracas, 39,508 in Miranda State, 14,203 in Maracaibo, 12.801 in Aragua State and 8,104 in Carabobo State, but even 66 in the Amazonas equatorial region. Actually, in the 2000s, nearly 90% of the Italo-Venezuelans are concentrated in the northern coastal section of Venezuela facing the Caribbean sea. Aproximately 2/3 of them are residents of the metropolitan areas of the three main Venezuelan cities: Caracas, Maracaibo and Valencia. Main Italian-Venezuelan Institutions and Associations Asociación Civil "Agustin Codazzi" in Caracas Casa de Italia in Caracas, Maracay, Valencia, Ciudad Bolivar Centro Italo-Venezolano in Caracas, Barcelona, Maracaibo, Valencia. Club Social Italiano in Puerto La Cruz, Acarigua Deportivo Italia Football Club Instituto Italiano de Cultura in Caracas Camera di Commercio, Industria ed Agricoltura Venezuelana-Italiana in Caracas Regional Associations of Italians in Venezuela Genealogía Italiana en Venezuela http://www.italven.org -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Italian Products Gnocchi Gnocchi mixed with ricotta. Gnocchi being prepared. Gnocchi (pronounced [ˈɲɔːki] in Italian; singular gnocco) is the Italian name for a variety of thick, soft noodle or dumpling. They may be made from semolina, ordinary wheat flour, potato, bread crumbs, or other ingredients. The word gnocco means "lump", and comes from nocchio, a knot in the wood. It’s been a traditional Italian pasta type of probably Middle Eastern origin since Roman times (Imperium Romanum). It was introduced by the Roman Legions while the enormous expansion of the empire into the countries of the European continent. In the past 2000 years each country developed its own specific type of small dumplings, with the ancient Gnocchi as their common ancestor. In Roman times, gnocchi were made from a semolina porridge-like dough mixed with eggs, and are still found in similar forms today, particularly in Sardinia. One variety, gnocchi di pane (literally bread noodles), is made from bread crumbs and is popular in Friuli and Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol. The use of potato is a relatively recent innovation, occuring after the introduction of the potato to Europe in the 16th century. Gnocchi are eaten as entrées (primi piatti) in Italy or as alternatives to minestre ("soups") or pasta. Gnocchi are widely available dried, frozen, or fresh in vacuum sealed packages in supermarkets and Italian specialty stores. Classic accompaniments of gnocchi include tomato sauces, pesto, and melted butter (sometimes fried butter) with cheese. In Latin America At the start of the 20th century waves of European immigrants arrived to Latin America. In Argentina, over 50% of those immigrants came from Italy, and they brought their traditions and cuisine along with them. In Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Venezuela, countries where Italian cuisine is especially popular, gnocchi (known as ñoquis in Spanish-speaking countries or nhoque in Brazil) are traditionally eaten on the 29th day of each month.[citation needed] Argentines, Paraguayans and Uruguayans gather each month (exept february) specifically to eat "ñoquis del 29" (literally, "gnocchi of the 29th"). On these occasions, some people leave a banknote under the plate to attract prosperity. There are two popular explanations for these customs. One is that 29th is the day before payday, when money was tight and gnocchi were cheap and hearty fare. The other is that the 29th is the feast day of Saint Pantaleon, one of the patron saints of Venice, who was canonized on this date. Pantaleon was a doctor in the 8th century who, upon converting to Christianity, made a pilgrimage across Northern Italy. Along the way, he practiced miraculous healings that led to his sainthood. On one occasion, he asked some poor farmers for a little bread, and they invited him to share their meager meal. He blessed the farmers, who reported abundant crops the next year-another miracle. Eating simple food (represented by the ñoquis) on his feast day is the customary way to honor that miracle and ask for prosperity and blessings. In a curious reversal of meaning, in Argentine and Uruguayan slang ñoqui has also become a way to denote a government employee that is listed in the payroll but only shows up to collect his or her paycheck around the 29th of each month. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Famous Italians Enrico Fermi Born: 29 September 1901 (1901-09-29) Roma (Rome), Italy Died: November 28, 1954 (aged 53) Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A. Citizenship: Italy (1901-1938), United States (1944-1954) Fields: Physics Institutions: Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, University of Göttingen, University of Leiden, University of Roma (Rome) La Sapienza, Columbia University, University of Chicago, Alma mater Scuola Normale Superiore Known for: New radioactive elements produced by neutron irradiation, Controlled nuclear chain reaction, Fermi-Dirac statistics, Theory of beta decay Notable Awards: Nobel Prize for Physics (1938) Enrico Fermi (September 29, 1901 – November 28, 1954) was an Italian physicist most noted for his work on the development of the first nuclear reactor, and for his contributions to the development of quantum theory, nuclear and particle physics, and statistical mechanics. Fermi was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1938 for his work on induced radioactivity and is today regarded as one of the top scientists of the 20th century. He is acknowledged as a unique physicist who was highly accomplished in both theory and experiment. Fermium, a synthetic element created in 1952 is named after him. Childhood Enrico Fermi was born in Roma (Rome), Italy. His father was Alberto Fermi, a Chief Inspector of the Ministry of Communications, and his mother was Ida de Gattis, an elementary school teacher. As a young boy he enjoyed learning physics and mathematics and shared his interests with his older brother, Giulio. When Giulio died unexpectedly of a throat abscess in 1915, Enrico was distraught, and immersed himself into scientific study to distract himself. According to his own account, each day he would walk in front of the hospital where Giulio died until he became inured to the pain. One of the first source for the study of physics was a book found at the local market of Campo de' Fiori in Roma (Rome). That book, entitled Elementorum physicae mathematicae comprehend different subjects as for example mathematics, classical mechanics, astronomy, optics, and acoustics. Its 900 pages in Latin, written by father Andrea Caraffa, professor at the Collegio Romano in Rome, have been deeply studied by the young Fermi, fact proved by the different notes found inside the original book. Later, Enrico befriended another scientifically inclined student named Enrico Persico, and the two together engaged in scientific projects such as building gyroscopes, and measuring the magnetic field of the earth. Fermi's interest in physics was further encouraged by a friend of his father, Adolfo Amidei, who gave him several books on physics and mathematics, which he read and quickly assimilated. Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa In 1918 Fermi enrolled at the prestigious Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, where he was later to receive his undergraduate and doctoral degree. In order to enter the Institute, candidates had to take an entrance exam which included an essay. For his essay on the given theme Characteristics of Sound, 17-year-old Fermi chose to derive and solve the Fourier analysis based partial differential equation for waves on a string. The examiner, Prof. Giulio Pittato, interviewed Fermi and concluded that his essay would have been commendable even for a doctoral degree. Enrico Fermi ended up at the first place in the classification of the entrance exam. During the years at the Scuola Normale Superiore, Fermi teamed up with a fellow student named Franco Rasetti with whom he used to indulge in light-hearted pranks. Later, Rasetti became Fermi's close friend and collaborator. Beside attending the classes, Enrico Fermi found the time to work on with his extra-curricular activities, particularly with the help of his friend Enrico Persico, who remained in Rome to attend the university. Between 1919 and 1923 Fermi studied general relativity, quantum mechanics and atomic physics. His knowledge of quantum mechanics reached such a high level that the head of the Physics Institute, Prof. Luigi Puccianti, asked him to organize seminars about that topic. During this time he learnt tensor calculus, a mathematical instrument invented by Gregorio Ricci and Tullio Levi-Civita, and needed to demonstrate the principles of general relativity. In 1921, his third year at the university, he published his first scientific works on the Italian magazine Nuovo Cimento: the first was entitled: "On the dynamic of a solid system of electrical charges in transient conditions"; the second: "On the electrostatic of a uniform gravitational field of electromagnetic charges and on the weight of electromagnetic charges". At first glance, the first paper seemed to point out a contradiction between the electrodynamic theory and the relativistic one concerning the calculation of the electromagnetic masses. After one year with a work entitled "Correction of severe discrepancy between electrodynamic theory and the relativistic one of electromagnetic charges. Inertia and weight of electricity", Enrico Fermi showed the correctness of his paper. This last publication was so successful that was translated into German and published in the famous German scientific magazine "Physikalische Zeitschrift". In 1922 he published his first important scientific work in the Italian magazine I Rendiconti dell'Accademia dei Lincei entitled "On the phenomena that happen close to the line of time", where he introduces for the first time the so-called "Fermi's coordinates", and proves that when close to the time line, space behaves as an euclidean one. In 1922 Fermi graduated from Scuola Normale Superiore. In 1923, while writing the appendix for the Italian edition of the book "Foundation of Einstein's relativity" written by A. Kopff, Enrico Fermi pointed out, for the first time, the fact that beside(?) the famous Einstein equation (E = mc^2), there was a enormous amount of energy (nuclear energy) to be exploited. Fermi's Ph.D advisor was Luigi Puccianti. In 1924 Fermi spent a semester in Göttingen, and then stayed for a few months in Leiden with Paul Ehrenfest. From January 1925 to the autumn of 1926, he stayed at the University of Florence. In this period he wrote his work on the Fermi-Dirac statistics. When he was only 24 years old, Fermi took a [professorship at the Rome (first inatomic physics in Italy) which he won in a competition held by Professor Orso Mario Corbino, director of the Institute of Physics). Corbino helped Fermi in selecting his team, which soon was joined by notable minds like Edoardo Amaldi, Bruno Pontecorvo, Franco Rasetti and Emilio Segrè. For the theoretical studies only, Ettore Majorana also took part in what was soon nicknamed "the Via Panisperna boys" (after the name of the road in which the Institute had its labs). The group went on with its now famous experiments, but in 1933 Rasetti left Italy for Canada and the United States, Pontecorvo went to France and Segrè left to teach in Palermo. During their time in Roma (Rome), Fermi and his group made important contributions to many practical and theoretical aspects of physics. These include the theory of beta decay, and the discovery of slow neutrons, which was to prove pivotal for the working of nuclear reactors. His group systematically bombarded elements with slow neutrons, and during their experiments with uranium, narrowly missed observing nuclear fission. At that time, fission was thought to be improbable if not impossible, mostly on theoretical grounds. While people expected elements with higher atomic number to form from neutron bombardment of lighter elements, nobody expected neutrons to have enough energy to actually split a heavier atom into two light element fragments. However, the chemist Ida Noddack had criticised Fermi's work and had suggested that some of his experiments could have produced lighter elements. At the time, Fermi dismissed this possibility on the basis of calculations. Fermi was well-known for his simplicity in solving problems. He began his inquiries with the simplest lines of mathematical reasoning, then later produced complete solutions to the problems he deemed worth pursuing. His abilities as a great scientist, combining theoretical and applied nuclear physics, were acknowledged by all. He influenced many physicists who worked with him, such as Hans Bethe, who spent two semesters working with Fermi in the early 1930s. From the time he was a boy, Fermi meticulously recorded his calculations in notebooks, and later used to solve many new problems that he encountered based on these earlier known problems. When Fermi submitted his famous paper on beta decay to the prestigious journal Nature, the journal's editor turned it down because "it contained speculations which were too remote from reality". Thus Fermi saw the theory published in Italian and in German before it was published in English. Nature eventually did publish Fermi's report on beta decay on January 16, 1939. The Manhattan Project Fermi remained in Roma (Rome) until 1938. In 1938, Fermi won the Nobel Prize in Physics at the age of 37 for his "demonstrations of the existence of new radioactive elements produced by neutron irradiation, and for his related discovery of nuclear reactions brought about by slow neutrons". Fermi (bottom left), Szilárd (second from right on bottom), and the rest of the pile team. After Fermi received the Nobel Prize in Stockholm, he, his wife Laura, and their children emigrated to New York. This was mainly because of the anti-Semitic laws promulgated by the fascist regime of Benito Mussolini which threatened Laura, who was Jewish. Also, the new laws put most of Fermi's research assistants out of work. Soon after his arrival in New York, Fermi began working at Columbia University. In December 1938, the German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann sent a manuscript to Naturwissenschaften reporting they had detected the element barium after bombarding uranium with neutrons; simultaneously, they communicated these results to Lise Meitner. Meitner, and her nephew Otto Robert Frisch, correctly interpreted these results as being nuclear fission. Frisch confirmed this experimentally on 13 January 1939. In 1944, Hahn received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry for the discovery of nuclear fission. Some historians have documented the history of the discovery of nuclear fission and believe Meitner should have been awarded the Nobel Prize with Hahn. Meitner’s and Frisch’s interpretation of the work of Hahn and Strassmann crossed the Atlantic Ocean with Niels Bohr, who was to lecture at Princeton University. Isidor Isaac Rabi and Willis Lamb, two Columbia University physicists working at Princeton, heard the news and carried it back to Columbia. Rabi said he told Enrico Fermi; Fermi gave credit to Lamb. Bohr soon thereafter went from Princeton to Columbia to see Fermi. Not finding Fermi in his office, Bohr went down to the cyclotron area and found Herbert L. Anderson. Bohr grabbed him by the shoulder and said: “Young man, let me explain to you about something new and exciting in physics.” It was clear to a number of scientists at Columbia that they should try to detect the energy released in the nuclear fission of uranium from neutron bombardment. On 25 January 1939, a Columbia University team conducted the first nuclear fission experiment in the United States, which was done in the basement of Pupin Hall; the members of the team were Herbert L. Anderson, Eugene T. Booth, John R. Dunning, Enrico Fermi, G. Norris Glasoe, and Francis G. Slack. The next day, the Fifth Washington Conference on Theoretical Physics began in Washington, D.C. under the joint auspices of The George Washington University and the Carnegie Institution of Washington. There, the news on nuclear fission was spread even further, which fostered many more experimental demonstrations. Fermi then went to the University of Chicago and began studies that led to the construction of the first nuclear pile Chicago Pile-1. Fermi recalled the beginning of the project in a speech given in 1954 when he retired as President of the American Physical Society: Fermi's ID badge photo from Los Alamos. "I remember very vividly the first month, January, 1939, that I started working at the Pupin Laboratories because things began happening very fast. In that period, Niels Bohr was on a lecture engagement at the Princeton University and I remember one afternoon Willis Lamb came back very excited and said that Bohr had leaked out great news. The great news that had leaked out was the discovery of fission and at least the outline of its interpretation. Then, somewhat later that same month, there was a meeting in Washington where the possible importance of the newly discovered phenomenon of fission was first discussed in semi-jocular earnest as a possible source of nuclear power." An image from the Fermi-Szilárd "neutronic reactor" patent. In August 1939 Leó Szilárd prepared and Albert Einstein signed the famous letter warning President Franklin D. Roosevelt of the probability that the Nazis were planning to build an atomic bomb. Because of Hitler's September 1 invasion of Poland, it was October before they could arrange for the letter to be personally delivered. Roosevelt was concerned enough that the Uranium Committee was assembled, and awarded Columbia University the first atomic energy funding of US$6,000. However, due to bureaucratic fears of foreigners doing secret research, the money was not actually issued until Szilárd implored Einstein to send a second letter to the president in the spring of 1940. The money was used in studies which led to the first nuclear reactor — Chicago Pile-1, a massive "atomic pile" of graphite bricks and uranium fuel which went critical on December 2, 1942, built in a hard racquets court under Stagg Field, the football stadium at the University of Chicago. Due to a mistranslation, Soviet reports on Enrico Fermi claimed that his work was performed in a converted "pumpkin field" instead of a "squash court", squash being an offshoot of hard racquets. This experiment was a landmark in the quest for energy, and it was typical of Fermi's brilliance. Every step had been carefully planned, every calculation meticulously done by him. When the first self-sustained nuclear chain reaction was achieved, a coded phone call was made by one of the physicists, Arthur Compton to James Conant, chairman of the National Defense Research Committee. The conversation was in impromptu code: Compton: The Italian navigator has landed in the New World. Conant: How were the natives? Compton: Very friendly. This successful initiation of a chain-reacting pile was important not only for its help in assessing the properties of fission — needed for understanding the internal workings of an atomic bomb — but also because it would serve as a pilot plant for the massive reactors which would be created in Hanford, Washington, which would then be used to produce the plutonium needed for the bombs used at the Trinity site and Nagasaki. Eventually Fermi and Szilárd's reactor work was folded into the Manhattan Project. Fermi moved to Los Alamos in the later stages of the Manhattan Project to serve as a general consultant. He was sitting in the control room of the Hanford B Reactor when it first went critical in 1944. His broad knowledge of many fields of physics was useful in solving problems that were of an interdisciplinary nature. He became a naturalized citizen of the United States of America in 1944. Fermi was present as an observer of the Trinity test on July 16, 1945. Engineer Jack Aeby saw Fermi at work: “ As the shock wave hit Base Camp, Aeby saw Enrico Fermi with a handful of torn paper. "He was dribbling it in the air. When the shock wave came it moved the confetti. He thought for a moment." Fermi had just estimated the yield of the first nuclear explosion. It was in the ball park. ” Fermi's strips-of-paper estimate was ten kilotons of TNT; the actual yield was about 19 kilotons. Post-War Work In Fermi's 1954 address to the APS he also said, "Well, this brings us to Pearl Harbor. That is the time when I left Columbia University, and after a few months of commuting between Chicago and New York, eventually moved to Chicago to keep up the work there, and from then on, with a few notable exceptions, the work at Columbia was concentrated on the isotope separation phase of the atomic energy project, initiated by Booth, Dunning and Urey about 1940". Fermi was widely regarded as the only physicist of the twentieth century who excelled both theoretically and experimentally. The well-known historian of physics, C. P. Snow, says about him, "If Fermi had been born a few years earlier, one could well imagine him discovering Rutherford's atomic nucleus, and then developing Bohr's theory of the hydrogen atom. If this sounds like hyperbole, anything about Fermi is likely to sound like hyperbole". Fermi's ability and success stemmed as much from his appraisal of the art of the possible, as from his innate skill and intelligence. He disliked complicated theories, and while he had great mathematical ability, he would never use it when the job could be done much more simply. He was famous for getting quick and accurate answers to problems which would stump other people. An instance of this was seen during the first atomic bomb test in New Mexico on July 16 1945. As the blast wave reached him, Fermi dropped bits of paper. By measuring the distance they were blown, he could compare to a previously computed table and thus estimate the bomb energy yield. He estimated that the blast was greater than 10 kilotons of TNT, the measured result was 18.6. (Rhodes, page 674). Later on, this method of getting approximate and quick answers through back-of-the-envelope calculations became informally known as the 'Fermi method'. The Enrico Fermi Street in Roma (Rome) Fermi's most disarming trait was his great modesty, and his ability to do any kind of work, whether creative or routine. It was this quality that made him popular and liked among people of all strata, from other Nobel Laureates to technicians. Henry DeWolf Smyth, who was Chairman of the Princeton Physics department, had once invited Fermi over to do some experiments with the Princeton cyclotron. Walking into the lab one day, Smyth saw the distinguished scientist helping a graduate student move a table, under another student's directions. Another time, a Du Pont executive made a visit to see him at Columbia. Not finding him either in his lab or his office, the executive was surprised to find the Nobel Laureate in the machine shop, cutting sheets of tin with a big pair of shears. After the war, Fermi served for a short time on the General Advisory Committee of the Atomic Energy Commission, a scientific committee chaired by J. Robert Oppenheimer which advised the commission on nuclear matters and policy. After the detonation of the first Soviet fission bomb in August 1949, he, along with Isidor Rabi, wrote a strongly-worded report for the committee which opposed the development of a hydrogen bomb on moral and technical grounds. But Fermi also participated in preliminary work on the hydrogen bomb at Los Alamos as a consultant, and along with Stanislaw Ulam, calculated that the amount of tritium needed for Edward Teller's model of a thermonuclear weapon would be prohibitive, and a fusion reaction could not be assured to propagate even with this large quantity of tritium. In his later years, Fermi did important work in particle physics, especially related to pions and muons. He was also known to be an inspiring teacher at the University of Chicago, and was known for his attention to detail, simplicity, and careful preparation for a lecture. Later, his lecture notes, especially those for quantum mechanics, nuclear physics, and thermodynamics, were transcribed into books which are still in print. Also in these later years he mused about a proposition which is now referred to as the "Fermi Paradox". This absurd contradiction or proposition is this: that with the billions and billions of star systems in the universe, one would think that intelligent life would have contacted our civilization by now; yet this has not happened since it takes only about 600 years for a civilization to reach potential for annihilating itself with weapons of mass destruction as it grows in knowledge exponentially. Fermi died at age 53 of stomach cancer and was interred at Oak Woods Cemetery in Chicago, Illinois. Two of his graduate students who assisted him in working on or near the nuclear pile also died of cancer. Fermi and his team knew that such work carried considerable risk but they considered the outcome so vital that they forged ahead with little regard for their own personal safety. As Eugene Wigner wrote: "Ten days before Fermi had died he told me, 'I hope it won't take long.' He had reconciled himself perfectly to his fate". A recent poll by Time magazine listed Fermi among the top twenty scientists of the century. The Fermilab particle accelerator and physics lab in Batavia, Illinois, is named after him in loving memory from the physics community. Fermi 1 & Fermi 2 nuclear power plants in Newport, Michigan are also named after him, as are many schools such as Enrico Fermi High School in Enfield, Connecticut. Fermi Court in Deep River, Ontario is named in his honour. In 1952, element 100 on the periodic table of elements was isolated from the debris of a nuclear test. In honor of Fermi's contributions to the scientific community, it was named fermium after him. Since the 1950s, the United States Atomic Energy Commission has named its highest honour, the Fermi Award, after him. Recipients of the award include well-known scientists like Otto Hahn, J. Robert Oppenheimer, Freeman Dyson, John Wheeler and Hans Bethe. Laura and Enrico Fermi Family Legacy Enrico Fermi's mother built her own pressure cooker and perhaps this inspired Enrico to build the first nuclear reactor in 1942. A pressure cooker is metal containing steam pressure. Enrico's pile was graphite containing uranium from exploding (copyright Olivia Fermi 2001-2008, unpublished manuscript). In 1928, Fermi married Laura Capon. They had two children while living in Rome, Italy: a daughter Nella Fermi Weiner, PhD (1931–1995), artist and feminist; and a son Giulio ("Judd") Fermi, PhD (1936–1997). Laura and Enrico's son Giulio worked with the Nobel laureate Max Perutz on the structure of hemoglobin. Toward the end of his life, Enrico realized his faith in society at large to make wise choices about nuclear technology was questionable. Enrico Fermi said: "Some of you may ask, what is the good of working so hard merely to collect a few facts which will bring no pleasure except to a few long-haired professors who love to collect such things and will be of no use to anybody because only few specialists at best will be able to understand them? In answer to such question[s] I may venture a fairly safe prediction. History of science and technology has consistently taught us that scientific advances in basic understanding have sooner or later led to technical and industrial applications that have revolutionized our way of life. It seems to me improbable that this effort to get at the structure of matter should be an exception to this rule. What is less certain, and what we all fervently hope, is that man will soon grow sufficiently adult to make good use of the powers that he acquires over nature." His wife, Laura Fermi (1907–1977), early environmentalist, systems thinker, prolific writer and New York Times bestselling author of "Atoms in the Family: Life with Enrico Fermi, Architect of the Atomic Age" said, of our nuclear dilemma: "But above all, there were the moral questions. I knew scientists had hoped that the bomb would not be possible, but there it was and it had already killed and destroyed so much. Was war or was science to be blamed? Should the scientists have stopped the work once they realized that a bomb was feasible? Would there always be war in the future? To these kinds of questions there is no simple answer." Rachel Fermi (1964–), photographer and teacher, Laura and Enrico Fermi's 3rd grandchild, continued to question the sanity of nuclear weapons in her book, "Picturing the Bomb". The authors juxtapose photos from the top secret world of the Manhattan Project with family photos from Los Alamos and Hanford. Olivia Fermi (1957–), formerly Alice Caton, M.A. A.B.S. - Leadership in Human Systems, ConRes Cert, photoartist, writer and business consultant, Laura and Enrico's first grandchild, is currently researching the legacy of her grandparents for a series of books she plans to publish.[21] On September 29, 2001, shortly after the destruction of the World Trade Center in New York City, Olivia flew to Rome, Italy to deliver a speech to the International Conference: Enrico Fermi and the Universe of Physics. She had been invited to speak to this gathering of physicists as a representative of the Laura and Enrico Fermi family. Olivia said]: "All of us alive today, and all who will come after us, are heirs to Enrico Fermi’s scientific legacy. We all have a stake in it. Since the end of World War II, humanity has had knowledge of nuclear energy and its incredible potential for benefit as well as harm. "Enrico Fermi gave us a lot. And there is more to be done. Enrico Fermi’s work, and the work of other scientists, exists in a world full of people who, in a certain way, are like Enrico... [funny anecdotes about occasional Enrico errors]... He, like all of us, was both brilliant and fallible. "We have a collective, developmental task. We must learn to integrate our scientific knowledge and our human experience to find the answers to the nuclear dilemma, and to the many other dilemmas facing us today. ... Our world has yet to find the right nuclear recipe – how to harness nuclear power for the benefit of all living things. "We will need all of our human gifts to survive and flourish on this planet. From here, it looks to me like Enrico contributed all of his gifts. Now it’s up to us to contribute ours. We can look back to Enrico for inspiration, if we look to ourselves for the future." The two male grandchildren of Laura and Enrico are Olivia's brother: Paul Weiner, PhD (1959–), mathematician and professor; and Rachel's brother: Daniel Fermi (1971–). Between Paul and Rachel, there are four great-grandchildren of Laura and Enrico Fermi. These two children, four grandchildren and four great-grandchildren are all the direct descendents of Laura and Enrico Fermi. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| In This Issue: |
| Issue # 12, November - December 2009 |


























































































































































































| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Italian Recipes Skillet Rosemary Focaccia Ingredients 1 teaspoon active dry yeast 1 cup lukewarm water (110 degrees F to 115 degrees F) 1 teaspoon sugar or honey 4 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil 2 1/2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour 1/2 cup cool water (70 degrees F to 85 degrees F) 2 teaspoons coarse salt 1/3 cup whole-wheat flour 1 teaspoon finely chopped fresh rosemary 1 tablespoon whole fresh rosemary leaves Cooking Directions In a medium glass bowl, stir together the yeast, lukewarm water and sugar. Let the mixture stand until foamy, about 5 minutes. Stir in 2 tablespoons of the olive oil and 1 1/2 cups of the flour. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and set in a warm spot for about 2 hours, until the mixture has doubled in volume. Remove the plastic wrap and stir in the cool water, 1 1/2 teaspoons of salt, the whole wheat flour, the remaining 1 cup of all-purpose flour and the chopped rosemary to form a wet dough. Transfer the dough to a mixer fitted with a paddle attachment and beat for 3 to 5 minutes on medium-low speed. Lightly coat the inside of another bowl with oil. Transfer the dough to the bowl, cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 12 to 24 hours. Remove the dough from the refrigerator 2 hours before baking to give it time to warm up. The dough will be bubbly and loose. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Position a rack on the middle shelf. Brush a cast-iron skillet (or 2-quart baking dish) with 1 tablespoon of olive oil. Gently scrape the dough into the skillet. Drizzle with the remaining tablespoon of olive oil. Sprinkle with salt and top with rosemary leaves. Set the dough aside to rise for 20 minutes, then bake until golden brown, about 40 minutes. Cool the focaccia in the pan for at least 20 minutes before slicing. Yield 8 servings --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |



















| --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Italian Provinces Province of TORINO (TURIN) Region PIEMONTE (PIEDMONT) Official Website: www.provincia.torino.it The province of Torino (Turin) is the second widest in Italy, and its territory is mostly high-mountain. The university and politechnic are among the most ancient and renowned in Italy, and, though smaller than Milan, the area is surely an industrial capital thanks to the automotive factories, machine technology and more recently the IT sector. The province of Torino was foremost in the Italian industrial development, thanks to the wealth of raw materials and the hydroelectric plants, but also to an enterpreneur class of great experience and foresight. But alongside with industrial progress, the province was able to maintain a strong cultural and historical identity, and to preserve natural landscapes of astounding variety and beauty, with natural parks, protected areas, tiny Alpine villages amid forests and small lakes, hundreds of miles of trekking itineraries and ski fields. Info: Area: 6,821 km² -- Population: over 2,100,000 inhabitants -- Zip/postal codes: from 10010 to 10100 -- Phone Area Codes: 011, 0121, 0122, 0123, 0124, 0125, 0161 -- Car Plate: TO -- Communes: 315 communes The Comuni in the Province of Torino (Turin) Agliè | Airasca | Ala di Stura | Albiano d'Ivrea | Alice Superiore | Almese | Alpette | Alpignano | Andezeno | Andrate | Angrogna | Arignano | Avigliana | Azeglio | Bairo | Balangero | Baldissero Canavese | Baldissero Torinese | Balme | Banchette | Barbania | Bardonecchia | Barone Canavese | Beinasco | Bibiana | Bobbio Pellice | Bollengo | Borgaro Torinese | Borgiallo | Borgofranco d'Ivrea | Borgomasino | Borgone Susa | Bosconero | Brandizzo | Bricherasio | Brosso | Brozolo | Bruino | Brusasco | Bruzolo | Buriasco | Burolo | Busano | Bussoleno | Buttigliera Alta | Cafasse | Caluso | Cambiano | Campiglione-Fenile | Candia Canavese | Candiolo | Canischio | Cantalupa | Cantoira | Caprie | Caravino | Carema | Carignano | Carmagnola | Casalborgone | Cascinette d'Ivrea | Caselette | Caselle Torinese | Castagneto Po | Castagnole Piemonte | Castellamonte | Castelnuovo Nigra | Castiglione Torinese | Cavagnolo | Cavour | Cercenasco | Ceres | Ceresole Reale | Cesana Torinese | Chialamberto | Chianocco | Chiaverano | Chieri | Chiesanuova | Chiomonte | Chiusa di San Michele | Chivasso | Ciconio | Cintano | Cinzano | Ciriè | Claviere | Coassolo Torinese | Coazze | Collegno | Colleretto Castelnuovo | Colleretto Giacosa | Condove | Corio | Cossano Canavese | Cuceglio | Cumiana | Cuorgne' | Druento | Exilles | Favria | Feletto | Fenestrelle | Fiano | Fiorano Canavese | Foglizzo | Forno Canavese | Frassinetto | Front | Frossasco | Garzigliana | Gassino Torinese | Germagnano | Giaglione | Giaveno | Givoletto | Gravere | Groscavallo | Grosso | Grugliasco | Ingria | Inverso Pinasca | Isolabella | Issiglio | Ivrea | La Cassa | La Loggia | Lanzo Torinese | Lauriano | Leini | Lemie | Lessolo | Levone | Locana | Lombardore | Lombriasco | Loranzè | Lugnacco | Luserna San Giovanni | Lusernetta | Lusigliè | Macello | Maglione | Marentino | Massello | Mathi | Mattie | Mazzè | Meana di Susa | Mercenasco | Meugliano | Mezzenile | Mombello di Torino | Mompantero | Monastero di Lanzo | Moncalieri | Moncenisio | Montaldo Torinese | Montalenghe | Montalto Dora | Montanaro | Monteu da Po | Moriondo Torinese | Nichelino | Noasca | Nole | Nomaglio | None | Novalesa | Oglianico | Orbassano | Orio Canavese | Osasco | Osasio | Oulx | Ozegna | Palazzo Canavese | Pancalieri | Parella | Pavarolo | Pavone Canavese | Pecco | Pecetto Torinese | Perosa Argentina | Perosa Canavese | Perrero | Pertusio | Pessinetto | Pianezza | Pinasca | Pinerolo | Pino Torinese | Piobesi Torinese | Piossasco | Piscina | Piverone | Poirino | Pomaretto | Pont-Canavese | Porte | Pragelato | Prali | Pralormo | Pramollo | Prarostino | Prascorsano | Pratiglione | Quagliuzzo | Quassolo | Quincinetto | Reano | Ribordone | Riva Presso Chieri | Rivalba | Rivalta di Torino | Rivara | Rivarolo Canavese | Rivarossa | Rivoli | Robassomero | Rocca Canavese | Roletto | Romano Canavese | Ronco Canavese | Rondissone | Rorà | Rosta | Roure | Rubiana | Rueglio | Salassa | Salbertrand | Salerano Canavese | Salza di Pinerolo | Samone | San Benigno Canavese | San Carlo Canavese | San Colombano Belmonte | San Didero | San Francesco al Campo | San Germano Chisone | San Gillio | San Giorgio Canavese | San Giorio di Susa | San Giusto Canavese | San Martino Canavese | San Maurizio Canavese | San Mauro Torinese | San Pietro Val Lemina | San Ponso | San Raffaele Cimena | San Sebastiano da Po | San Secondo di Pinerolo | Sangano | Sant'Ambrogio di Torino | Sant'Antonino di Susa | Santena | Sauze di Cesana | Sauze d'Oulx | Scalenghe | Scarmagno | Sciolze | Sestriere | Settimo Rottaro | Settimo Torinese | Settimo Vittone | Sparone | Strambinello | Strambino | Susa | Tavagnasco | TORINO | Torrazza Piemonte | Torre Canavese | Torre Pellice | Trana | Trausella | Traversella | Traves | Trofarello | Usseaux | Usseglio | Vaie | Val della Torre | Valgioie | Vallo Torinese | Valperga | Valprato Soana | Varisella | Vauda Canavese | Venaria Reale | Venaus | Verolengo | Verrua Savoia | Vestignè | Vialfrè | Vico Canavese | Vidracco | Vigone | Villafranca Piemonte | Villanova Canavese | Villar Dora | Villar Focchiardo | Villar Pellice | Villar Perosa | Villarbasse | Villareggia | Villastellone | Vinovo | Virle Piemonte | Vische | Vistrorio | Viù | Volpiano | Volvera --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Province of ALESSANDRIA Region PIEMONTE (PIEDMONT) Official Website: www.provincia.alessandria.it The province lies in the southeastern Piedmont, half on the northern slope of the Apennines and half on the Po plain, with the wine-producing area of the Monferrato hills in the north, rich also of castles and important monasteries as Santa Croce at Bosco Marengo, Santa Giustina at Sezzadio or the Sacro Monte di Crea, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Info: Area: 3,560 km² -- Population: about 430,000 inhabitants -- Zip/postal codes: from 15010 to 15100 -- Phone Area Codes: 010, 019, 0131, 0141, 0142, 0143, 0144 -- Car Plate: AL -- Communes: 190 communes The Comuni in the Province of Alessandria Acqui Terme | Albera Ligure | Alessandria | Alfiano Natta | Alice Bel Colle | Alluvioni Cambiò | Altavilla Monferrato | Alzano Scrivia | Arquata Scrivia | Avolasca | Balzola | Basaluzzo | Bassignana | Belforte Monferrato | Bergamasco | Berzano di Tortona | Bistagno | Borghetto di Borbera | Borgo San Martino | Borgoratto Alessandrino | Bosco Marengo | Bosio | Bozzole | Brignano-Frascata | Cabella Ligure | Camagna Monferrato | Camino | Cantalupo Ligure | Capriata D'Orba | Carbonara Scrivia | Carentino | Carezzano | Carpeneto | Carrega Ligure | Carrosio | Cartosio | Casal Cermelli | Casale Monferrato | Casaleggio Boiro | Casalnoceto | Casasco | Cassano Spinola | Cassine | Cassinelle | Castellania | Castellar Guidobono | Castellazzo Bormida | Castelletto D'Erro | Castelletto D'Orba | Castelletto Merli | Castelletto Monferrato | Castelnuovo Bormida | Castelnuovo Scrivia | Castelspina | Cavatore | Cella Monte | Cereseto | Cerreto Grue | Cerrina Monferrato | Coniolo | Conzano | Costa Vescovato | Cremolino | Cuccaro Monferrato | Denice | Dernice | Fabbrica Curone | Felizzano | Fraconalto | Francavilla Bisio | Frascaro | Frassinello Monferrato | Frassineto Po | Fresonara | Frugarolo | Fubine | Gabiano | Gamalero | Garbagna | Gavazzana | Gavi | Giarole | Gremiasco | Grognardo | Grondona | Guazzora | Isola Sant'Antonio | Lerma | Lu | Malvicino | Masio | Melazzo | Merana | Mirabello Monferrato | Molare | Molino dei Torti | Mombello Monferrato | Momperone | Moncestino | Mongiardino Ligure | Monleale | Montacuto | Montaldeo | Montaldo Bormida | Montecastello | Montechiaro d'Acqui | Montegioco | Montemarzino | Morano sul Po | Morbello | Mornese | Morsasco | Murisengo | Novi Ligure | Occimiano | Odalengo Grande | Odalengo Piccolo | Olivola | Orsara Bormida | Ottiglio | Ovada | Oviglio | Ozzano Monferrato | Paderna | Pareto | Parodi Ligure | Pasturana | Pecetto di Valenza | Pietra Marazzi | Piovera | Pomaro Monferrato | Pontecurone | Pontestura | Ponti | Ponzano Monferrato | Ponzone | Pozzol Groppo | Pozzolo Formigaro | Prasco | Predosa | Quargnento | Quattordio | Ricaldone | Rivalta Bormida | Rivarone | Rocca Grimalda | Roccaforte Ligure | Rocchetta Ligure | Rosignano Monferrato | Sala Monferrato | Sale | San Cristoforo | San Giorgio Monferrato | San Salvatore Monferrato | San Sebastiano Curone | Sant'Agata Fossili | Sardigliano | Sarezzano | Serralunga di Crea | Serravalle Scrivia | Sezzadio | Silvano D'Orba | Solero | Solonghello | Spigno Monferrato | Spineto Scrivia | Stazzano | Strevi | Tagliolo Monferrato | Tassarolo | Terruggia | Terzo | Ticineto | Tortona | Treville | Trisobbio | Valenza | Valmacca | Vignale Monferrato | Vignole Borbera | Viguzzolo | Villadeati | Villalvernia | Villamiroglio | Villanova Monferrato | Villaromagnano | Visone | Volpedo | Volpeglino | Voltaggio --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Province of ASTI Region PIEMONTE (PIEDMONT) Official Website: www.provincia.asti.it The Province of Asti is located in the center of Piedmont, a territory of hills crossed by the Tanaro River, with the province capital Asti right in the middle. The province is crossed by the so called Via Francigena, a network of itineraries followed since the early Middle Ages by pilgrims directed to Rome; this Via is sided by innumerable romanesque churches and abbeys. The hilly area called Monferrato is renowned for the quality of its wines, among them the moscato d'Asti, and the spumante, a typical fizzy wine used one festive occasions to toast. Info: Area: 1,511 km² -- Population: about 210,000 inhabitants -- Zip/postal codes: from 14010 to 14100 -- Phone Area Codes: 011, 0141, 0144 -- Car Plate: AT -- Communes: 118 communes The Comuni in the Province of Asti Agliano Terme | Albugnano | Antignano | Aramengo | Asti | Azzano d'Asti | Baldichieri d'Asti | Belveglio | Berzano di San Pietro | Bruno | Bubbio | Buttigliera d'Asti | Calamandrana | Calliano | Calosso | Camerano Casasco | Canelli | Cantarana | Capriglio | Casorzo | Cassinasco | Castagnole delle Lanze | Castagnole Monferrato | Castel Boglione | Castel Rocchero | Castell'Alfero | Castellero | Castelletto Molina | Castello di Annone | Castelnuovo Belbo | Castelnuovo Calcea | Castelnuovo Don Bosco | Cellarengo | Celle Enomondo | Cerreto d'Asti | Cerro Tanaro | Cessole | Chiusano d'Asti | Cinaglio | Cisterna d'Asti | Coazzolo | Cocconato | Corsione | Cortandone | Cortanze | Cortazzone | Cortiglione | Cossombrato | Costigliole d'Asti | Cunico | Dusino San Michele | Ferrere | Fontanile | Frinco | Grana | Grazzano Badoglio | Incisa Scapaccino | Isola d'Asti | Loazzolo | Maranzana | Maretto | Moasca | Mombaldone | Mombaruzzo | Mombercelli | Monale | Monastero Bormida | Moncalvo | Moncucco Torinese | Mongardino | Montabone | Montafia | Montaldo Scarampi | Montechiaro d'Asti | Montegrosso d'Asti | Montemagno | Montiglio Monferrato | Moransengo | Nizza Monferrato | Olmo Gentile | Passerano Marmorito | Penango | Piea | Pino d'Asti | Piovà Massaia | Portacomaro | Quaranti | Refrancore | Revigliasco d'Asti | Roatto | Robella | Rocca d'Arazzo | Roccaverano | Rocchetta Palafea | Rocchetta Tanaro | San Damiano d'Asti | San Giorgio Scarampi | San Martino Alfieri | San Marzano Oliveto | San Paolo Solbrito | Scurzolengo | Serole | Sessame | Settime | Soglio | Tigliole | Tonco | Tonengo | Vaglio Serra | Valfenera | Vesime | Viale | Viarigi | Vigliano d'Asti | Villa San Secondo | Villafranca d'Asti | Villanova d'Asti | Vinchio --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
















