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Now that's History
It's a long story! Italy as a geographical area was mentioned as far back as
during the age of the highly civilised Etruscan people, as is borne out by
the manuscripts kept in some museums, especially in Tuscany and Latium.
These in fact were the regions where most Etruscan settlements are found,
although they also populated Umbria, Campania and some zones of what is now
Emilia Romagna and Lombardy.
Then came the Romans who, starting from the 3rd century BC, unified the
whole peninsular under their dominion (and indeed most of Europe in
general).
The word Italia appears on a coin dating back to the 1st century BC which
was minted by the confederation of the Italic peoples who rose up against
Rome. The coin was found in the region of Abruzzo in Corfinio, the ancient
Corfinium, capital of the confederation with the name of Italica.
The long
Roman domination (from the 3rd century BC to the 5th century AD) has left an
indelible mark in Italy with its roads, aqueducts, temples, monuments, towns
and cities, bridges, theatres and so on - all relics and memories of a past
that is remote and yet also very present, a past that can be seen in every
part of the country.
After the fall of the Roman Empire, Italy was invaded
and dominated for centuries by foreign populations, especially in the south
and Sicily. Thanks to the success of independent city states in the Centre
and North such as Venice, Florence, Siena, Genoa, and Milan, Italy
nevertheless became a flourishing and civilised country of trade and the
arts. Later however, the small independent states could not hold out against
the invasions of the great states of Spain and Austria. Only the small
kingdom of Piedmont remained independent and after the interlude of
Napoleon's occupation it became the "driving force" behind il Risorgimento,
the great movement that led to the unification of Italy in 1870 under the
Royal House of Savoia. After the Second World War, in 1946 a popular
referendum abolished the monarchy and proclaimed Italy a Republic.
The rest
is the history of recent times. An on-going, fascinating story to follow
always. Italy and its regions: beyond the bounds of the big cities Is Rome
in Latium or Campania? Is Milan in Veneto or Lombardy?
Easy to answer for
Italians perhaps, but for the rest of us it may be tricky to connect Rome,
Naples, Florence, Milan and Venice with their respective regions of Latium,
Campania, Lombardy and Veneto. Perhaps Tuscany is the exception in this
regard as it has traditionally enjoyed a special relationship with
foreigners, the British Isles and North America in particular.
The holiday
that British Prime Minister Tony Blair took in Tuscany in the summer of '98
has further fortified this bond. So how can we start talking about the
regions? To start with, they are main territorial administrative divisions
of the Italian state and there are 20 of them: Abruzzo, Basilicata,
Calabria, Campania, Emilia-Romagna, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Latium, Liguria,
Lombardy, Marche, Molise, Piedmont, Apulia, Sardinia, Sicily, Tuscany,
Trentino-Alto Adige, Umbria, the Aosta Valley, and Veneto.
Each has
accumulated a historical, artistic and cultural heritage of extraordinary
value over time that offers an attractive alternative to the great art
cities. So why not come and venture into an Italy which, when stepping off
the beaten track of the main tourism flows, is practically unknown. The
Italy of the regions: more Italy than ever before!
Italy has 18 National Parks, 89 Regional Parks, 270 Regional Reserves, 142
State Reserves, 47 Marsh reserves and 7 Marine Reserves, which are protected
zones managed either by the State in some form - Regional Councils,
Provincial Councils and Municipalities - or by the environmental and
protection associations such as Italia Nostra, WWF, Lega
Ambiente, Greenpeace, LIPU, Touring Club, etc.
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The National Parks are: Abruzzo (the
oldest, officially opened in September 1922), Gran Paradiso (opened a few
months after the Abruzzo park), Circeo, Stelvio, Calabria,
Pollino, Monti Sibillini, Archipelago Tuscany, the Caserta Forests, the Belluno Dolomite
mountains, Aspromonte, Cilento-Valle di Diano, Gargano, Gran
Sasso-Laga, Maiella, Val Grande, Vesuvius, and Gennargentu-Asinara-Golfo di
Orosei. We
have listed all of them to show how in Italy Nature is loved and protected
as much in the North as in the South.
Every journey to Italy is always a 'tour artistique'
A trip to Italy is always a tour artistique. There are so many artistic
treasures and of such quality that to describe Italy as an open-air art
gallery in its own right is hardly an exaggeration. No other country in the
world can vaunt the same treasures
of culture and art as Italy. Indeed, half of the world's historic and
artistic assets are within its boundaries.
Found almost everywhere and referring to every historical era, they are
preserved and protected in hundreds of archaeological sites and over 3,000
museums scattered throughout the country. Tourists, visitors and academics
alike may admire and study these remnants - large and small - of centuries
gone by. Theatres and other buildings date back to Greek and Roman times;
whole cities, roads and districts once buried have today been returned to
the light by patient and skilful excavations; temples, statues, coins,
inscriptions, and objects of daily use. In Italy an exceptionally rich store
of memories await to remind us all of Europe's past. The imposing and often
elegantly embellished Romanesque and Gothic cathedrals - built after the
eleventh century - are found mainly in the Center and North. The ancient
religious architecture in the southern regions amounts instead to an
enthralling crucible of Byzantine, Muslim and Norman elements. In all the
regions, then, in every city and town we will find relics - from buildings
to the personal affects - of a deeply rooted artistic tradition that is
spread throughout Italy.
Renaissance art was the great cultural movement which began in Italy in the
15th century and which profoundly influenced the history of culture and
European civilisation as a whole. The Renaissance culture placed man and the
secular world again at the centre of the Universe after the marginal
position Man was afforded with respect to the gods during the difficult
centuries of the medieval period. Those who exemplified it and have become
icons of culture itself are Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo
Buonarroti, Masaccio, Botticelli, Piero della Francesca,
Mantegna, Donatello, Raffaello,
Antonello da Messina, Bramante, Correggio, Tintoretto, Giorgione - all
artists, sculptors, painters or architects who have become known as the
world's greatest exponents of artistic genius.
Their works are the source of a constant attraction for tourists and
academics alike, people who are curious to unveil something of the secrets
of that art which, even if produced today, would result as an expression of
the breathtaking creativity. For the arts and architecture, the Renaissance
is synonymous with masterpieces, inventive genius and creativity.
Philosophers like Giordano Bruno and Tommaso Campanella, scientists like
Copernico and Galilei, scholars like Machiavelli, poets like
Ariosto,
musicians like Palestrina and Monteverdi: great men of the Renaissance who,
with their modern vision of the world and society that was shared and
supported by a rich and enterprising bourgeoisie, succeeded in radically
changing forever the way of thinking, living and creating. The great
Renaissance season left its magnificent marks everywhere in Italy, not only
in the great cities like Florence, Rome, Venice, Milan and Naples but also
in many other centers of Italy's regions. Paintings, statues, churches,
buildings, palaces and fountains: a sparkling series of signs through which
the visitor can ideally reconstruct a civilization that really did change
the world. |