Articles in Italy ( 3,827 )

3,827 Articles of interest in Italy

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  • San Vincenzo al Volturno

    San Vincenzo al Volturno is an historic Benedictine monastery located in the territories of the Comunes of Castel San Vincenzo and Rocchetta a Volturno, in the Province of Isernia, near the source of the river Volturno in Italy.

  • Church of San Sisto Vecchio

    The Church of San Sisto Vecchio is one of the churches of Rome, one dedicated to St. Pope Sixtus II. It was built in the 4th century, and is recorded as the Titulus Crescentianae, thus relating the church to some Crescentia, possibly a Roman woman w…

  • San Nicolò al Lido

    San Nicolò al Lido is a church in Venice, northern Italy. It is located in the northern part of Venice's Lido, and houses the relics of St Nicholas, patron of sailors (shared with Bari). From this church, the traditional thanksgiving mass of the Spo…

  • San Michele Visdomini

    San Michele Visdomini is a church in the centre of Florence, central Italy. The original church of San Michele was demolished in 1368 to make space for the tribunes of the new Cathedral of Florence. Soon it was rebuilt in its present location to a d…

  • San Giobbe

    The Church of St Job (Italian: Chiesa di San Giobbe) is a 15th-century Roman Catholic church located overlooking the campo of the same name, known as Sant'Agiopo in Venetian dialect, on the south bank of the Cannaregio canal near Ponte dei Tre Archi…

  • Sacro Convento

    The Sacro Convento is a Franciscan friary in Assisi, Umbria, Italy. The friary is connected as part of three buildings to the upper and lower church of the Basilica of San Francesco d'Assisi, where the friars custody with great reverence the body of…

  • Royal Library of Turin

    The Royal Library of Turin (Biblioteca Reale di Torino) is located under the porticoes on the ground floor of the Royal Palace (today a World Heritage Site) in the north-west Italian city of Turin. At the time of the library’s foundation around 1840…

  • Rocciamelone

    Rocciamelone (Piemontese: Ròcia-mlon, French: Rochemelon or Roche Melon) is a 3,538 m high mountain in Piedmont, near the border between Italy and France.

  • Porta Genova

    Porta Genova is a neighborhood ("quartiere") of Milan, Italy, located within the Zone 6 administrative division. The name "Porta Genova" means "Genoa gate"; the district is named after a city gate of the old Spanish Walls of Milan, namely that leadi…

  • Pontificia Fonderia Marinelli

    The Pontificia Fonderia Marinelli (or Marinelli Pontifical Foundry, Marinelli Bell Foundry) is the successor of a bell foundry already at work in Agnone, Italy in 1040. The bell foundry is considered Italy's oldest family business and among the thre…

  • Ponte San Lorenzo

    The Ponte San Lorenzo is a Roman segmental arch bridge over the river Bacchiglione in Padua, Italy. Constructed between 47 and 30 BC, it is one of the very earliest segmental arched bridges in the world.

  • Piz Daint

    Piz Daint (Romansh pronunciation: [pit͡s dai̯nt], English: pits-dynt) is a mountain of the Swiss Ortler Alps, overlooking the Ofen Pass in the canton of Graubünden.

  • Pertosa Caves

    The Pertosa Caves (Italian: ''Grotte di Pertosa''), co-officially named Pertosa-Auletta Caves (Italian: ''Grotte di Pertosa-Auletta'') since 2012, are a karst show cave system located in the municipality of Pertosa, in the province of Salerno, Campa…

  • Palinuro

    Palinuro is an Italian small town, the most populated civil parish (frazione) of Centola, Province of Salerno, in the Campania region.

  • Palatrussardi

    Palatrussardi was an indoor arena located in Milan, Italy. The seating capacity was for 8,479 people and it hosted concerts and indoor sporting events.

  • Nuraghe Losa

    The Nuraghe Losa is a nuraghe near Abbasanta, in Sardinia, Italy. One of the largest and best preserved nuraghe in the island, it dates to the 15th-13th centuries BC. The bastion and the line of walls date instead to the late 13th-early 12th centuri…

  • Nonantola Abbey

    Nonantola Abbey, dedicated to Saint Sylvester, is a former a Benedictine monastery and prelature nullius in the commune of Nonantola, c. 10 km north-east of Modena, in the Emilia Romagna region of Italy.

  • Nicastro

    Nicastro (Greek: Neokastron, new castle) was a small town in the province of Catanzaro, in the Calabria region of southern Italy.