LUIGI CANINA

LUIGI CANINA

https://search.headlines-world.com/search.html?q=LUIGI%20CANINA


Go

Luigi Canina thumbnail

Luigi CaninaLuigi Canina (23 October 1795 – 17 October 1856) was an Italian archaeologist and architect. In England, he restored interiors at Alnwick Castle, Northumberland.

In connection with: Luigi Canina

Luigi

Canina

Title combos: Canina Luigi

Description combos: archaeologist October Luigi Canina Castle 1856 an Luigi archaeologist

Casale Monferrato thumbnail

Casale MonferratoCasale Monferrato (Italian pronunciation: [kaˈzaːle moɱferˈraːto]) is a town in the Piedmont region of northwestern Italy, in the province of Alessandria. It is situated about 60 km (37 mi) east of Turin on the right bank of the Po, where the river runs at the foot of the Montferrat hills. Beyond the river lies the vast plain of the Po valley. An ancient Roman municipium, the town has been the most important trade and manufacturing centre of the area for centuries. After the fall of the Roman Empire, Casale became a free municipality and, in the 15th and early 16th centuries, served as the capital of the House of Palaiologos. Then in 1536, the town passed to the Gonzagas who fortified it with a large citadel. In the 17th century, Casale was heavily involved in the War of the Mantuan Succession and besieged by French and Spanish troops. During the wars of Italian unification the town was a defensive bulwark against the Austrian Empire. In the 1900s Casale, in the middle of the Turin-Milan-Genoa industrial triangle, developed as an important industrial centre, especially known for the production of lime and cement. Furthermore, the asbestos cement industry has also developed. A local Eternit factory has been at the centre of a massive environmental scandal, with subsequent high-profile litigation that often made international headlines.

In connection with: Casale Monferrato

Casale

Monferrato

Title combos: Monferrato Casale

Description combos: the the river developed the pronunciation Italian most manufacturing

Acqua Pia Antica MarciaThe Acqua Pia Antica Marcia or Aqua Pia is an aqueduct in Rome. It was first built as a restoration of the classical Aqua Marcia by Luigi Canina, commissioned by Pope Pius IX. Its city terminus was the Fountain of the Naiads in the Piazza Esedra. The Acqua Pia Antica Marcia SpA society was formed in 1868 to manage and sell the waters of this aqueduct; this society was for a long time one of the main water suppliers to Rome, and still manages some fountains and drains. This proved necessary with Rome's population expansion at this period but the infrastructure's expansion was not achieved without resistance. Moves to create a secondary source for the aqueduct in the commune of Agosto led to its residents organizing a guerilla army, which stopped the society from creating this new source until the end of the Second World War.

In connection with: Acqua Pia Antica Marcia

Acqua

Pia

Antica

Marcia

Title combos: Marcia Acqua Pia Acqua Marcia Antica Marcia Pia Acqua

Description combos: for sell Rome in Acqua new the Marcia time

CaninaCanina ('canine' in Latin), may refer to : Canina (subtribe), a zoological taxon name (subtribe) belonging to the Canini tribe of the family Canidae (canids); Canina includes the domestic dog, coyote, jackals, Eurasian wild dogs species, and most species named wolves. Canina, an Italian surname: Luigi Canina (1795–1856), Italian archaeologist and architect Canina, a California-based brand that develops content and clothing to inspire and equip people to be active with their dogs. Any of several cultivars of wine grape: Uva Canina, a red Italian wine grape grown through Central Italy but most noted in Tuscany Canina, another name for the French wine grape Tourbat Canina, another name for the Italian wine grape Drupeggio Vōx canīna ('dog voice') and littera canīna ('the dog letter'), names used by the Romans to identify their pronunciation of the Latin letter r, and a name for the letter itself, respectively Tillandsia 'Canina', a plant hybrid cultivar

In connection with: Canina

Canina

Description combos: red Canina Italy several name letter Italian name Canidae

Luigi (given name)Luigi is a masculine Italian given name. It is the Italian form of the German name Ludwig, through the Latinization Ludovicus, corresponding to the French name Louis and its anglicized variant Lewis. Other forms of the same name in Italian are the names Ludovico, Clodoveo, Aloísio, and Alvise, the last form being more frequent in the Veneto region. A derived feminine name is Luigina.

In connection with: Luigi (given name)

Luigi

given

name

Title combos: given Luigi name given Luigi

Description combos: forms the is Italian name and the frequent Luigina

Giovan Battista Filippo Basile thumbnail

Giovan Battista Filippo BasileGiovan Battista Filippo Basile (August 8, 1825 in Palermo – June 16, 1891) was an Italian architect. Born to a family of humble means. From childhood, Vincenzo Tineo, an erudite horticulturalist in Palermo, recognized Basile's talent, and was able to sponsor his education, and gain him entry into the university to study physical and mathematical sciences. Basile and eventually received or won his degree in architecture, which at the time was a prize conferred through a competition. He also taught physics at university, and at the atheneum, taught descriptive geometry and its applications. As a young man, he published his text on Practical Stereotomy. He continued the study of figure drawing under the painter Salvatore Lo Forte. Completed such studies, Tineo sponsored some years of study at the University of Rome (La Sapienza) in architecture. There he took courses given by Tortolini, Venturoli, and dal Cavalieri. He also attended the Accademia di San Luca, and designed under Sarti and Poletti. He also was a disciple of the engraver of antiquities, Luigi Canina, before the latter was called to occupy an honorary position at the Royal Institute of British Architects. Basile performed studies on ancient and antique art and monuments, including the temples of Fortuna Virilis, Vesta, and Giove Tonante (Thundering Jove), and the tombs of Bibulus and Scipio, and the ruins of Hadrian's Villa in Tivoli. In this era, a number of artists from Naples and Sicily were sponsored by the public to study in Rome; among these artists were Domenico Morelli, ill Cipolla, and Francesco Di Bartolo. Among his works are the Teatro Massimo in Palermo (completed by his son Ernesto Basile); the Neo-Gothic facade of the Acireale Cathedral; the villa Favaloro in Palermo (1889), also finished by his son Ernesto. He also designed several gardens such as for Villa Garibaldi and the English Garden in Palermo, Piazza Marina and Villa Vittorio Emanuele in Caltagirone. He is buried in the family grave at the Cemetery of the scrolls in Palermo.

In connection with: Giovan Battista Filippo Basile

Giovan

Battista

Filippo

Basile

Title combos: Giovan Battista Giovan Basile Filippo Battista Basile Giovan Filippo

Description combos: Jove disciple painter the di in into Basile disciple

Temple of Jupiter Tonans thumbnail

Temple of Jupiter TonansThe Temple of Jupiter Tonans (Latin: Aedes Iovis Tonantis, lit. 'Temple of Jupiter the Thunderer') was a small temple in Rome, dedicated by Augustus Caesar in 22 BCE to Jupiter, the chief god of ancient Rome. It was probably situated at the entrance to the Area Capitolina, the sanctuary of Jupiter on the Capitoline Hill, near the much older and larger Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus. The temple was considered among Augustus's most impressive archaeological projects, and played an important role in the Secular Games, a religious and artistic festival that he revived in 17 BCE. It was also noted by Roman authors for the artworks, particularly statues, displayed in and around it. Much of the temple's history is unclear, though it was mentioned in a fourth-century CE panegyric and may have been restored around the beginning of the second century CE. Nothing, except perhaps a small part of its foundations, survives of the temple. From 1555 until the nineteenth century, the Temple of Vespasian and Titus in the Roman Forum was misidentified as the Temple of Jupiter Tonans, but the Italian archaeologist Luigi Canina correctly identified the former temple during excavations in 1844.

In connection with: Temple of Jupiter Tonans

Temple

of

Jupiter

Tonans

Title combos: Tonans Jupiter Tonans of Jupiter of Tonans Temple Jupiter

Description combos: the Roman may in as archaeological Tonans of Iovis

Quick Access

Tag Explorer


Partajare

Discover Fresh Ideas in the Universe of aéPiot

MultiSearch | Search | Tag Explorer

SHEET MUSIC | DIGITAL DOWNLOADS

News | LIVE TV

INSTAPAPER




Report Page