Calabria - translation to italian
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Calabria - translation to italian

REGION OF ITALY
Bruttium; Enotria; Calabrie; Calabria (Italy); Calabria, Italy; Ancient calabria; Classical calabria; Medieval calabria; Calabria in the middle ages; Calàbbria; History of Calabria; Tourism in Calabria; Cuisine of Calabria; Economy of Calabria; Geology of Calabria; Calabrian cuisine; Climate of Calabria
  • ''[['Nduja]]''
  • date=5 April 2012 }}. Nasa.gov (30 December 2009). Retrieved on 28 July 2013.</ref>
  • Provinces of Calabria
  • Geotectonic Cross Section of the Calabrian Arc. Left: NW; Right: SE. From van Dijk (1992)<ref name ='van Dijk-etal_2000, a'/>
  • Occitan]] language.
  • [[Geotectonic]] map of the Central Mediterranean Area and the Calabrian Arc. The blue area is the geotectonic cross section depicted below. From van Dijk (1992)<ref name ='van Dijk-etal_2000, a'/>
  • Cliff at [[Tropea]]
  • Arbëreshë costumes in Calabria about 1800
  • The seaport of [[Gioia Tauro]]
  • [[La Sila]] National Park
  • Calabrian olive tree plantations
  • [[Magna Grecia]] around 280&nbsp;BC
  • [[Pollino National Park]]
  • Ski trails near [[Gambarie]] overlooking the [[Strait of Messina]]
  • The [[Riace bronzes]], Greek bronzes, about 460–430&nbsp;BC
  • Cattolica]]''

Calabria         
n. Calabria, the most southern region of the Italian peninsula, lies between the Ionian Sea to east and the Tyrrhenian Sea to west; Reggio Calabria, capital of Calabria
Reggio Calabria         
  • Arena dello Stretto, hosts musical and theatrical events.
  • Bathing establishments along the beach
  • View on the Strait of Messina by the beach of Reggio Calabria
  • Castle
  • Cathedral
  • Monument to [[Victor Emmanuel II]]
  • View on Reggio Calabria Airport
  • Giudecca Street
  • Reggio in a medieval engraving.
  • Cilea Theatre
  • Reggio di Calabria in 1920.
  • 1908 earthquake]].
  • Villa Genoese-Zerbi
ITALIAN CITY
Rhegion; Reggio di Calabria; Rhegium; UN/LOCODE:ITREG; Reggio Calabria, Italy; Arena dello Stretto; Rhegians; Rhegia; Museums in Reggio Calabria
Reggio Calabria (città dell"Italia meridionale)
calabro         
native or inhabitant of Calabria (Literary)

Definition

Tarsia
·noun ·Alt. of Tarsiatura.

Wikipedia

Calabria

Calabria is a region in Southern Italy. It is a peninsula bordered by Basilicata to the north, the Ionian Sea to the east, the Strait of Messina to the southwest, which separates it from Sicily, and the Tyrrhenian Sea to the west. With almost 2 million residents across a total area of approximately 15,222 km2 (5,877 sq mi), it is the tenth most populous and the tenth largest Italian region by area. Catanzaro is the region's capital, while Reggio Calabria is the most populous city in the region.

Calabria is the birthplace of the term Italy, given to it by the Ancient Greeks who settled in this land starting from the 8th century BC. Thanks to its strategic position in the center of the Mediterranean Sea, the region became the center of Magna Grecia (Greater Greece), with the foundation along its coasts of many Greek city-states (póleis) that remained for centuries among the richest and most culturally advanced of their time. Calabria is where Pythagoras, one of the fathers of Western philosophy, developed and spread his thought. It is also the birthplace of Milo, the greatest champion of the ancient Olympic Games, and the adoptive homeland of Herodotus, one of the greatest historians of all time.

In Roman times it was part of the Regio III Lucania et Bruttii, a region of Augustan Italy. After the Gothic War, it became and remained for five centuries a Byzantine dominion (Duchy of Calabria, later promoted to Theme), fully recovering its Hellenic character on a linguistic, religious and artistic level. Cenobitism flourished, with the rise in the whole peninsula of countless churches, hermitages and monasteries in which multitudes of Basilian monks were dedicated to the transcription of classical and religious texts. The Byzantines introduced the art of silk in Calabria and made it the main silk production area in Europe. In the 11th century, the Norman conquest started a slow process of Latinization.

It is the birthplace of two of the most influential European philosophers of the 16th century, Bernardino Telesio and Tommaso Campanella.

In Calabria there are three historical ethnic minorities: the Griko people, speaking Calabrian Greek (also known as Grecanico), a local variety of the Greek language with some unique and archaic features; the Arbëreshë people, descendants of Albanian refugees who fled Albania between the 14th and the 18th centuries following the Ottoman conquest of the Balkans; the Occitans of Guardia Piemontese, a village founded in the 12th century by Waldensians coming from the Western Alps. This extraordinary linguistic diversity makes the region an object of study for linguists from all over the world.

Three national parks are found in Calabria: the Pollino National Park (which is the largest in the country), the Sila National Park and the Aspromonte National Park. This, combined with a large number of beaches, small villages, archaeological parks and ancient castles, makes the region a tourist destination.

Examples of use of Calabria
1. Un bambino di undici anni è rimasto ucciso nella tarda serata di ieri dall‘esplosione di un ordigno, con ogni probabilità un residuato bellico, in un paesino in provincia di Reggio Calabria.