Sicilian$74984$ - definitie. Wat is Sicilian$74984$
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Wat (wie) is Sicilian$74984$ - definitie

SPECIES OF MAMMAL (FOSSIL)
Sicilian Hippo; Sicilian Hippopotamus; Sicilian hippopotamus
  • Jaw

Sicilian cuisine         
  • right
  • alt=A plate showing three blood oranges:  one whole, one peeled, and one sliced in half
  • left
  • alt=A frozen white dessert in a clear glass, next to a piece of bread
  • alt=A yellow liquor bottle next to the yellow packaging it is sold in
STYLE OF COOKING ON THE ISLAND OF SICILY
Cuisine of Sicily; Sicilian desserts; Sicilian street food; Street food in Sicily; History of Sicilian cuisine; Sicilian desserts and sweets
Sicilian cuisine is the style of cooking on the island of Sicily. It shows traces of all cultures that have existed on the island of Sicily over the last two millennia.
Sicilian Baroque         
  • Church of San Benedetto]], Catania
  • rustication]] and two-tone [[lava]] masonry – a reversal of the more conventional rusticated walls and smooth pilasters
  • Illustration 13: [[Catania Cathedral]]. [[Giovanni Battista Vaccarini]]'s principal façade of 1736 shows Spanish architectural influences.
  • Chiesa del Gesù]], Palermo (1564–1633), with abundant use of [[polychrome]] [[marble]] on the floor and walls
  • Duomo of San Giorgio]] in Ragusa
  • Cathedral of San Giorgio]], [[Modica]]
  • The "Entrance Temple" to the [[Orto botanico di Palermo]]
  • Illustration 21: Palazzo Belmonte Riso (1784), restrained late Sicilian Baroque with more dominant neoclassical features. The upper windows have neoclassical pediments, while the piano nobile has Baroque pediments and a balcony with decorated corbels. The pilasters have decorated Baroque capitals, but are otherwise simple and unadorned.
  • Syracuse]], designed by [[Luciano Alì]] in restrained late Sicilian Baroque. The [[wrought iron]] balconies and sweeping curves, however, keep the approaching [[neoclassicism]] at bay.
  • Illustration 7: [[Catania]] and the [[Palazzo Biscari]], begun in 1702. Catania replaced [[Messina]] as Sicily's second city after the revolt of 1686.
  • Illustration 17: The flamboyant staircase at the [[Palazzo Biscari]]
  • Illustration 19: Palazzo Ducezio at [[Noto]]
  • Palazzo Gangi]], [[Palermo]]
  • Illustration 6: Early Sicilian Baroque: Quattro Canti, [[Palermo]], (circa 1610)
  • mouldings]], scrolls and masks was widely copied all over [[Catania]] immediately following the quake.
  • Ragusa Ibla]]
  • access-date=6 February 2020}}</ref> Behind the fountain is the Church of Santa Caterina (circa 1556), with its spectacular Baroque dome (which was added later).
  • A balcony of the [[Palazzo Zacco]]
  • Illustration 20: Palazzo Lampedusa in Palermo
  • Illustration 11: [[Cathedral of Syracuse]], [[Andrea Palma]]'s cathedral façade (begun in 1728). Based on the formula of a Roman [[triumphal arch]], the broken masses within a columned façade create a theatrical effect.
  • Syracuse]]. Andrea Palma's [[Cathedral of Syracuse]] (see illustration&nbsp;11 below) is flanked by Baroque palazzi.
  • Illustration 9: Via Nicolasi, [[Noto]]
BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE ON THE ISLAND OF SICILY
Sicilian baroque; Sicilian Baroque architecture
Sicilian Baroque is the distinctive form of Baroque architecture which evolved on the island of Sicily, off the southern coast of Italy, in the , when it was part of the Spanish Empire. The style is recognisable not only by its typical Baroque curves and flourishes, but also by distinctive grinning masks and putti and a particular flamboyance that has given Sicily a unique architectural identity.
Sicilian nationalism         
  • Antonio Canepa, Sicilian Nationalist
  • Location of [[Sicily]]
  • Graffito in [[Palermo]], [[Sicily]] with the text "Self Determination, Autonomy, Independence"
SECESSIONIST MOVEMENT IN ITALY
Sicilian nationalist
Sicilian nationalism, or Sicilianism, is a movement in the autonomous Italian region of Sicily, as well as the Sicilian diaspora, which seeks greater autonomy or outright independence from Italy, and/or promotes further inclusion of the Sicilian identity, culture, history, and linguistic variety.

Wikipedia

Hippopotamus pentlandi

Hippopotamus pentlandi is an extinct species of hippopotamus from Sicily, known from the late Middle Pleistocene to early Late Pleistocene. It is the largest of the insular dwarf hippos known from the Pleistocene of the Mediterranean, "at most 20% smaller than the mainland forms", with an estimated body mass of approximately 1100 kg. It is suggested that it arrived in Sicily between 250,000 and 150,000 years ago, probably descending from the modern hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius), with an origin from Hippopotamus antiquus being less likely. In comparison to those species, the muzzle was shorter, the occipital and nasal regions were more developed, the mastoid process was enlarged, and the dental row was shortened, and the condyle of the mandible is low. In comparison to H. amphibius, the orbits are also elevated. It was present in Sicily until at least the latest Middle Pleistocene around 120 kya, and was probably extinct by the beginning of Marine Isotope Stage 4 (~71,000 years ago). Contemporaneous species include the dwarf elephant Palaeoloxodon mnaidriensis, the aurochs, red deer, steppe bison, fallow deer, wild boar, brown bear, wolves, red foxes, cave hyena and cave lions. Its diet was likely grazing dominated, similar to that of modern H. amphibius. It is probably ancestral to Hippopotamus melitensis from Malta, which is substantially smaller than H. pentlandi.