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Topic: Massimo D'Azeglio


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In the News (Tue 29 Dec 09)

  
 Massimo
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funny.superfunny.net /massimo.html   (175 words)

  
 Italy: President Elected, Red Brigades Resurrected
With the swift election of the new state president Carlo Azeglio Ciampi Italy's political class has given a rare and surprising example of efficiency and responsibility.
When Berlusconi announced the astonished majority-leader Massimo D'Alema that the opposition was ready to accept the majority's proposal and vote for Ciampi, the position of D'Alema's ally, Franco Marini (PPI), who had been intriguing for his own election, became unsustainable and all speculations vanished in a haze.
In the past Ciampi has always proved master of a new style of consensus policy and therefore his election has now grown new hopes for the long awaited Constitutional reforms.
www.suite101.com /article.cfm/european_politics/21065   (439 words)

  
 Città di Palermo - Comunicati Stampa del 28 agosto 1999
Massimo D'Alema e al Ministro dell'interno Rosa Russo lervolino per esprimere gratitudine a nome della città per la solidarietà da essi manifestata in occasione del gravissimo incendio divampato ieri in Via Montepellegrino4 Nella lettera Orlando ha auspicato "che, anche in questa occasione, a Palermo non dovranno mancare l'attenzione ed 11 sostegno della Comunità nazionale".
Il Sindaco Leoluca Orlando ha inviato una Lettera al Capo dello Stato Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, aL Presidente del Consiglio dei Ministri.
Sono dell'avviso che nessuna ipotesi vada scartata, ma è necessario che proprio nella ricorrenza del barbaro assassinio di Libero Grassi si faccia chiarezza sull'accaduto, onde evitare che questo atto criminale rimanga tra i misteri di questa città".
www.comune.palermo.it /Comune/Avvisi/1999/Agosto/28.htm   (439 words)

  
 Political Theory: Essays
Piero Gobetti, Cesare Pavese, Giulio Einaudi, Massimo Mila, Vittorio Foa, Gian Carlo Pajetta, Felice Balbo, Leone Ginzburg were Bobbio’s friends in the Liceo dAzeglio.
In addition, his high school was the Liceo Ginnasio Massimo dAzeglio of Turin, not an ordinary public school indeed, but the one that formed the intellectual and political generation that contributed to form the future democratic Italy.
In 1909, the FIAT was ten years old and was producing 1.800 cars per year; and Piero Gobetti, one of Bobbio’s most important mentors, was eight years old.
www.politicaltheory.info /essays/bobbio.htm   (439 words)

  
 ::: how to reach Villa Gualino :::
Then drive along for some 5 kilometers until Corso Unità d'’Italia changes its name several times and it eventually becomes Corso Massimo D'Azeglio.
Drive on until Corso Massimo D'Azeglio ends in Corso Vittorio Emanuele II.
Cross the river and drive on into Corso Fiume (the new name of Corso Vittorio Emanuele II, on the other side of the Po), slightly uphill.
www.fobiotech.org /how_to_reach_villa_gualino.htm   (524 words)

  
 Secretary-General's visit to Italy and Algeria (December 2000)
Secretary-General Kofi Annan (left) meeting with Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, President of Italy, and Dr. Thomas Klestil (right), President of Austria, at Teatro massimo on December 12 before the opening of the high level signing conference of the UN Convention on Transnational Organized Crime.
Left to right are: Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, President of Italy; Secretary-General Kofi Annan (at podium); Piero Fassino, Minister of Justice of Italy; Pino Arlacchi, Executive Director of the UN Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention in Vienna; and Aleksander Kwasniewski, President of Poland.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan travelled to Palermo, Italy to attend the signing of the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime and its two Protocols, one which aims to prevent, suppress and punish trafficking in persons, especially women and children; and the other which pledges efforts against the smuggling of migrants by land, sea and air.
www.un.org /av/photo/sgtrips/sgpalermo.htm   (524 words)

  
 Amato asked to form new Italian government - 4/21/00
Amato, who served as a Socialist premier in 1992-93 but later became an independent, told reporters after meeting with President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi that he would immediately start consultations to see if he can put together Italy's 58th government since World War II.
If Amato succeeds, he will replace Premier Massimo D'Alema, who resigned on Wednesday after the conservative opposition was victorious in regional voting a few days earlier.
Earlier in the day, a left-wing leader, Fabio Mussi, speaking for the governing coalition, insisted that Amato has sufficient support to win a vote of confidence and "guarantee an authoritative government until the end of the legislature" in 2001.
www.detnews.com /2000/nation/0004/21/04220018.htm   (524 words)

  
 Resignation of Italian Prime Minister D'Alema threatens to topple government
Following resignation of Italian Prime Minister Massimo D'Alema on Wednesday, April 19, President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi has initiated talks to see if a new centre-left government can be formed, or if a general election must be rapidly organised.
D'Alema said that his aim was to form a stable centre-left coalition and to abolish proportional representation and replace it with majority voting to weaken the influence of the minor parties that had always been able to play a role in government beyond their actual size.
He hoped it would be able to play the same role as other social democratic and Stalinist organisations that had ditched their old reformist policies and attempted to repackage the social and economic nostrums of the deeply unpopular right-wing parties and sell them to the working class.
www.wsws.org /articles/2000/apr2000/ital-a21.shtml   (1420 words)

  
 Learning Italian Italian Lessons Learn Italian Online Learn Basic Italian
In fact the marchese Massimo D'Azeglio said: "We have made Italy, now we have to make the Italians".
Our goal is to introduce the Italian language to pupils from 1st through 12th grade.
We are now preparing "Learning Italian - Level -2," where our focus will be to cover more Italian Basics and the beginning of "Italian Conversation." We will open a new Web site soon and keep you informed on how to register.
www.learningitalian.com   (613 words)

  
 Boeucc
La piazza sulla quale il palazzo si affaccia ha avuto "inquilini" più che eccellenti: qui aveva il suo recapito postale Henri Beyle – Stendhal; qui stabilì il suo indirizzo Alessandro Manzoni, nel palazzo di fronte a quello dove abitò Massimo DAzeglio.
Senza dimenticare il "Circolo La Patriottica", ospitato proprio in Palazzo Belgioioso, i cui primi soci furono nientemeno che Pietro Verri, Paolo Frisi, il Parini e il Beccaria.
www.boeucc.it /palazzo.html   (613 words)

  
 Isokinetic Congress 2006 - About Turin
Those were the years of Massimo d'Azeglio and Camillo Benso Conte di Cavour, the true power behind the proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy in 1861, which held its first Parliament in Palazzo Carignano on February 18 that same year.
The capital was moved to Florence in 1864, and in the latter part of the century the fire at the heart of the city shifted from politics to the metal-working industry.
In recent years the city has changed considerably: the historical centre has found a new heart with the pedestrian precinct in Piazza Castello and the restoration of Palazzo Reale.
www.isokinetic.com /english/attivita_torino2006_eng.htm   (564 words)

  
 Italy
Yet such a hasty conclusion must be balanced by the cautionary note from the sketches of Saldino Sterbini, Massimo Taparelli d'Azeglio, Angelo Brunetti ("Ciceruacchio"), and Giuseppe Montanelli, champions of Italian unity.
But some contemporary Italians in what many will consider her darkest hour can return for inspiration to the pure ideal of Giuseppe Mazzini, who could inspire passionate devotion to the duty of Italians to give their lives in patriotic devotion to liberate Italy from all tyranny.
And anyone who loves Italy should acknowledge the "Popular participation in the Italian revolutions." Others may want to peruse the articles on Guiseppe Ferrari and "federalism" to question if Italy's excessively centralized administrations has been a curse more than strength, if the centralism contributed to some of modern Italy's present political difficulties.
www.trincoll.edu /classes/hist300/group3/italy.htm   (2236 words)

  
 BEST WESTERN GENOVA E STAZIONE - Turin, italy - ITWG.COM
*** Route for those arriving from the Turin - Savona A6 motorway: 1) A6 Motorway • 2)C.so Unità d’Italia • 3)C.so Massimo DAzeglio • 4)C.so Vittorio • 5)Via Sacchi.
BEST WESTERN GENOVA E STAZIONE - Turin, italy - ITWG.COM
*** Route for those arriving from the Turin - Piacenza A21 motorway: 1) A21 Motorway • 2)Tangenziale (City by-pass) • 3)Stupinigi turn-off • 4)Corso Unione Sovietica • 5)Corso Turati • 6)Via Sacchi.
www.itwg.com /hotel94   (362 words)

  
 or251004.txt
VITAL STATISTICS Rocco Buttiglione, PhD Born: June 6, 1948, Gallipoli, province of Lecce, Italy Family: Married with four daughters Education: Massimo DAzeglio high school, Turin.
During his assessment hearings in October 2004, Dr. Buttiglione enraged many members of the European Parliament by describing homosexuality as a sin and suggesting that the role of a woman was to have children and be protected by her husband.
Buttiglione, a conservative Catholic who has been described as one of “Pope John Paul II’s closest friends and counsellors” and “the intellectual alter ego of Pope John Paul II,” has a long track record of supporting very conservative positions on HIV/AIDS, women’s rights, immigrants’ rights, homosexual rights and reproductive rights.
www.connectotel.com /marcus/or251004.txt   (362 words)

  
 Victor Emmanuel II
Under the guidance of two able prime ministers Massimo d'Azeglio and then Camillo Benso di Cavour, both veterans of the 1848-49 turmoils, Victor Emmanuel successfully met various crises in the early years of his reign.
Victor Emmanuel succeeded his father Charles Albert to the throne of Piedmont-Sardinia on March 24, 1849, following the abdication of Charles Albert after two humiliating defeats (1848 and 1849) by Austria.
Victor Emanuel II VICTOR EMMANUEL II (1820-1878) First king (1861-1878) of united Italy and last king of Piedmont-Sardinia (1849-1861).
www.ohiou.edu /~Chastain/rz/victorem.htm   (350 words)

  
 Victor Emmanuel II
Under the guidance of two able prime ministers Massimo d'Azeglio and then Camillo Benso di Cavour, both veterans of the 1848-49 turmoils, Victor Emmanuel successfully met various crises in the early years of his reign.
Victor Emmanuel succeeded his father Charles Albert to the throne of Piedmont-Sardinia on March 24, 1849, following the abdication of Charles Albert after two humiliating defeats (1848 and 1849) by Austria.
Victor Emanuel II VICTOR EMMANUEL II (1820-1878) First king (1861-1878) of united Italy and last king of Piedmont-Sardinia (1849-1861).
www.ohiou.edu /~Chastain/rz/victorem.htm   (350 words)

  
 Victor Emmanuel II
Under the guidance of two able prime ministers Massimo d'Azeglio and then Camillo Benso di Cavour, both veterans of the 1848-49 turmoils, Victor Emmanuel successfully met various crises in the early years of his reign.
Victor Emmanuel succeeded his father Charles Albert to the throne of Piedmont-Sardinia on March 24, 1849, following the abdication of Charles Albert after two humiliating defeats (1848 and 1849) by Austria.
Victor Emanuel II VICTOR EMMANUEL II (1820-1878) First king (1861-1878) of united Italy and last king of Piedmont-Sardinia (1849-1861).
www.ohiou.edu /~Chastain/rz/victorem.htm   (350 words)

  
 Victor Emmanuel II
Under the guidance of two able prime ministers Massimo d'Azeglio and then Camillo Benso di Cavour, both veterans of the 1848-49 turmoils, Victor Emmanuel successfully met various crises in the early years of his reign.
Victor Emmanuel succeeded his father Charles Albert to the throne of Piedmont-Sardinia on March 24, 1849, following the abdication of Charles Albert after two humiliating defeats (1848 and 1849) by Austria.
Victor Emanuel II VICTOR EMMANUEL II (1820-1878) First king (1861-1878) of united Italy and last king of Piedmont-Sardinia (1849-1861).
www.ohiou.edu /~Chastain/rz/victorem.htm   (350 words)

  
 Victor Emmanuel II
Under the guidance of two able prime ministers Massimo d'Azeglio and then Camillo Benso di Cavour, both veterans of the 1848-49 turmoils, Victor Emmanuel successfully met various crises in the early years of his reign.
Victor Emmanuel succeeded his father Charles Albert to the throne of Piedmont-Sardinia on March 24, 1849, following the abdication of Charles Albert after two humiliating defeats (1848 and 1849) by Austria.
Victor Emanuel II VICTOR EMMANUEL II (1820-1878) First king (1861-1878) of united Italy and last king of Piedmont-Sardinia (1849-1861).
www.ohiou.edu /~Chastain/rz/victorem.htm   (350 words)

  
 Victor Emmanuel II
Under the guidance of two able prime ministers Massimo d'Azeglio and then Camillo Benso di Cavour, both veterans of the 1848-49 turmoils, Victor Emmanuel successfully met various crises in the early years of his reign.
Victor Emmanuel succeeded his father Charles Albert to the throne of Piedmont-Sardinia on March 24, 1849, following the abdication of Charles Albert after two humiliating defeats (1848 and 1849) by Austria.
Victor Emanuel II VICTOR EMMANUEL II (1820-1878) First king (1861-1878) of united Italy and last king of Piedmont-Sardinia (1849-1861).
www.ohiou.edu /~Chastain/rz/victorem.htm   (350 words)

  
 Italy 1796-1900
Siccardi Laws approved in Piedmont (Apr.); Cavour appointed minister of agriculture, commerce, and the navy by Massimo DAzeglio
First elections for the new Italian parliament; Victor Emanuel of Savoy II assumes title of king of Italy (17 Mar.); rural insurrections spread throughout the Mezzogiorno; Cavour dies (6 June); General Cialdini given emergency powers in the south.
Napoleon III defeated at the Battle of Sedan (1 Sept.); Italian troops enter Rome (20 Sept.); Rome and Lazio annexed by plebiscite; Pius IX denounces the occupation of Rome and excommunicates Victor Emanuel II; parliament votes to transfer the capital to Rome (23 Dec.)
www.sas.upenn.edu /~mercerb/Italy19thC.html   (350 words)

  
 Italy 1796-1900
Siccardi Laws approved in Piedmont (Apr.); Cavour appointed minister of agriculture, commerce, and the navy by Massimo DAzeglio
First elections for the new Italian parliament; Victor Emanuel of Savoy II assumes title of king of Italy (17 Mar.); rural insurrections spread throughout the Mezzogiorno; Cavour dies (6 June); General Cialdini given emergency powers in the south.
Urbano Rattazzi replaces Ricasoli as prime minister (3 Mar.); Garibaldi’s attempt to resume the march on Rome halted by the Italian army in the Aspromonte mountains (29 July); Rattazzi resigns (29 Nov.) as prime minister, succeeded by Luigi Carlo.
www.sas.upenn.edu /~mercerb/Italy19thC.html   (350 words)

  
 Museo Nazionale del Risorgimento (National Museum of the Risorgimento) Museum/Attraction Review Turin Frommers.com
The plaques summing up each room are in English, and will finally reveal to you just who those people are after whom half the major streets and piazzas in Italy are named -- including Mazzini, Vittorio Emanuele II, Massimo d'Azeglio, Cavour, and Garibaldi.
Documents, paintings, and other paraphernalia recount the heady days when Vittorio Emanuele banded with Garibaldi and his Red Shirts to oust the Bourbons from Sicily and the Austrians from the north to create a unified Italy.
While any self-respecting town in Italy has a museum of the Risorgimento, the movement that launched Italian unification, this one is the best.
www.frommers.com /destinations/turin/A33565.html   (297 words)

  
 BBC News EUROPE Italy prepares for elections
Italian President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi has dissolved the country's parliament ahead of elections expected in two months' time.
Massimo D'Alema took power in October 1998, but resigned after his centre-right opponents made gains in local elections last spring.
He ensured that Italy met the economic criteria necessary for joining the euro, but fell from power in a budget dispute with the communists.
news.bbc.co.uk /1/low/world/europe/1210101.stm   (297 words)

  
 museums.htm
Room IV - devoted to the romantic movement represented by Francesco Hayez, Bather and The Sicilian Vespers Giovanni Carnavali (Il Piccio) with biblical scenes and portraits and a few paintings by Massimo d'Azeglio.
One of his collaborators was Francesco Borromini whose hand is recognizable in certain architectural details, and in the design of the curving staircase on the right, corresponding to the rectangular main staircase on the opposite side that was designed by Bernini.
Wing 1 - Return of the Prodigal Son by Jacopo and Francesco Bassano the Younger; Salome With the Head of St. John the Baptist by Titian; Portrait of Andrea Navagero and Agostin Beazzano by Raphael; Rest During the Flight Into Egypt by Caravaggio.
www.stuardtclarkesrome.com /museums.htm   (13536 words)

  
 GTT Avvisi
Da corso Regina Margherita angolo viale I° Maggio (Giardini Reali) prosegue per corso Regina Margherita, via Rossini, corso San Maurizio, via Bava, piazza Vittorio Veneto, via Bonafous, corso Cairoli, corso Vittorio Emanuele II, corso Massimo d'Azeglio, via Valperga Caluso (ritorno: corso Raffaello), percorso normale.
Da piazza Statuto deviate in corso San Martino, Porta Susa (capolinea provvisorio).
Direzione piazza Gran Madre: da via Pietro Micca deviata in via Bertola, via XX Settembre, corso Regina Margherita, Giardini Reali, inversione di marcia.
www.comune.torino.it /gtt/avvisi/urbana51.shtml   (13536 words)

  
 Italy 1796-1900
Siccardi Laws approved in Piedmont (Apr.); Cavour appointed minister of agriculture, commerce, and the navy by Massimo DAzeglio
Pius IX reforms censorship in the Papal States; Leopold II of Tuscany establishes a consulta (Aug.); Turin enters into a customs league with Rome and Florence; publication of Cavour’s journal Il Risorgimento (Turin)
Administrative reorganization of the restored states: Pius VII’s motu proprio in Rome (6 July), Tuscany (6 Sept.); creation of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies (8 Dec.); first performance of Gioacchino Rossini’s Il barbiere di Siviglia (Rome)
www.sas.upenn.edu /~mercerb/Italy19thC.html   (1019 words)

  
 ipedia.com: Juventus Article
Juventus F.C. was founded in November 1897 by students from Massimo D'Azeglio Lyceum, and won a previous version of the national league title as early as 1905, but did not win their second until 1926.
Until recently, Juventus' players had to wear short (and regular) hair; the club also provided the team with official formal wear (made by famous tailors) and forced them to complete their educational studies.
The team typically plays in black-and-white striped shirts and black shorts (but for decades in white shorts), and is nicknamed la Vecchia Signora (the Old Lady).
www.ipedia.com /juventus.html   (434 words)

  
 G-14 (g-14 resources)
Juventus F.C. was founded in November 1897 by students from Massimo D'Azeglio Lyceum, in a "legendary" bench in one of Turin's boulevard, Re Umberto boulevard.
FC Barcelona was just one of several football clubs that emerged in Catalonia around this time.
In a pleasing symmetry for PSG supporters, Paris F.C. were relegated in that season and PSG would henceforth always play at the newly rebuilt Parc des Princes, once the ground of Paris F.C. The club has remained in the top division since 1974, winning the league twice, in 1985–86 and in 1993–94.
g.14.en.xanax-buy.be   (10086 words)

  
 Umberto I of Italy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
His education was entrusted to, amongst others, Massimo Taparelli, marquis d'Azeglio and Pasquale Stanislao Mancini.
The son of Vittorio Emanuele II and of Adelaide, archduchess of Austria, Humbert was born in Turin, then capital of the kingdom of Sardinia, on March 14, 1844.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Umberto_I_of_Italy   (10086 words)

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