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primepaginequotidiani · 13 days ago
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PRIMA PAGINA Nuova Ferrara di Oggi lunedì, 31 marzo 2025
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sardies · 1 month ago
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Una Torres poco brillante non va oltre lo 0-0 col Legnago
I veneti strappano un punto meritato a una Torres sottotono, che dopo le vittorie di Entella e Ternana, vede lontanissime le chances di centrare la promozione diretta e deve anche guardarsi le spalle dal ritorno del Pescara Continue reading Una Torres poco brillante non va oltre lo 0-0 col Legnago
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pier-carlo-universe · 2 months ago
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La Stazione Carabinieri di San Giuliano Vecchio ha un nuovo Comandante: da Novi Ligure arriva il Maresciallo Ordinario Matteo Petrignano
San Giuliano Vecchio – Il Maresciallo Ordinario Matteo Petrignano, 27enne di Genova, è il nuovo Comandante della locale Stazione dei Carabinieri.
San Giuliano Vecchio – Il Maresciallo Ordinario Matteo Petrignano, 27enne di Genova, è il nuovo Comandante della locale Stazione dei Carabinieri. Arruolatosi nell’Esercito a settembre del 2017, ha frequentato il corso presso il Centro Addestramento Paracadutismo di Pisa e ha partecipato a quello da Operatore per le Operazioni Speciali delle forze speciali presso il 4° Reggimento Alpini…
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forumelettrico · 1 year ago
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Le stazioni di ricarica per veicoli elettrici Be Charge da 22 kW situate a Legnago VR in Via I Maggio: le più centrali della città, a due passi dalla sede della polizia locale (può sempre fare comodo) https://www.forumelettrico.it/forum/colonnine-be-charge-legnago-vr-parcheggio-zona-centro-t29394.html #becharge #legnago #verona
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hanakihan · 7 months ago
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silently slides towards you shitty modern edsali au featuring wealthy dumbass ceo accidentally falling in love in middle of his plan and a not really famous broke but respected musician in middle of crisis and both of them unconsciously just want to love and be loved
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impresaedileroncari · 2 years ago
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whencyclopedia · 5 months ago
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Battle of Arcole
The Battle of Arcole (15-17 November 1796), or Arcola, was a three-day battle fought between Napoleon Bonaparte's French Army of Italy and an Austrian army under József Alvinczi. Part of Napoleon's Italian Campaign, the battle foiled Austria's third attempt to relieve the siege of Mantua and helped lead to France's success in the broader War of the First Coalition (1792-1797).
The battle, which involved a daring attempt by General Bonaparte to outflank the Austrian army, was mostly centered around the bridge at Arcole, about 25 kilometers (16 mi) southeast of Verona. It was a hard-fought clash that included such dramatic moments as Bonaparte personally leading a charge across the bridge, and it ultimately ended in a French victory.
The Key to Italy
In October 1796, the siege of Mantua entered its fourth month. Situated in the Lombardy region of northern Italy, Mantua was one of four crucial fortresses collectively known as the Quadrilateral, that guarded the Alpine passes and the entrances to the Po River and Lake Garda (the other three fortresses being Peschiera, Legnago, and Verona). As such, Mantua held the key to Austria's control of northern Italy, making it vital that the French Republic capture it.
The siege was being carried out by the 41,400 men of the French Army of Italy, commanded by the 27-year-old General Napoleon Bonaparte. Since the siege had begun in June, Bonaparte had already fended off two Austrian attempts to relieve it. The first had come in late July when a 50,000-man Austrian army led by Field Marshal Dagobert von Wurmser advanced down Lake Garda. Wurmser had divided his army into two corps, each one marching down an opposite side of the lake; Bonaparte, therefore, was able to defeat each corps before they had a chance to link up, beating the first at the Battle of Lonato (3 August) and the other at the Battle of Castiglione (5 August).
Wurmser retreated north to Tyrol to regroup and launched a second attempt to relieve the siege at the end of August. This, too, ended in failure when Wurmser was again defeated by Bonaparte at the First Battle of Bassano (8 September). Rather than cutting his losses and retreating after this defeat, Wurmser elected instead to press on to Mantua. The French pursued, and after a hard-fought battle outside the city on 15 September, Wurmser was forced behind Mantua's walls alongside 14,000 of his men. The French then resumed their siege of Mantua, with Wurmser's army now trapped inside.
Far from alleviating the suffering of the 16,000-man Mantua garrison, Wurmser's presence had only made things worse. Mantua's resources, which were already depleted, now buckled under the strain of 14,000 additional mouths to feed, as the overcrowded garrison accelerated the spread of disease. Within six weeks of Wurmser's defeat, 4,000 Austrians had died of wounds, disease, or malnutrition, and a further 7,000 were hospitalized. By 10 October, there was only 38 days' worth of food left, forcing Wurmser to launch increasingly desperate sorties to forage for supplies; one such sortie cost 1,000 Austrian casualties. On 16 October, Bonaparte called on Wurmser to surrender, telling him that "the brave should be facing danger, not swamp plague" (Roberts, 118). Wurmser refused.
Continue reading...
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magical-mystery-tour1967 · 2 months ago
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The following text is from Alexander Wheelock Thayer's Antonio Salieri biography [edited by Theodore Albrecht]
(The guy really liked sugar)
A HUNDRED YEARS AGO and more, Signor Salieri was a well-to-do shopkeeper or trader in the fortified town of Legnago, in the Venetian territory. He must have had a taste for music, for he gave his son, Francesco, the means of becoming a good pianist, but, more than that, put him under the great Tartini to study the violin, upon which he became a distinguished player.
Antonio was born on August 19 [actually the 18th], 1750, and as soon as he was old enough was sent to the public school to learn Latin, and put under his brother, Francesco, to study violin, pianoforte and singing. In process of time Giuseppe Simoni, organist in the Cathedral at Legnago and pupil of the famous Padre Martini of Bologna, became his musical instructor.
(The rest is under the cut)
Francesco was often employed at the church festivals in and about Legnago, to play the violin concerto--a common feature in the service on such occasions. The best musicians of the neighborhood usually assembled to take part, and thus the saint's celebration became a musical festivity. Little Antonio was, from his infancy, passionately fond of music, and when there was room in the carriage which took his brother to and from the place of his engagement, he was allowed to accompany him. When he was ten years old, on such an occasion there was no room for him, but since the village was not far from home, he started off on foot without asking permission of his parents who subsequently suffered no small anxiety at his long absence.
Upon his return with his brother at night, the angry father threatened him with confinement in his room, and bread and water for a week upon a repetition of the offense. The boy, at first greatly frightened, thought the matter over and concluded that it was not so very bad after all. He was such a full-blooded boy that he had been taught to drink nothing but water, and remained a water-drinker all his life; perhaps this was the reason for his extraordinary fondness for all sorts of sugar preparations and sweet dishes for which he was noted in Vienna. According his own account he reasoned out his father's threat in this manner:
"The punishment is not so very dreadful, when one can hear such beautiful music in return. I never drink wine anyway, I don't like the taste of it unless it is sweet, and as to bread, if I can only get sugar, why I would just as soon eat it with bread as anything else, and at any rate I will begin at once to lay in a little stock of sugar."
The boy had actually laid in a provision against imprisonment by the time his brother had another engagement to which he was unable to take Antonio. Let the old man himself tell his childish experience:
"This time I saw my brother drive off with great indifference, as I supposed, and remained quietly at home. After half an hour or so it was still early in the morning and my parents, brothers and sisters were not yet up. I told a servant girl that I would go to mass, and really did leave the house for that purpose. Quite involuntarily, and contrary to my custom, I selected a more distant church, and one which stood near the city gate through which my brother had been driven to the village church-festival. After service, I came out of the church really intending to return home when the thought struck me that that village also was not far from the town. I stood and said to myself: 'My disobedience cannot be so very great a fault, as I am only guilty of it for the sake of hearing sacred music.' Thinking the matter over in this way, my longing for this, as it seemed to me, innocent pleasure, increased, and believing myself unobserved, off I started on the road to the festival. But this time I failed in my reckoning. A person, whom my father had set upon the watch, overtook me when hardly through the city gate, stopped me, and led me back home. Thus you obey me? cried my father, angrily, 'and thus you have forgotten the punishment I threatened? Away to your chamber and get ready for a good dinner.' I sneaked away to my room like a bird to its cage after a warm bath, and father locked me in. But, as my head was full of the idea that I had not committed any heinous crime, I was not much cast down, and having a good breakfast with my brother in the morning before he drove off. I was not hungry, so I set myself now to a book, and now to the pianoforte, and waited for the dinner hour, curious to see if my father would really carry out his threat. The hour struck, and sure enough, the next moment the servant came and brought me a piece (not so very large) of bread, a bottle of water and a glass. After the ugly old woman had placed them all before me, she went out of the room with an ill-boding smile and locked the door again. Well, I saw now that my father was really resolved to keep his word; but the thought of my hidden treasure of sugar lessened the pain. Now I went to the clothes press where I had concealed my store to get a portion of it: I hunted and hunted, but not a trace of sugar was to be found! I had entrusted my secret to my sister, she had entrusted it to my mother, and she had entrusted it to my father, who on that very morning before I was brought back, had confiscated my entire stock as contraband of war.
And now, indeed, I felt the full weight of my punish-ment, and, as I had on other occasions learned that my father was a man of his word, the terror came upon me of being obliged to pass eight everlasting days shut up. and upon such small rations. Overcome with shame and pain I broke out into loud crying. At this moment, my father, who had been listening, opened the door, and said: "Ah, ha, my fine gentleman, pretty tricks these of yours! disobeying my orders, hiding away sugar -what will be the end of it all? Full of repentance I prayed forgiveness, which was granted, with the proviso that in the future, when brother Francesco went to a festival, and there was no room for me in the carriage, I must be shut up all day in my room-a sentence which was rigidly carried out. For this time, after this pathetic scene, I was allowed to go to the table. But as several friends dined there that day, and the story of the sugar had got out, I had to put up with many a banter; indeed for a long time afterward, when I met any one of them, I always had to hear the question: 'Well, Tony, how are you off for sugar?""
An odd boy, ardently fond of music (and sugar)!
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cottonraincoat · 2 months ago
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Antonio Salieri's family - part 1 - Parents and Siblings
*cracks knuckles* time to compile all the information nobody ever needed
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Salieri’s father, also Antonio Salieri, was born on January 21, 1702 to Elisabetta and Francesco Salieri, in Angiari (Verona). He was a relatively well-to-do trader, but suffered from failing business towards the end of his life.
With his first wife, Elisabetta Bonanomi (d. April 6, 1740), he had two children:
Giula, b. May 11, 1724
Francesco Antonio, b. Feb 5, 1737. This was the (step) brother who became a monk in Padua, and with whom Salieri stayed (from 1764-66) after the death of their father.* 
Five weeks after Elisabetta’s death, Antonio Salieri married Anna Maria Scachi di Francesco (d. Feb 3, 1763) on May 15, 1740. They had nine children*:
Francesco Antonio, b. May 17, 1741. He was a musician in the court of Legnago, and Salieri’s first teacher in music. On Feb 2, 1764 (nearly exactly a year after the death of their mother), Francesco married Barbara Danieletti, and they had three children between 1772-78
Giovanni Battista, b. Sep 9, 1742
Pietro, b. Sep 14, 1743
Antonio, b. Oct 17, 1744; d. Aug 30, 1745
Antonia, b. Feb 15, 1746
Domenico, b. Jun 3, 1747
Giovanni, b. Apr 6, 1749
Antonio (our composer), b. Aug 18, 1750
Giuseppe, b. Jan 23, 1752
The precise date Salieri’s father died is not known. According to Mosel (Salieri's friend in old age, and first biographer), it was shortly after Salieri’s mother’s death in 1763.
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The sole source for this was Edward E. Swenson's Antonio Salieri : a documentary biography, written in 1974. Much of the information can be found repeated in the handful of Salieri biographies available on the Internet Archive.
* Statements marked with an asterisk have a small but mildly convoluted caveat to their truth status. Feel free to ask me about them!
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primepaginequotidiani · 4 months ago
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PRIMA PAGINA Il Centro di Oggi domenica, 08 dicembre 2024
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mezzopieno-news · 1 year ago
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FERRARA È LA CITTÀ PIÙ LIBERA DALLA PLASTICA IN ITALIA
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È Ferrara la città più libera dalle plastiche in Italia. Insieme a lei sono Termoli (Campobasso), Borgo Virgilio (Mantova), Legnago (Verona), Mogliano Veneto (Treviso), Tortora (Cosenza) e Bacoli (Napoli) ad avere dimostrato di poter invertire la diffusione dei polimeri sintetici responsabili di una delle forme più dannose di inquinamento al mondo.
Il primato è stato ufficializzato su una valutazione basata su 23 punti suddivisi in 5 aree principali: lotta contro gli abbandoni illeciti, sensibilizzazione del territorio, gestione dei rifiuti urbani, attività virtuose dell’ente e collaborazione con Plastic FreeOnlus, l’organizzazione di volontariato impegnata dal 2019 nel contrastare l’inquinamento da plastica in Italia. Il premio Comune Plastic Free ha evidenziato una forte crescita (da 49 a 111) dei Comuni che nell’ultimo anno hanno conseguito risultati importanti nella lotta alla plastica.
Ferrara è il primo capoluogo di provincia d’Italia a conseguire il massimo punteggio “Al di là della soddisfazione di essere l’unica città capoluogo tra le sette premiate ad aver raggiunto il punteggio massimo, la nostra intenzione è ora mandare un messaggio ai più giovani: condividiamo la vostra attenzione verso l’ambiente e la natura e il nostro impegno ha l’obiettivo di consegnarvi una Ferrara sempre più pulita e sostenibile” ha dichiarato l’assessore comunale all’Ambiente Alessandro Balboni. Il protocollo d’intesa che il Comune ha realizzato ha come obiettivo di essere un vero e proprio patto per generare benefici per il territorio, snellire gli iter burocratici favorendo le attività di volontariato e avvicinando gli enti ai cittadini impegnati nella tutela ambientale.
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Fonte: PlasticFree; foto di Ввласенко CC BY-SA 3.0 DEED
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VERIFICATO ALLA FONTE | Guarda il protocollo di Fact checking delle notizie di Mezzopieno
BUONE NOTIZIE CAMBIANO IL MONDO | Firma la petizione per avere più informazione positiva in giornali e telegiornali
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Se trovi utile il nostro lavoro e credi nel principio del giornalismo costruttivo non-profit | sostieni Mezzopieno
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pier-carlo-universe · 5 months ago
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Campionati Primavera e Serie C NOW: Risultati e Decisioni del Giudice Sportivo. Un resoconto dettagliato delle gare del 23 e 27 novembre 2024
Risultati e aggiornamenti del Campionato Primavera 3 e Primavera 4
Risultati e aggiornamenti del Campionato Primavera 3 e Primavera 4 Le giornate del 23 novembre 2024 hanno visto competizioni intense nei gironi A e B dei campionati Primavera 3 e Primavera 4, con squadre che hanno dato il massimo in campo. Primavera 3 – 9ª Giornata Andata Tra i risultati più significativi: Arzignano V. – Rimini: 3-3 Mantova – Lumezzane: 2-0 Pro Patria – Pergolettese:…
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lordfederico · 15 days ago
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Edoardo Corvi + Benedetta Remedi
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Benedetta Remedi | 25.12.2001 in Parma, Italy
Studies/Emploiment:
Social Networks: Instagram / Tik Tok
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Edoardo Corvi | 23.03.2001 in Parma, Italy
Team: Parma Calcio
Social Networks: Instagram
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They're together since 21.11.2019 They live in Parma, Italy Edoardo has played in: FC Legnago Salus and Parma Calcio (now)
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impresaedileroncari · 2 years ago
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📲328 1787217
#impresaedileroncari
Via Emilio Sereni, 17, 37045 Legnago VR https://g.co/kgs/4gQfT1
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eurovision-revisited · 1 month ago
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Eurovision 2008 - Number 50 - Sergio Cammariere - "L'amore non si spiega"
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Every one of Sergio Cammariere's Sanremo appearances at Sanremo have made my lists so far. His 2003 critics' award winning entry Tutto quello che un uomo and his guest appearance alongside Simone Cristicchi in 2007. In 2008 he returned for his second try the year of the launch of his first career compilation album.
He's still sitting at the piano and he's still working with poet and lyricist Robert Kunstler, but there has been one change. His previous song, Tutto quello che un uomo found Sergio beaming with wonder at the love in his life. Everything was almost supernaturally astonishingly great. Now though things have gone wrong.
L'amore non si spiega (Love Cannot Be Explained) sees Sergio still just as in love as before, but now something - he doesn't know what - has resulted in his love not being returned. Whether this is from someone who just isn't that into him or someone who loved him deeply until very recently isn't entirely clear. He mourns how useless the world is without love and struggles to connect, lost in his own inability to work it out.
He's not bitter though. He seems resigned to his melancholy and no-comprehension. Accepting of it. Like last time, the mellowness of his music carries him through. While Sergio keeps the song moving on his piano, including a solo - not something that Sanremo or Eurovision are that well acquainted with - there's also time for a trumpet solo from Fabrizio Bosso too.
This is all about the jazz and musical performance, weighted with the expression of a complex and nuanced emotional state. This a high-tariff dive from the musical Olympic high board and Sergio pulls it off with the aplomb he's delivered before.
This year he did well, but not quite as well as previously. He finished seventh in the main competition and runner up with the critics. They still all held him in very high regard. It was enough to send his album to number one in the charts and get it certified gold. Not that common for a jazz release.
This is his last main competition Sanremo appearance, although he has appeared as fourth night guest since this. Otherwise, Sergio has continued to plough his furrow of soft jazz, emotional complexity coupled with poetic expression both in collaborations and solo.
This is Sergio, again alongside trumpeter Fabrizio Bosso, and this time the Orchestra Filarmonica Veneta performing Dalla pace del mare lontano (From the Peace of the Distant Sea) at the Teatro Salieri, Legnago in 2011.
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