Did You Know Italy Is Shaped Like a Boo

  • Introduction & Quick Facts
    • Relief
      • Mountain ranges
      • The plains
      • Coastal areas
    • Drainage
      • Rivers
      • Lakes
    • Soils
    • Climate
    • Found life
    • Animal life
    • Ethnic groups
    • Languages
    • Religion
    • Traditional regions
    • Settlement patterns
      • Rural areas
      • Urban centres
    • Demographic trends
      • Internal migration patterns
      • Emigration and immigration
    • An overview
      • Public and private sectors
      • Postwar economical evolution
      • Afterward economic trends
    • Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
      • Field crops
      • Tree crops
      • Pasture
      • Forestry
      • Line-fishing
    • Resources and power
      • Atomic number 26 and coal
      • Mineral production
      • Free energy
    • Manufacturing
      • Mining and quarrying
      • Development of heavy manufacture
      • Low-cal manufacturing
      • Construction
    • Finance
    • Trade
    • Services and tourism
      • Business services
      • Tourism
    • Labour and taxation
    • Transportation and telecommunications
      • Water transport
      • Rail transport
      • Road ship
      • Air transport
      • Telecommunications
    • Ramble framework
      • Constitution of 1948
      • The legislature
      • The presidential office
      • The government
    • Regional and local government
    • Justice
    • Political procedure
      • Electoral system
      • Political parties
      • The participation of the citizen
    • Security
    • Health and welfare
    • Housing
    • Education
    • Cultural milieu
    • Daily life and social customs
    • The arts
      • Visual arts
      • Architecture
      • Literature
      • Music
      • Theatre
      • Flick
    • Cultural institutions
      • Museums and galleries
      • Libraries
      • Cultural institutes
    • Sports and recreation
    • Media and publishing
    • Italian republic in the early Middle Ages
      • The late Roman Empire and the Ostrogoths
        • Fifth-century political trends
        • The Ostrogothic kingdom
        • The end of the Roman world
      • Lombards and Byzantines
        • The Lombard kingdom, 584–774
        • Popes and exarchs, 590–800
        • Indigenous identity and regime
          • Lombard Italy
          • Byzantine Italy
          • Similarities between Lombard and Byzantine states
      • Carolingian and post-Carolingian Italy, 774–962
        • The kingdom of Italian republic
          • The role of Rome
          • The reign of Berengar I
        • The south, 774–1000
      • Literature and fine art
      • Economy and order
        • Socioeconomic developments in the countryside
          • Subsistence tillage
          • The growing ability of the aristocracy
        • Socioeconomic developments in the metropolis
    • Italy, 962–1300
      • Italian republic under the Saxon emperors
        • The Ottonian arrangement
        • Social and economic developments
      • The reform movement and the Salian emperors
        • The papacy and the Normans
        • The Investiture Controversy
        • The ascension of communes
      • The age of the Hohenstaufen
        • Frederick I (Frederick Barbarossa)
          • Papal-imperial relations
          • Institutional reforms
          • Northern Italy
        • Economical and cultural developments
        • Henry 6
        • Otto IV
        • Frederick Ii
          • Relations to the papacy
          • The kingdom of Jerusalem
          • The Sicilian kingdom
          • The state of war in northern Italy
        • The factors shaping political factions
        • The cease of Hohenstaufen rule
        • Economic developments
        • Cultural developments
    • Italian republic in the 14th and 15th centuries
      • Characteristics of the menstruum
      • Italy to c. 1380
        • The southern kingdoms and the Papal States
        • The popolo and the formation of the signorie in key and northern Italy
        • Venice in the 14th century
        • Florence in the 14th century
        • Economical change
        • Famine, war, and plague (1340–fourscore)
      • Italy from c. 1380 to c. 1500
        • Political development, 1380–1454
        • The states of Italian republic in the 15th century
          • The southern monarchies and the Papal States
          • Venice
          • Florence
          • Milan
        • The first French invasion
        • Savonarola
      • The early Italian Renaissance
        • Humanism
        • The arts and intellectual life
    • Early modernistic Italian republic (16th to 18th century)
      • From the 1490s through the 17th-century crisis
        • French and Spanish rivalries afterwards 1494
          • French loss of Naples, gain of Milan
          • Spanish acquisition of Naples
          • Tuscany and the papacy
          • French victories in Lombardy
        • The age of Charles V
          • New warfare
          • Spanish victory in Italian republic
        • Spanish Italy
          • The Kingdom of Naples
          • The kingdom of Sicily
          • Sardinia
          • The duchy of Milan
          • Principates and oligarchic republics
          • The duchy of Savoy
          • The duchy of Tuscany
          • The republic of Genoa
          • The Republic of Venice
          • The Papal States
        • Culture and guild
        • Lodge and economy
        • The 17th-century crisis
      • Reform and Enlightenment in the 18th century
        • Club and economy
        • Political thought and early attempts at reform
        • The era of Enlightenment reform
          • Milan
          • Tuscany
          • Naples and Sicily
          • The other Italian states
        • The crisis of the old regime
    • Revolution, restoration, and unification
      • The French Revolutionary period
        • The early on years
          • French invasion of Italia
          • Roots of the Risorgimento
          • The Italian republics of 1796–99
          • Collapse of the republics
        • The French Consulate, 1799–1804
        • The Napoleonic empire, 1804–14
          • Northern and central Italy
          • The Kingdom of Naples
          • Sardinia and Sicily
          • The end of French rule
      • The restoration menses
        • The Vienna settlement
        • Economic slump and revival
        • The rebellions of 1831 and their aftermath
        • The Revolutions of 1848
      • Unification
        • The role of Piedmont
        • The state of war of 1859
        • Garibaldi and the 1000
        • Condition of the Italian kingdom
        • The acquisition of Venetia and Rome
    • Italy from 1870 to 1945
      • Developments from 1870 to 1914
        • Politics and the political system, 1870–87
          • Forces of opposition
          • Land reform
          • Protectionism
          • Social changes
        • The Crispi era, 1887–1900
          • Domestic policies
          • Colonialism
          • Years of crunch
        • The Giolitti era, 1900–14
          • Domestic policies
          • Economical developments
          • Health and education
      • Earth War I and fascism
        • War and its aftermath
          • Conduct of the war
          • The cost of victory
          • Economical and political crisis: the "two cerise years"
        • The Fascist era
          • The rise of Mussolini
          • The end of constitutional rule
          • Anti-Fascist movements
          • Economical policy
          • Foreign policy
        • World War 2
          • Armed services disaster
          • End of the regime
          • The republic of Salò (the Italian Social Republic) and the German occupation
          • The partisans and the Resistance
    • Italy since 1945
      • The first decades subsequently World War II
        • Birth of the Italian democracy
        • The Common cold State of war political order
          • Parties and party factions
          • Foreign policy
        • The economic phenomenon
          • Industrial growth
          • Land reform
          • The south
      • Italy from the 1960s
        • Demographic and social alter
        • Economic stagnation and labour militancy in the 1960s and '70s
        • Student protestation and social movements, 1960s to '80s
        • Terrorism
        • Politics in the 1970s and '80s
        • Regional government
        • The economic system in the 1980s
        • The fight against organized criminal offence
        • Italia at the plow of the 21st century
          • Emergence of the "second democracy"
          • Economic force
          • A new political landscape
            • The rise of Berlusconi
            • Shifting power
            • Scandal and the struggling economy
          • The migrant crisis and the growth of populist movements
            • The Renzi and Gentiloni governments
            • The victory of populist parties
          • Immigration and foreign policy

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Source: https://www.britannica.com/place/Italy

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