|
Liguria
Genoa, Imperia, La Spezia, Savona
Liguria is a
coastal region of north-western Italy. It borders France to the west,
Piedmont to the north, and Emilia-Romagna and Tuscany to the east. It
lies on the Ligurian Sea, a part of the Tyrrhenian Sea.
The coastal strip forms the Italian Riviera; further inland are the
Ligurian Alps, on the west, and the Ligurian Apennines on the east. The
regional capital is Genoa.
Ancient Ligures settled the Mediterranean coast from Rhône to
Arno, but later Gallic migration mixed and produced the Gallo-Ligurian
culture.. The region was officially subdued by the Roman Republic
during the 2nd century BC. During the Middle Ages, Genoa gradually
gained control of most of Liguria, which shared most of the city's
history, and, with a few breaks in the 15th and early 16th century when
the area was under either Milanese or French control, the Republic of
Genoa ruled the area until 1796, when the French Revolutionary general
Napoleon Bonaparte reorganized the area into the Ligurian Republic. The
Ligurian Republic proved short-lived, however, and was annexed directly
by France in 1805. Following the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815,
the area was annexed by the Kingdom of Sardinia.
|
Abruzzo
Basilicata
Calabria
Campania
Emilia-Romagna
Friuli-Venezia
Giulia
Latium
Liguria
Lombardy
Marche
Molise
Umbria
Piedmont
Apulia
Sardinia
Sicily
Tuscany
Trentino-South
Tyrol
Aosta Valley
Veneto
|