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  2. Italic peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italic_peoples

    The origin of a hypothetical ancestral "Italo-Celtic" people is to be found in today's eastern Hungary, settled around 3100 BC by the Yamnaya culture. This hypothesis is to some extent supported by the observation that Italic shares a large number of isoglosses and lexical terms with Celtic and Germanic , some of which are more likely to be ...

  3. List of Italic peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Italic_peoples

    Map 1: Indo-European migrations as described in The Horse, the Wheel, and Language by David W. Anthony Map 2: Possible area of origin and migration route of Proto-Italic speaking people towards Italian peninsula Map 3: Ethnicities of today's Italy in 400 BC. The Italic tribes lived at this point in the south-central part of the Italian peninsula.

  4. History of Italy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Italy

    Marco Polo, explorer of the 13th century, recorded his 24 years-long travels in the Book of the Marvels of the World, introducing Europeans to Central Asia and China. [ 81 ] During this period, many Italian cities developed republican forms of government, such as the republics of Florence , Lucca , Genoa , Venice and Siena .

  5. Rerum italicarum scriptores - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rerum_italicarum_scriptores

    Rerum italicarum scriptores ab anno æræ christianæ quingentesimo ad millesimumquingentesimum is a collection of texts which are sources for Italian history from the 6th to the 15th century, compiled in the 18th century by Ludovico Antonio Muratori. Muratori's work became a landmark in European historiographical methodology. He set out to ...

  6. Latins (Italic tribe) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latins_(Italic_tribe)

    According to one theory which?, it was invented, and used as an ethnic emblem, by the Proto-Indo-Europeans, although it is also a documented symbol of the Stone Age VinĨa culture of SE Europe (c. 5500 – 4500 BC), which was probably pre-Indo-European (although it may have been used as a hieroglyph, rather than a cultural symbol, by the Vinca ...

  7. Italophilia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italophilia

    In 1940 Walt Disney Productions produced Pinocchio based on the Italian children's novel The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi, the most translated non-religious book in the world and one of the best-selling books ever published, as well as a canonical piece of children's literature. The film was the second animated feature film produced ...

  8. Sabellians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabellians

    Sabellians is a collective ethnonym for a group of Italic peoples or tribes inhabiting central and southern Italy at the time of the rise of Rome. [1] The name was first applied by Niebuhr [2] and encompassed the Sabines, Marsi, Marrucini and Vestini. Pliny in one passage says the Samnites were also called Sabelli, [3] and this is confirmed by ...

  9. Umbri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umbri

    The Umbri were an Italic people of ancient Italy. [1] A region called Umbria still exists and is now occupied by Italian speakers. It is somewhat smaller than the ancient Umbria. Most ancient Umbrian cities were settled in the 9th-4th centuries BC on easily defensible hilltops.