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Firenze Nord Florence Peretola Airport Rest area "Firenze nord" 280 km (170 mi) 480 km (300 mi) FI: E35: Firenze Scandicci Superstrada Firenze - Pisa - Livorno: 286 km (178 mi) 474 km (295 mi) FI: E35: Villa Costanza: 288 km (179 mi) 472 km (293 mi) FI: E35: Firenze Impruneta previous "Firenze Certosa" Siena – Autopalio: 295 km (183 mi) 465 ...
This is a list of the main architectural works in Florence, Italy by period. It also includes buildings in surrounding cities, such as Fiesole . Some structures appear two or more times, since they were built in various styles.
November 15 is the 319th day of the year (320th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar; 46 days remain until the end of the year. Events. Pre-1600. 655 – ...
The Autostrada A11 or Autostrada Firenze - Mare ("Florence-Sea Motorway") is an autostrada (Italian for "motorway") 81.7 kilometres (50.8 mi) long in Italy located in the region of Tuscany, which connects Florence to Pisa.
The Vasari Corridor (Italian: Corridoio Vasariano) is an elevated enclosed passageway in Florence, central Italy, connecting the Palazzo Vecchio with the Palazzo Pitti. Beginning on the south side of the Palazzo Vecchio, it joins the Uffizi Gallery and leaves on its south side, crossing the Lungarno degli Archibusieri, then following the north ...
Hexadecimal clockface showing Florence time. The Meridian 11°15' East was proposed as prime meridian by Arno Peters in the Peters World Map.The Meridian is the antipode of 168°45' West of Greenwich which runs through the Bering Strait and was proposed as a new date line.
Via Cavour (Florence) Via Camillo Cavour is one of the main roads of the northern area of the historic city centre of the Italian city of Florence.It was created in 1861 from two older streets, Via Larga and Via Leopoldo (as far as Piazza della Libertà, renamed Piazzale Cavour at the same time), and renamed after Camillo Cavour on 17 June 1861, just 11 days after his death.
Piazza del Mercato Vecchio, by Giovanni Stradano (Palazzo Vecchio, Sala di Gualdrada). In the early medieval period the forum area was densely inhabited. Before the closure of the fifth circle of city walls, chroniclers record that there was no longer a single garden or pasture in the city, and that urban crowding led to tenements with ever-rising floors, including case-torri (tower houses).