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Travaglio announced his intention on 1 June 2009. [24] The title il Fatto Quotidiano ("The Daily Fact") was chosen as a homage to journalist Enzo Biagi, [24] who at then Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's request was removed from RAI, the Italian state television, in what became known as the editto bulgaro controversy; Biagi's daily ten-minute ...
10 January – Roberto Mantovani, geologist (born 1854) 14 March – Antonio Garbasso, physicist, politician (born 1871) 18 March – Prince Luigi Amedeo, Duke of the Abruzzi, mountaineer, explorer and admiral (born 1873) [4] 2 September – Francesco de Pinedo, aviator (born 1890; flying accident) [5] 10 September
Gazzetta di Parma was established as a weekly newspaper in 1735. [1] [2] [3] Cesare Zavattini started his career in the paper. [4] Early contributors included Giovannino Guareschi, [5] Giuseppe Verdi, Arturo Toscanini, Alberto Bevilacqua, Luca Goldoni [1] and Leonardo Sciascia. [6] The daily focuses on local news related to Parma. [7]
[1] The present appearance of the facade is due to a Neoclassical refurbishment in the late 18th-century by E.A. Petitot . The piazza in front of the palace once held a Monument to the Ara Amicitiae (1769), also designed by Petitot, but it has been substituted by a statue of Giuseppe Garibaldi , by Davide Calandra .
La città, le barricate, il monumento, scritti in occasione della posa del monumento in ricordo alle barricate del 1922, edizione a cura del Comune di Parma, Parma, 1997; Alberghi, Pietro, Il fascismo in Emilia-Romagna: dalle origini alla marcia su Roma, Modena, Mucchi, 1989. Le Barricate a Parma 1/5 agosto 1922, numero monografico di “PR.
187 BCE – Via Aemilia (road) built through Parma. [1] 183 BCE – Parma becomes a Roman colony. [1] 4th century CE – Roman Catholic Diocese of Parma established (approximate date). [2] 452 CE – Parma burned by forces of Attila. [3] 569 CE – Alboin in power. [1] 1046 – Cadalus becomes bishop. [1] 1106 – Parma Cathedral consecrated ...
Born in Luzzara near Reggio Emilia in northern Italy, on 20 September 1902, Zavattini studied law at the University of Parma, but devoted himself to writing. He started his career in Gazzetta di Parma. [1] In 1930 he relocated to Milan, and worked for the book and magazine publisher Angelo Rizzoli. After Rizzoli began producing films in 1934 ...
Political alignment I believe the political alignment, as stated in the infobox, is incorrect. Only some of the journalists writing on Il Fatto are left-wingers Also, populist means nothing in the context of journalism, and if it refers to the fact that many at Il Fatto support the Five Stars Movement, which I would agree can be called, although vaguely, 'populist' - that is certainly not the ...