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Rome constitutes a comune speciale, named "Roma Capitale", [122] and is the largest both in terms of land area and population among the 8,101 comuni of Italy. It is governed by a mayor and a city council.
Francesco Totti, most capped player and number-one goalscorer in Roma's history. This is a list of AS Roma players who have been inducted into the club's Hall of Fame. AS Roma 's Hall of Fame has been launched in 2012 as part of the initiatives for the club's 85th anniversary.
The term Roma is increasingly encountered [109] [110] as a generic term for the Roma. [111] [112] [113] Because not all Roma use the word Romani as an adjective, the term became a noun for the entire ethnic group. [114] Today, the term Romani is used by some organizations, including the United Nations and the US Library of Congress. [106]
Data collected by the Bureau of Inter-ethnic Relations in 2012 suggested that this figure could be closer to 20,000, while Romani leaders believe that the actual number of Roma living in Moldova could be up to 250,000. Romani people constitute the ethnic majority in the villages of Ursari and Vulcănești. [1]
The anti-Roma discourse which had been present in Romanian academia during the 1930s became more prominent as an intellectual current after 1940, with academics who had never previously expressed anti-Roma views now doing so, and eugenicists making more radical demands such as the sterilisation of Roma people to protect Romania's ethnic purity ...
The church of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane (Saint Charles at the Four Fountains), also called San Carlino, is a Roman Catholic church in Rome, Italy.The church was designed by the architect Francesco Borromini and it was his first independent commission.
This is a list of seasons played by AS Roma in Italian and European football, from 1978 to the present day. It details the club's achievements in major competitions ...
The presence of Romani people in Ukraine, locally referred to as the Цигани/Cyhany (IPA: [ˈt͡sɪɦɐnɘ]), was first documented in the early 15th century. [3] The Romani maintained their social organizations and folkways, shunning non-Romani contacts, education and values, often as a reaction to anti-Romani attitudes and persecution.