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Tonight We Improvise (Italian: Questa sera si recita a soggetto [ˈkwesta ˈseːra si ˈrɛːtʃita a ssodˈdʒɛtto]) is a play by Luigi Pirandello. [1] Like his plays Six Characters in Search of an Author and Each In His Own Way, it forms part of his "trilogy of the theatre in the theatre."
Giorgio Sommer (1834–1914), "Napoli – Fabbrica di maccheroni". Hand-colored photo. Catalog number: 6204. There is a great variety of Neapolitan pastas.Pasta was not invented in Naples, but one of the best grades available is found quite close by, in Gragnano, and in Torre Annunziata, a few kilometers from the capital.
Plaque in Naples remembering the centennial of pizza Margherita invention. Raffaele Esposito (Italian: [raffaˈɛːle eˈspɔːzito]) was an Italian chef and owner of a tavern in Naples called Pizzeria di Pietro e basta così (lit. ' Pietro's Pizzeria and that's enough ') in the 19th century that had been founded in 1780 by Pietro Colicchio. [1]
The Chapel Royal of Naples (Italian: Cappella Palatina or Cappella Reale dell'Assunta) was the sacred musical establishment of the Spanish court in Naples which began with the Aragonese Court of Naples, [1] and continued under the Habsburgs [2] the Bourbons, and Joseph Bonaparte.
Il Mattino was first published on 16 March 1892 [2] [3] by the journalists Edoardo Scarfoglio and Matilde Serao. [4] Since 1999, the paper is owned and published by Caltagirone Editore following the purchase of the newspapers Il Messaggero and Il Mattino.
Piazza dei Martiri (in Italian: Martyrs' Square) is a monument-containing square in Naples, Italy, located at the junction of Via Domenico Morelli and Santa Caterina, one block north of the eastern end of the large seaside park known as the Villa Comunale. The square was originally dedicated to Santa Maria a Cappella, but took on patriotic ...
Galleria Umberto I is a public shopping gallery in Naples, southern Italy.It is located directly across from the San Carlo opera house. It was built between 1887 and 1890, and was the cornerstone in the decades-long rebuilding of Naples—called the risanamento (lit. "making healthy again")—that lasted until World War I.
Sant'Antonio Abate is an ancient church of Naples, located at the beginning of the village of the same name: Borgo Sant'Antonio Abate. [1]Legend has it that the church, placed at the origin of the village of the same name, was founded at the behest of Queen Joanna I of Anjou, but a diploma of King Robert of Anjou, shows that, as early as March 1313, there were church and hospital and that in ...