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Roberta Negrelli
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@CatherinScience I'm so sorry about your mother. Life is very difficult sometimes. I hope things get better. ❤️❤️❤️
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@Filmsanddogs They are beautiful. Merry Christmas!!! 🎄
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Roberta Negrelli retweetledi

Giacomo #Puccini ci ha trasportato in epoche e continenti distanti, attraverso le sue melodie straordinarie. Nel centenario della sua morte, oggi #29novembre, #Passatoepresente gli dedica una puntata speciale alle 13.15 su @RaiTre e alle 20.30 su #RaiStoria.
Italiano
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#22settembre Salutiamo l'arrivo dell'#autunno astronomico con lo splendido dipinto di #GuidoReni del 1620ca. raffigurante un giovane dio del vino, un #Bacco fanciullo.
#Uffizi #equinozio

Italiano

Philistines defeated by Ramses III
"The Philistines were a population that settled around 1200 BC in the historical region of Palestine [...] Archaeologically they could be identified with the Peleset people, mentioned in the Egyptian inscriptions of Medinet Habu among the Sea Peoples who attacked Egypt during the reign of Pharaoh Ramses III, around 1177 BC". (Wikipedia)
#GROK

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Il #10settembre 1827 muore Ugo Foscolo, fra i maggiori esponenti del neoclassicismo letterario e autore del capolavoro "I sepolcri".
Italiano
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Metti un martedì sera agli #Uffizi, aperti ogni martedì fino a dicembre fino alle 21.30! Lo spettacolo del tramonto da una prospettiva speciale. Approfittiamone!
👉️ uffizi.it/news/aperture-…

Italiano

Letters from Italy
Girgenti, Wednesday 25 April 1787
"The Temple of Concordia has withstood so many centuries. Its light architectural style brings it very close to our current standard of beauty and good taste; [...] I will not express my regrets that the recent laudable project of restoration of this monument has been carried out with so little taste, that the gaps and defects are actually filled with a dazzling white plaster. As a result, this monument of ancient art stands before the eyes, in a sense, dilapidated and disfigured. How easy it would have been to give the plaster the same shade as the weathered stone of the rest of the building! Indeed, when you look at the mollusk limestone of which the walls and columns are composed, and see how easily it crumbles, your only surprise is that they have lasted so long. But the builders, counting on a posterity similar to themselves, had taken precautions against it. The remains of a fine plaster are observed on the pillars, which would have both pleased the eye and ensured durability".

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The Scaligero Castle of Sirmione
It's "a fortification built after the middle of the fourteenth century on the waters of the lake by the Veronese Della Scala family, from whom it takes its name “Rocca Scaligera”."
(visitsirmione.com)

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