Timeline of Italian history
This is a timeline of Italian history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in Italy and its predecessor states. To read about the background to these events, see History of Italy. See also the list of Prime Ministers of Italy.
- This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
8th century BC
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
706 BC | Spartan immigrants found the colony of Taranto in Southern Italy. | |
7th century BC
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
630 BC | The lyric poet Stesichorus is born in Calabria in Southern Italy. | |
6th century BC
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
540 BC | The Ancient Greek city of Elea is founded in Southern Italy. | |
5th century BC
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
474 BC | The Battle of Cumae occurs, resulting in a Siracusani and Cumaean victory against the Etruscans and ending Etruscan expansion in Southern Italy. | |
4th century BC
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
304 BC | The Greek tyrant Agathocles takes the title of king of Sicily. | |
3rd century BC
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
289 BC | Agathocles dies, and democracy is restored in Syracuse due to this wish to not have his sons succeed him as king. | |
2nd century BC
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
135 BC | The First Servile War, an unsuccessful slave revolt against the Roman Republic, begins. | |
104 BC | The Second Servile War, another failed slave rebellion against the Romans, begins. | |
1st century BC
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
91 BC | The assassination of a tribune named Marcus Livius Drusus helps spark the Marsic War. | |
88 BC | The Marsic War ends in a Roman military victory, though the Italians were granted rights. | |
73 BC | The Third Servile War begins; one of the participants is the famous Thracian gladiator known as Spartacus.[1] | |
71 BC | Like the other Servile Wars, the Third Servile War ends in a Roman victory against the uprising slaves. | |
Centuries: 1st · 2nd · 3rd · 4th · 5th · 6th · 7th · 8th · 9th · 10th · 11th · 12th · 13th · 14th · 15th · 16th · 17th · 18th · 19th · 20th
1st century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
79 | The eruption of Mount Vesuvius spews massive amounts of volcanic gas, ash, and molten rock. Several Roman settlements, including Pompeii and Herculaneum, are annihilated and buried under colossal amounts of ashfall deposits and rock fragments. | |
4th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
365 | 21 July | An earthquake near Crete with a magnitude of at least eight affects the Eastern Mediterranean. Combined with a subsequent tsunami, residents of Sicily are among the casualties. |
5th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
476 | Flavius Odoacer becomes the first King of Italy. | |
493 | An Ostrogoth known as Theoderic the Great succeeds Odoacer as King of Italy. | |
6th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
529 | St. Benedict of Nursia establishes his first monastery at the hill of Monte Cassino. | |
568 | The Lombards establish the Kingdom of the Lombards on the Italian Peninsula. | |
7th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
661 | Brothers Perctarit and Godepert share the ruling power of King of the Lombards. | |
8th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
774 | 10 July | Charlemagne is coronated in Pavia and becomes King of the Lombards. |
9th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
813 | Charlemagne crowns his son Louis the Pious of Aquitaine as co-emperor. | |
814 | 28 January | Charlemagne dies in Aachen of pleurisy. |
10th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
961 | 25 December | Otto I becomes King of Italy. |
973 | 7 May | Otto I succumbs to a fever and dies. |
980 | 25 December | Otto II becomes King of Italy. |
983 | 7 December | Otto II dies due to an outbreak of malaria. |
996 | 12 April | Otto III becomes King of Italy. |
11th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1002 | 23 January | Otto III dies of a sudden fever in a castle near Civita Castellana. |
1046 | Italian feudal ruler and militant noblewoman Matilda of Tuscany is born. | |
1087 | In the Mahdia campaign of 1087, seafaring vessels from the Italian maritime republics of Genoa and Pisa attack the North African town of Mahdia, burning Mahdia's Muslim fleet in the harbour. | |
12th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1115 | 24 July | Matilda of Tuscany dies of gout. |
13th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1170 | Leonardo of Pisa, an Italian mathematician more famously known as Fibonacci, is born. | |
1202 | Fibonacci's Liber Abaci, a book on arithmetic, helps to popularise the Hindu–Arabic numeral system and brings the idea of the integer sequence known as the Fibonacci number to locations outside India. | |
14th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1377 | Filippo Brunelleschi, a famous Italian architect, is born in Florence, Italy. | |
15th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1494 | The Italian War of 1494–98, or First Italian War, begins, marking the first major battle in the Italian Wars. | |
1498 | The First Italian War ends in a victory for the League of Venice. | |
1499 | The Italian War of 1499-1504, or Second Italian War, begins. | |
16th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1504 | The Second Italian War ends in a Spanish victory. | |
1551 | The Italian War of 1551-59, or Last Italian War begins. | |
1559 | 3 April | The Last Italian War ends with a peace treaty signed between Henry II of France and Philip II of Spain at Le Cateau-Cambrésis. |
17th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1678 | 4 March | Antonio Vivaldi, a famous Italian Baroque composer, is born in Venice. |
18th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1725 | Antonio Vivaldi publishes a now-famous set of concertos entitled The Four Seasons as part of a set of twelve concerti called Il cimento dell'armonia e dell'inventione. | |
1741 | 28 July | Without a sustainable source of income or royal protection, the impoverished Antonio Vivaldi dies of infection during the night. |
1796 | Napoleon Bonaparte and his French Army of Italy invade Italy. | |
17 November | Napoleon defeats József Alvinczi at the Battle of Arcole.[2] | |
19th century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
1809 | Napoleon Bonaparte occupies Rome, exiles Pope Pius VII to Savona and then to France, and takes the Papal States' art collections to the Louvre. | |
1821 | A revolt in Piedmont, led by Annibale Santorre di Rossi de Pomarolo, takes place in an attempt to remove the Austrians from Italy and unify the Italian territories under the House of Savoy. | |
1830 | A series of uprisings along the Italian Peninsula occur, calling out for the merging of the different territories in the peninsula into one unified nation. | |
1831 | Spring | Austrian troops gradually crush political resistance along the Italian peninsula. |
July | The political movement Young Italy is formed by activist Giuseppe Mazzini, promoting insurrection in Italian states and Austrian lands to help unify Italy.[3] | |
1834 | 28 May | Mazzini is arrested in Solothurn and exiled from Switzerland. |
1846 | Pope Pius IX is elected, and his support of the unification of Italy helps to further popularise the movement.[4] | |
1848 | Fuelled by the revolutionary republican ideology of Mazzini, uprisings lead to revolutionary governments being briefly installed in Rome, Milan (see Cinque giornate di Milano), and Venice, and the establishment of constitutions in the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, the Papal States, and Tuscany. Takeover by reactionary forces and the defeat of Piedmont-Sardinia by Austria lead to a failure in the First Italian War of Independence. | |
1849 | 9 February | A Roman Republic is declared following an election. |
March | Mazzini arrives in Rome and is appointed Chief Minister of the Roman Republic. | |
1856 | The Congress of Paris, a peace conference held between Austria, France, Prussia, the Kingdom of Great Britain, the Ottoman Empire, the Russian Empire, and the Kingdom of Sardinia, is held to make peace after the Crimean War. | |
Italian statesman Camillo Benso of Cavour disparages Austria's intrusive presence in the Italian Peninsula. | ||
1858 | Napoleon III and Cavour meet secretly in France, in Plombières-les-Bains, where they make the Plombières Agreement. They decide that Cavour will provoke rebellion in Austrian territories in Northern Italy so as to tempt Austria into making a military decision. | |
1859 | After having allied with France, under the lead of Cavour, the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia provokes Austria to war and secure the takeover of Milan and Lombardy (Second Italian War of Independence). Plebiscites subsequently guarantee the annexation of Tuscany, Emilian dukedoms, and Papal-controlled central Italy. Savoy and Nice are ceded to France in exchange for recognition. (to 1860) | |
1860 | The Expedition of the Thousand takes place, in which volunteers led by Giuseppe Garibaldi set out to conquer the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, which collapses. The Papal States are reduced to Latium. | |
1861 | 17 March | Most of the states of the Italian Peninsula are united under King Victor Emmanuel II of the Savoy dynasty, crowned King of Italy. |
1865 | The capital of Italy is moved from Turin to Florence, in order to approach it to Rome, considered the natural capital, but still under Papal rule and French protection. | |
1866 | 20 June – 12 August | The Third Italian War of Independence, between the Kingdom of Italy and Austrian Empire, occurs, resulting in no true victory by either side. |
3 October | After some heavy losses, like Custoza and Lissa, and few wins (most of them by Giuseppe Garibaldi), thanks to Prussian victories the Kingdom of Italy gains Veneto and western Friuli by the Treaty of Vienna. Trento and Trieste remains "irredeemed". | |
1870 | 20 September | Following the defeat of Napoleon III in the French-Prussian War, Italian forces occupy Rome, which becomes the new capital of Italy the following year. The Italian Army breaks into the walls of Rome by the breach of Porta Pia. |
2 October | Rome replaces Florence as the capital city of Italy. | |
1878 | 3 January | King Victor Emmanuel II of Italy dies. |
9 January | Victor Emmanuel II's son, Umberto I, takes the throne. | |
1882 | 5 July | The bay of Assab (Eritrea) becomes the first official Italian colonial possession in Africa. |
1889 | Somalia is established as the second Italian colony in Africa. | |
1895 | 21-year-old Guglielmo Marconi invents the radio telegraph. | |
1896 | The French Lumière brothers publicly screen some of the earliest films in the history of cinema in various locations in Italy. | |
20th century
Year | Date | Event | −1900-the population is about 32.4 million | 1900 | King Umberto is assassinated. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1906 | The poet Giosuè Carducci is the first Italian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. | |||||
1907 | Maria Montessori establishes her first Casa dei Bambini in Rome. | |||||
Ernestina Prola becomes the first Italian woman to get a driving licence. | ||||||
1908 | Europe's worst earthquake, centered on the strait of Messina, kills up to 200,000 people in Sicily and southern Italy. | |||||
1911 | Italy defeats the Ottoman Empire and gain control over Libya and the Rhodes archipelago. | |||||
1915 | Although formerly aligned with Germany and Austria-Hungary, Italy enters World War I on the side of the Anglo-French Allies. After the war, Italy expands his borders well beyond Trento and Trieste, including Bolzano/Bozen and Fiume/Rijeka. | |||||
1919 | Enzo Ferrari, having no other job perspective, eventually settles for a job at a small car company called CMN (Costruzioni Meccaniche Nazionali) redesigning used truck bodies into small passenger cars. | |||||
1922 | After the lack of a compromise between socialists and Christian-democrats, and the March on Rome of the fascist militias, Benito Mussolini is named by the King as prime minister of Italy. | |||||
1926 | Mussolini assumes dictatorial powers. | |||||
The novelist Grazia Deledda is the first Italian woman who is awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. | ||||||
1929 | 3 January | Italian film director Sergio Leone is born. | ||||
1934 | The Italian national football team wins its first FIFA World Cup. | |||||
1936 | Following the invasion of Ethiopia, Italy is expelled from the League of Nations. Mussolini and Hitler signed the Rome-Berlin Axis. | |||||
1938 | The Italian national football team wins its second FIFA World Cup. | |||||
Enrico Fermi is awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on induced radioactivity. | ||||||
1940 | Italy enters World War II by invading Greece from Albania, which had been occupied in 1939. | |||||
1941 | While they are confined on the island of Ventotene by the Fascist regime, Altiero Spinelli and Ernesto Rossi compile the Ventotene Manifesto, entitled "Towards a Free and United Europe". With his Manifesto, Spinelli gives the major contribution to the formulation of the Federalist thinking, and is later one of the main figures of the European Parliament. | |||||
1943 | Nazi troops occupy Northern Italy, release Mussolini from prison and have him leading the puppet Italian Social Republic. Anglo-American troops fight in the following two years to free the whole peninsula. The Italian Resistance plays a growing role in harassing German occupation forces. | |||||
25 July | After the Allied occupy Sicily, the government of Mussolini is overthrown by the same Great Council of Fascism. | |||||
8 September | General Badoglio signs the armistice. | |||||
1945 | Alcide De Gasperi becomes Prime Minister, holding the office until 1953. He is considered one of the founding fathers of the European integration. | |||||
25 April | Milan is finally liberated on 25 April 1945. Resistance fighters catch Benito Mussolini as he flees north in the hope of reaching Switzerland. They shot him along with his lover, Clara Petacci. The corpses are brought back to Milan and hang in a gas station in Piazzale Loreto. | |||||
1946 | 10 June | Birth of the Italian Republic: Italy becomes a republic after the results of a popular referendum. The Constituent Assembly is elected to draft the Republican Constitution. Women are granted suffrage too. | ||||
1947 | Primo Levi publishes If This Is a Man, based on his experiences in Auschwitz.[5] | |||||
1948 | 18 April | The general election sanctions the supremacy of the Christian Democracy party, and the belonging of Italy to the Western side. | ||||
24 November | The film Bicycle Thieves is released.[6] | |||||
22 December | The Constitution of the Italian Republic, agreed between Christian-democrats, Socialists and Communists, comes into force. | |||||
1949 | Italy joins NATO. | |||||
1952 | Italy becomes a founding member of the European Coal and Steel Community. | |||||
1953 | 10 February | The national oil company ENI (Ente Nationale Idrocarburi) is established, with Enrico Mattei as his first President. The ENI will become a strong actor in Italian foreign policy towards Arab countries. | ||||
1954 | The state-owned RAI broadcasts the first Italian official TV program. | |||||
1955 | The Messina Conference achieves the basic agreement on the European Economic Community | |||||
Italy joins the United Nations, along with fifteen other states, after years of stalemate due to opposed vetoes between the United States and the Soviet Union. | ||||||
1957 | The Treaty of Rome founds the European Economic Community. | |||||
1958 | 22 September | Singer-songwriter Andrea Bocelli is born in Lajatico. | ||||
1959 | Valentino opens his first atelier, in Rome on Via Condotti. | |||||
1960 | Italian film director Federico Fellini shoots La Dolce Vita, an episodic study of life along Via Veneto in Rome. | |||||
Rightist riots in Reggio Calabria against the regional capital being set in Catanzaro. | ||||||
Leftist riots in Genoa and Reggio Emilia against the Tambroni Cabinet led by Fernando Tambroni, a coalition between DC and post-fascist Italian Social Movement. | ||||||
25 August | The 1960 Summer Olympics opens in Rome. | |||||
1963 | The DC switches to a strategy of alliance with the socialist PSI. Electric energy is nationalised and the high school system is reformed. | |||||
30 June | Ciaculli massacre: a bomb intended for the mafia boss Salvatore Greco "Ciaschiteddu" explodes in Ciaculli, killing seven police and military officers. | |||||
9 October | Two thousand people die when a landslide causes the overtopping of the Vajont Dam north of Venice; the flooding wave completely wipes out several villages. | |||||
1964 | 12 September | Sergio Leone's A Fistful of Dollars, the first of three films in his Dollars Trilogy of Spaghetti Westerns starring Clint Eastwood, is released. | ||||
An attempted coup (Piano Solo) is defused. | ||||||
Michele, the son of Mastro Pietro Ferrero, modifies his father's recipe for the "supercrema gianduja" (invented in 1946) and renames it Nutella. | ||||||
1965 | 18 November | The film For a Few Dollars More is released. | ||||
1966 | 15 December | The film The Good, the Bad and the Ugly is released. The film is now considered to be one of the greatest films of all time. | ||||
1969 | The "Hot Autumn" of 1969 features occupations of factories and universities, and violence between right and left-wing students. | |||||
The "Years of Lead" are characterized by bombings and shootings, a "strategy of tension" purportedly aimed at avoiding the "historic compromise" between DC and PCI. | ||||||
12 December | Far-right terrorists bomb the Banca Nazionale dell'Agricoltura in Milan (Piazza Fontana bombing), killing 17 people and wounding 88. Four more bombs detonate without victims. Investigations are blurred, and no responsible party has been held accountable. | |||||
1970 | Another rightist coup attempt is defused (golpe Borghese). | |||||
1971 | October | The band Pink Floyd films performances for their songs "Echoes", "One of These Days", and "A Saucerful of Secrets" in Pompeii. The footage was included in their concert documentary film Pink Floyd: Live at Pompeii. | ||||
1974 | 12 May | A referendum asking voters to repeal a government law allowing divorce is defeated. The result of Italian divorce referendum, 1974 is the retention of the law allowing divorce. | ||||
1975 | 22 November | The controversial Italian-French art film Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom, is first released. | ||||
1978 | 16 March | Kidnapping of the former Prime Minister Aldo Moro by the Red Brigades. | ||||
9 May | Moro is killed after the government refuses to negotiate with the Communist group. The "historic compromise" is stopped and Giulio Andreotti steps down from government. The Red Brigades begin falling apart. | |||||
1980 | Umberto Eco publishes The Name of the Rose, a medieval murder mystery. | |||||
1981 | 9 July | The fictional Italian video game character Mario, known then as "Jumpman", first appears in the game Donkey Kong. | ||||
1982 | The Italian national football team wins its third FIFA World Cup in Spain. | |||||
1983 | Bettino Craxi (PSI) is premier of a PSI-DC coalition until 1987. Under his government, a television reform allows Berlusconi to build up his media empire. The Concordat with the Vatican is revised, and salary indexation is abolished to curb inflation from 12% to 5%, but public debt raises up to 90% of GDP. | |||||
14 July | Mario Bros., the first game to officially feature the Italian video game character Mario, is released (both Donkey Kong and Mario Bros. were made by Nintendo R&D1, a defunct Japanese video game company owned by Nintendo). The game is also the first to feature Mario's younger brother Luigi, who is also of Italian nationality. | |||||
1984 | At the European Parliament elections, in the wake of the death of the leader Giovanni Berlinguer, the PCI gains 33.3% of votes and overcomes the DC as first party in Italy. | |||||
1985 | Franco Modigliani receives the Nobel Prize for Economics for his work on household savings and the dynamics of financial markets. | |||||
1986 | Italy took its most visible steps toward fighting organized crime, convicting 338 Mafia members of criminal activities. | |||||
Italy-US relations are strained by the Libyan retaliation after the American bombing of Tripoli, and by the Sigonella crisis following the kidnapping of the Achille Lauro liner ship by the Palestinian Liberation Front. | ||||||
The neurologist Rita Levi-Montalcini, together with Stanley Cohen, receives the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their discovery of Nerve growth factor (NGF). Since 2001, she has also served in the Italian Senate as a Senator for Life. | ||||||
1987 | In the wake of the Chernobyl disaster, a referendum put off the use of nuclear plants. The three working plants are slowly decommissioned. The Green party establishes itself in Italy. | |||||
1989 | 30 April | Sergio Leone dies of a heart attack. | ||||
1990 | Italy hosts the World Football Cup, but loses in the semi-final against Argentina at penalties. | |||||
1991 | 19 September | A man found frozen high in the Alps is discovered, and is later found to be a Neolithic hunter who lived approximately 5,000 years ago. | ||||
1992 | Paolo Borsellino and Giovanni Falcone, two Italian anti-Mafia magistrates, are assassinated by the mafia. | |||||
Mani pulite (clean hands), a nationwide judicial investigation into political corruption and influence-peddling, leads to the fall and dissolution of the Christian Democracy, and of the Socialist party, which had been the most influential political parties in Italy since 1948. Craxi flees to Tunisia to avoid prosecution. | ||||||
1994 | 27 April | Media magnate Silvio Berlusconi becomes Prime Minister for a rightist coalition. However, the pact between northern autonomists and southern post-fascists collapsed late in the year, and Berlusconi is forced to resign as prime minister. | ||||
1 September | The Italian film Il Postino: The Postman premieres at the Venice Film Festival. | |||||
1996 | 17 May | Romano Prodi becomes Prime Minister for the Olive Tree coalition, voted into power with the external support of the communists. | ||||
1997 | Valentino Rossi wins his first World Championship at the 1997 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season. | |||||
Dario Fo, an Italian avant-garde playwright, manager-director, and actor-mime, is awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. A theatrical caricaturist with a flair for social agitation, he has often faced government censure. | ||||||
20 December | Roberto Benigni's film Life Is Beautiful is released. | |||||
1998 | 20 skiers (of which 3 Italians) die in the Cavalese cable car disaster, when a US EA-6B Prowler military jet severed the cables supporting the Cermis mountain cable car. Pilots will be later found not guilty by an American court. | |||||
1999 | 21 March | The film Life is Beautiful is nominated for seven Academy Awards. The film wins the awards for Best Actor (the first for a male performer in a non-English-speaking role, and only the third overall acting Oscar for non-English-speaking roles), the Best Original Dramatic Score and the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film. | ||||
Italy takes part in the Kosovo War, a NATO-led aerial operation against Milosevic's Serbia to prevent genocide in Kosovo. The premier is Massimo D'Alema, of the post-communist Partito Democratico della Sinistra. | ||||||
Italy is accepted in the eurozone. |
21st century
Year | Date | Event |
---|---|---|
2001 | 11 June | Berlusconi's second term as Prime Minister begins. |
20 July | Violence erupts at the G8 demonstrations in Genoa. The police is accused of severe abuses; one demonstrator is shot dead. | |
October | Italy takes part in the Afghanistan War. | |
2002 | 1 January | The euro begins circulating as new official currency of Italy. |
2003 | March | Italy takes part in the Iraq War, although populations show disapproval through peace flags. |
2005 | 4 March | Nicola Calipari, Italian secret agent, is shot dead by friendly fire from an US patrol during the rescue of journalist Giuliana Sgrena from kidnappers in Baghdad. US later refused the extradition of the identified shooter, Mario Lozano. |
2006 | The Italian national football team wins its fourth FIFA World Cup in Germany. | |
Roberto Saviano publishes Gomorra, where he describes and denounces the system of Camorra criminal organization around Naples and its ramifications. | ||
10 February | The 2006 Winter Olympics are held in Turin (to 26 February).[7] | |
17 May | Prodi's second term as Prime Minister begins. | |
September | Italy's engagement is pivotal in the deployment of the UNIFIL peace force after the 2006 Lebanon War. | |
2008 | Berlusconi's third term as Prime Minister begins. | |
2009 | 6 April | An earthquake strikes L'Aquila, causing the death of 307 people and making about 65,000 homeless. |
See also
- Cities in Italy
- Timeline of Bologna
- Timeline of Florence
- Timeline of Genoa
- Timeline of Milan
- Timeline of Naples
- Timeline of Palermo
- Timeline of Rome
- Timeline of Siena
- Timeline of Trieste
- Timeline of Turin
- Timeline of Venice
Further reading
- Thomas Bartlett (1841). "Italy". New Tablet of Memory; or, Chronicle of Remarkable Events. London: Thomas Kelly.
- J. Willoughby Rosse (1858). "Italy". Index of Dates ... Facts in the Chronology and History of the World. London: H.G. Bohn – via Hathi Trust.
- George Henry Townsend (1867), "Italy", A Manual of Dates (2nd ed.), London: Frederick Warne & Co.
- William Henry Overall, ed. (1870). "Italy". Dictionary of Chronology. London: William Tegg.
- Charles E. Little (1900), "Italy", Cyclopedia of Classified Dates, New York: Funk & Wagnalls
- Henry Smith Williams, ed. (1908). "Chronological Résumé of Italian History". Italy. Historians' History of the World 9. London: Hooper & Jackson.
- Benjamin Vincent (1910), "Italy", Haydn's Dictionary of Dates (25th ed.), London: Ward, Lock & Co.
- Zygmunt G. Baranski and Rebecca J. West, ed. (2001). "Chronology". Cambridge Companion to Modern Italian Culture. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-55982-9.
- Mark Gilbert; Robert K. Nilsson (2007). "Chronology". Historical Dictionary of Modern Italy. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-6428-3.
References
- ↑ Frontinus, Stratagems, Book I, 5:20–22 and Book VII:6.
- ↑ James Harvey Robinson and Charles A. Beard, The Development of Modern Europe: An Introduction to the Study of Current History, vol. 1 (Boston: Ginn & Company, 1907), 290, http://www.questia.com/read/6387433.
- ↑ Hunt, Lynn, Thomas R. Martin, and Barbara H. Rosenwein. The Making of the West, Volume C Since 1740: Peoples and Cultures. Boston: Bedford/Saint Martin's, 2008.
- ↑ "History of Italy: Blueprints for Italy (1831–1848)". HistoryWorld. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
- ↑ Levi, Primo. Note to the Theatre version of If This Is a Man, pp. 23–25.
- ↑ "The Bicycle Thief (1949)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
- ↑ "Olympic Bid Election History—Voting Records and Results". GamesBids. Archived from the original on 21 February 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2007.
External links
- "Italy Profile: Timeline". BBC News.
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