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Southern Europe: Italy Buon Giorno! Chapter 12 / Section 2
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Page 1: Southern Europe: Italy Buon Giorno! Chapter 12 / Section 2.

Southern Europe:Italy

Buon Giorno!

Chapter 12 / Section 2

Page 2: Southern Europe: Italy Buon Giorno! Chapter 12 / Section 2.
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A boot kicking a football• Italy is a 750-mile long peninsula (the

Appenine Peninsula) & islands (Sicily & Sardinia)

• It is surrounded by the Mediterranean Sea on three sides

- East: Adriatic Sea - South: Ionian Sea - West: Tyrrhenian Sea (They are bodies of water that are part of the

Mediterranean Sea.) - North: Monaco, France, Switzerland, Austria,

Slovenia

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The Land

• Size: the states of FL & GA combined (113,351 sq mi.)

• Three types of landforms:

1) Mountains

2) Lowlands

3) Coasts

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Page 8: Southern Europe: Italy Buon Giorno! Chapter 12 / Section 2.

Italy from Space (Thanks NASA!)

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1) Mountains

• Alps: they form a natural border b/w Italy and the countries of France, Switzerland, and Austria in the north

• Appennines: they run from the top of the peninsula to the “toe” of the boot (NW-SW direction) in the center of the country

- They turn into hills in Southern Italy• Volcanic mountains: close to 20

volcanoes, 3 of which are still active today

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The Alps

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The Appennines

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The Southern Hills of the Appennines(Santa Luce)

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Volcanic Mountains• Mount Etna (continuous eruptions): on the

island of Sicily• Stromboli (continuous eruptions): one of the

Aeolian Islands• Mount Vesuvius (last erupted in 1944):

near the city of Naples

- The only active volcano in mainland Europe

- In A.D. 79, it destroyed the cities of Pompei & Herculaneum, killing 10,000-25,000 people

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Mount Etna

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Mount Etna

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Stromboli

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Stromboli

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Mount Vesuvius

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The Crater of Mt. Vesuvius

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Pompeii

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Pompeii

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2) Lowlands

• The largest & most important lowland is the Po River Valley in northern Italy

• Italy’s largest river, the Po River, cuts through it from the border of Switzerland all the way to the Adriatic Sea

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Po River & Valley

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Po River Valley from Space

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Po River

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Po River Plains

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3) Coasts

The most famous coasts:

• Amalfi Coast

• Italian Riviera

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Amalfi Coast

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Amalfi Coast

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Amalfi Coast

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Italian Riviera

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Italian Riviera

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Italian Riviera

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The Climate3 types of climate (from N to S):

1) Highland: in the Alps = cold & cool temperatures year-round due to the high elevation (timberline & snowcaps!)

2) Humid subtropical: in the Po River Valley = hot, humid summers w/ plenty of rain & short, mild winters

3) Mediterranean: in the rest of Italy, including the islands of Sicily & Sardinia = hot, dry summers (sirocco!) & mild, rainy winters

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Siroccos

• Hot, dry winds blowing from North Africa in the spring & the summer

• Cool, moist air from the Atlantic Ocean replaces the siroccos in the fall & the winter (they bring rain to Italy)

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Sirocco Winds

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The Economy

• Wealthy Southern European country

• Its wealth is unevenly distributed b/w the industrialized, urban North & agricultural, rural South

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The Prosperous North1) Agriculture: • In the fertile Po River Valley: wheat, corn, rice,

sugar beet• In the hills of N. Italy: wine grapes2) Industry:• Hydroelectric power from the Alps & natural

gas in the Po River Valley • Manufacturing of cars, machinery, chemical,

clothing, & leather in Turin & Milan3) Trade: in the port city of Genoa4) Banking

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Farms in the Po River Valley

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Italian Vineyards

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FIAT

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Milan Fashion Week

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The Developing South

1) Raising livestock: dry, rugged landscape used for pastureland grazing livestock

2) Agriculture: volcanic & clay soil used for growing citrus fruits, olives, & grapes

3) Tourism

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Pastureland in Southern Italy

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Citrus & Olive Farms in S. Italy

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Tourists on Mt. Etna

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The People

• Capital: Rome• Population: 59.8 million People only live on 25% of the land Reasons: mountains & migration to Northern

cities• Language: Italian• Religion: Roman Catholic• Type of Government: parliamentary democracy• Largest cities: Milan, Naples, Turin, Palermo,

Genoa, Bologna, Florence

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The Flag of Italy

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Rome

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The Coliseum

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Vatican City, a.k.a. the Holy See

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St. Peter’s Basilica

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St Peter’s Square

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Italy’s Heritage• The Roman Empire was the heart of Western

Civilization from 31 B.C. until its collapse in 476 A.D.

• Then, Italy was divided into city-states: independent cities w/ the surrounding countryside

• City-states developed during the Renaissance (14th through 16th centuries) & spread Italian scientific & cultural achievements abroad

• City-states were unified into an independent country (Italy) by Giuseppe Garibaldi & Victor Emmanuel II. in 1861

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Modern Italy• Dictator Benito Mussolini ruled Italy from

1922-1945

• Mussolini supported Adolf Hitler & pushed Italy into World War II (Italy was defeated)

• Italy became a parliamentary democracy in 1946

• Unstable democracy w/ many-many changes of government

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Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi

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Roman Roads

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Roman Aqueducts

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Italian Pasta Dishes

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The End

Ciao!