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History of the municipality of Marino, Italy

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  • history of the municipality of Marino, Italy (en)
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  • Massimo d'Azeglio, I miei ricordi, cap. XXIV p. 355. (en)
  • Massimo d'Azeglio, I miei ricordi, cap. XXIV p. 369. (en)
  • Girolamo Torquati, Studi storico-archeologici sulla città e sul territorio di Marino, vol. I cap. XIX p. 174. (en)
  • Zaccaria Negroni, Marino sotto le bombe, pp. 15-16. (en)
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  • Italy (en)
  • History (en)
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  • I arrived in Marino and stayed at the hotel located at the top of the town, on the crossroads of the streets that lead, one down to the church, and the others to Frascati, Castello and Albano. (en)
  • [...] it is forbidden for anyone, on the public street and on all areas subject to public passage in the territory of the city of Marino [...] to stop and/or stand for the purpose of contracting or otherwise entertain with persons engaged in prostitution or to agree on or request sexual services for payment or for a fee. [...] It is also prohibited to adopt attitudes, behaviors, or wear clothing that unequivocally manifests the purpose of solicitation or exercise of the activity of prostitution. [...] Violation of this ordinance shall be subject to the administrative penalty of payment of 50 euros. (en)
  • There would be a difference between the case of the detachment of Boville from Marino and the case of the erection as an autonomous municipality of Baranzate by detachment from Bollate. In fact, it would be one thing to erect as an autonomous municipality a fraction of a municipality that remains larger in any case, as in the case now before the Court, and quite another thing to erect as an autonomous municipality a very large part of the territory of a pre-existing municipality, as occurred in the case of Marino. In that case, it would have been absurd not to consult the entire population of Marino, precisely because Marino, after the Boville split, would have become something other than what it was. (en)
  • Wednesday, Feb. 2. All is quiet, serene. People are heading home for lunch. In the church, the solemn Candlemas service has just ended. Some women linger quietly in the stores for their daily shopping. Half past twelve: roar of engines. Alarm. But few make their way to the shelters; most stand by, as usual: so many formations have passed, especially in the last few days! Where will they go to sow death?.... There, one formation has passed. A second one is heard coming; it too will pass like the others. A sudden roar abruptly breaks all illusions. . People rush to the shelters. Too late! A shower of bombs comes over, heralded by ragged hisses. Then another and another. The village is buried in smoke and the dust of rubble: it cannot be seen a meter away. Screams. Groans. Wailing. Rubble. I give up describing. Those who have lived through those moments know; those who have not lived through them ... cannot understand. (en)
  • In our towns it would make a certain impression to have a shot greeting a group of twenty or thirty individuals in this way, as a simple admonition. In Marino, on the other hand, it seemed logical and most natural. But it must be known that the mood of the Marinese does not resemble ours at all, nor that of many other populations. [...] And by this I do not mean to conclude that Marino is a sad and corrupt population. Far from it. The family, marriage, parenthood, are very much respected there: for all that it is regularity of life, privacy of women, I have never seen the slightest disorder. [...] Of thefts I never heard of any. I always found admirable readiness in everyone, to help each other and to please those who, of course, treated with kindness, and did not want to quarrel with them. (en)
  • I would almost like to say that fortunate was that City that had the good fortune to be governed not by the most just and peaceful Prince but by the strongest, and most overbearing who managed to spare it from devastation, and from fires. How true it is that the very little that survived the fury of the Barbarians was irreparably destroyed by the Lords of the thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth centuries, who in the act of destruction not only emulated, but overcame the Barbarians themselves. (en)
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  • History of Marino (en)
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