- The
Lunigiana (pronounced [luniˈdʒaːna]) or
Lunesana is a
historical territory of
Italy that
today falls within the
provinces of M****a Carrara, Tuscany...
- The
Lunigiana revolt took
place in
January 1894, in the
stone and
marble quarries of M****a and
Carrara in the
Lunigiana, the
northernmost tip of Tuscany...
-
Casola in
Lunigiana is a
comune (muni****lity) in the
Province of M****a and
Carrara in the
Italian region Tuscany,
located about 100
kilometres (62 mi)...
- that
descended from
Boniface I,
through the
Obertenghi line, that
ruled Lunigiana from the 13th to the 14th centuries, and the
marquisate of M****a and lordship...
-
Villafranca in
Lunigiana is a
comune (muni****lity) in the
Province of M****a and
Carrara in the
Italian region Tuscany,
located about 120
kilometres (75...
- Sarzana, an
important town in
Lunigiana, to the
physician Bartolomeo Parentucelli and wife
Andreola Bosi of Fivizzano. The
Lunigiana region had long been fought...
- Giro
della Lunigiana is a four-day road
bicycle race for
junior men (age 17 and 18) in the
historical territory Lunigiana (currently the
provinces of La...
- the
Serchio and
Magra rivers, and, to the northwest, the Gar****nana and
Lunigiana, with a
total length of
approximately 55
kilometres (34 mi). The name...
-
outside the city of
Carrara in the
province of M****a and
Carrara in the
Lunigiana, the
northernmost tip of modern-day Tuscany, Italy. More
marble has been...
-
province of "M****a e Carrara" was born in 1859 from the
separation of the
Lunigiana and the Gar****nana from the
Duchy of Modena.
Originally it was composed...