What could be better than celebrating the end of the old year and the start of the new year (in Italian il Capodanno) in an auspicious way?
Of course food plays an important role. Lentils are always present in the traditional Italian Cenone di Capodanno... but let's see what's bring you good luck in the coming year
You chose: piazza
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What could be better than celebrating the end of the old year and the start of the new year (in Italian il Capodanno) in an auspicious way? Of course food plays an important role. Lentils are always present in the traditional Italian Cenone di Capodanno... but let's see what's bring you good luck in the coming year
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The Piazza as a political forum, from the empires to the contemporary democracies... passing through dictatorships.
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In 1970 in Settefrati, a small town in Lazio, the piazza was a meeting place for the town’s citizens, a shopping center, a playground, a resting spot, a political forum. And it still is...
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Families and friends usually gather to await the new year and have a merry feast all together. Of course food plays an important role. Lentils are always present in the traditional Italian Cenone di Capodanno; in fact they symbolize money and good fortune for the coming year... and an important piece of advice: don’t forget to wear your red underwear on New Year’s Eve!
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On March 27 ENIT offered an Italian style “Aperitivo,” an occasion for lovers of Italy to come together and better understand the culture and the lifestyle of the boot-shaped country, and to discover Italy's up-and-coming areas and hidden gems.
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Philadelphia, the city that hosts one of the largest Italian communities of the US, dedicates its Flower Show to the Bel Paese. The result is a journey throughout the most popular spots of the country as seen through the eyes of Americans
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IACE (Italian American Committee on Education) is promoting a physical exchange between American and Italian students with the aim to give American youths the possibility to visit Italian piazza and improve their knowlege of Italian.
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The youngest "Italian piazza" ever: waiting for the First Convention of "Young Italians in the World" (Rome, December 2008)
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Amara Lakhous is in the U.S. to present his new novel "Clash of Civilizations in an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio"