BASILICATA

bäzēlēkäˈtä, region (1991 pop. 610,528), 3,856 sq mi (9,987 sq km), S Italy, bordering on the Tyrrhenian Sea in the southwest and on the Gulf of Taranto in the southeast. It forms the instep of the Italian "boot." Potenza is the capital of Basilicata, which is divided into Potenza and Matera provs. (named for their capitals). The region is crossed by the Lucanian Apennines; its main river is the Bradano. Because of a dry climate and a scarcity of groundwater, farming is difficult, although it is the occupation of most inhabitants of the generally poor region. Olives, plums, and cereals are grown, and sheep and goats are raised. There is also some fishing. The transportation network is very limited, and commerce and industry are minimal, except in the Pisticci zone where a chemical plant is located. Natural gas also has been discovered near Matera. Basilicata corresponds to most of ancient Lucania and to part of ancient Samnium. Rome took the region in 272 b.c.; it later passed in turn to the Lombards, to the Byzantines, and (11th cent.) to the Norman duchy of Apulia, of which Melfi (now in Basilicata) was the capital. Although later a part of the kingdom of Naples, Basilicata was controlled by virtually independent feudal lords. Malaria, still a scourge on the coasts, caused the flourishing coastal towns to be abandoned in the early Middle Ages. In the 20th cent. there have been reclamation works and social and land reforms in Basilicata, but many of the inhabitants have emigrated to foreign countries (especially the United States) or have taken jobs in the industrial cities of N Italy. The region has suffered numerous earthquakes.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Basilicata
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books on: Basilicata  - 289 results

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...Ente Riforma -- Bari Hill country in Basilicata Margaret Carlyle THE AWAKENING...her car over great parts of Calabria, Basilicata, and Apulia, and from whom I learned...VI APULIA AND BASILICATA 77...
...3. BASILICATA 31...the Gulf of Taranto to the border with Basilicata. There, Apulia turns inland and meets...and, three years later, made Melfi Basilicata their capital. The Normans also permanently...
...Umbria 80 , the Marche 81 , Basilicata 78 , and Calabria 84 in Italy...capita growth was to be found in Italy. Basilicata 154 was the fastest-growing region...some areas of the deep Mezzogiorno Basilicata, 119 , and Umbria 120 enjoyed...
...Liguria; Emilia-Romagna and Toscana; Basilicata and Calabria the Center-Left coalition...1 8* 12 Basilicata no 1 - - 1 1...Puglia 3 3 3 3 2* 12 Basilicata 2* 1 1 2 - 6 Calabria...
...assortment of regional governments (Basilicata, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Emilia-Romagna...last into the desolate mountains of Basilicata, isolated in the instep of the Italian...some regions, such as Pietrapertosas Basilicata, ranked with countries of the Third...
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journal articles on: Basilicata  - 16 results

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...fertility regions, including the Veneto and Basilicata, experienced greater percentage declines...3.4 -8.6 Basilicata -55.6 -6.4...14.7 Basilicata -25.6 -14.8...
...88-7246-665-2. Maria Pia Ellero taught at the University of the Basilicata in Potenza during the period when she wrote this book. This...If one reads the book with the goals of the University of Basilicata in mind, one realizes that her work is in line with this new...
...the Archaeological Superintendency of Basilicata and by the Superintendency of Calabria...the Archaeological Superintendency of Basilicata at Metaponto, confirm the survey results...of the archaeological authorities of Basilicata, Calabria, and the National Preserve...
...despair" were accepted by his audience--"the president of Basilicata" or "the prime minister of Azerbaijan," for example--their...research would have been more compelling: "the prime minister of Basilicata cannot move his government to Emilia, and the prime minister...
...of democracy with several salient aspects of Italys civic culture. Edward Banfield studied a small rural community in the Basilicata region in the immediate postwar period and coined the term "amoral familism," which was destined to become an obligatory point...
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magazine articles on: Basilicata  - 7 results

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...nearly 1,000 people in May 1976; in November 1980 in Campania-Basilicata, there were nearly 3,000 dead; one centred on Nocera in Umbria...hands of the criminal organisation Camorra. After the Campania-Basilicata earthquake of 1980, 25 billion euros were budgeted for reconstruction...
...and underground passages where abundant traces of neolithic mans activity have been found. Today, the town belongs to the Basilicata, a region known in Roman times as Lucania. The name Matera comes from Matheolae, the Latin name for the place. This, in turn...
...Sicily, the Camorra in and around Naples, the Ndrangheta in Calabria, the Sacra Corona Unita in Apulia, and the Basilischi in Basilicata. And as Scarpinato and Lodato show, Italys mafia cartels are not simply violent, drug-dealing gangs; they are 21st-century...
...The Arab corsairs plaguing Italy and southern France turned to settlers in the middle decades of the century. By 850 much of Basilicata and Calabria, as well as Corsica and Sicily, were in Arab hands. In this period they threatened Rome itself, sacking part...
...is hard to find. Willingers recipe, from a cook and innkeeper named Lucia Botte, who lives in the walnut-growing region of Basilicata, uses plain chopped nuts and egg whites (sugar is the third main ingredient). I had to try the recipe as soon as I read it...
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newspaper articles on: Basilicata  - 25 results

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...food to die for WOULD you like some Basilicata? How about some Calabria on the side...a boot, the neighbouring regions of Basilicata and Calabria are on exactly the bit...different coastlines within easy reach. Basilicatas Tyrrhenian coast, on the west side...
...food to die for WOULD you like some Basilicata? How about some Calabria on the side...a boot, the neighbouring regions of Basilicata and Calabria are on exactly the bit...different coastlines within easy reach. Basilicatas Tyrrhenian coast, on the west side...
Ready to Rock? Byline: Nicola Venning MATERA, a beautiful medieval city in Basilicata, on the instep ofsouthern Italy, is fast becoming a rival to nearby Puglia. With a memorable landscape and renowned for its ancient...
...Byline: Cathy Hawker Matera, Basilicata Lying between Calabria and Puglia...instep" of the boot of Italy, Basilicata is one of the countrys smallest...jobs and a better life elsewhere, Basilicata suffered hugely from a falling...
...White House, is about power to the kitchen. While the kitchen does not reflect the cooking of Potenza itself, the capital of Basilicata, the region in the arch of the Italian boot, it is basically southern Italian. Bright new digs in the renovated Woodward Building...
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encyclopedia articles on: Basilicata  - 8 results

       More encyclopedia Results: 1-8 >>  
 
BASILICATA bazeleka ta, region (1991 pop. 610,528), 3,856 sq...of the Italian "boot." Potenza is the capital of Basilicata, which is divided into Potenza and Matera provs. (named...located. Natural gas also has been discovered near Matera. Basilicata corresponds to most of ancient Lucania and to part...
POTENZA potan tsa, city (1990 pop. 65,714), capital of Basilicata and of Potenza prov., S Italy, in the Apennines. It is an agricultural, commercial, and light industrial center. Founded in the...
MELFI mel fe, town (1991 pop. 15,757), in Basilicata, S Italy. It is an agricultural and tourist center noted for its wine. In 1041 it was made the first capital of the Norman county...
...region of S Italy. The Mezzogiorno comprises the modern Italian regions of Abruzzi , Campania , Molise , Puglia, Basilicata , Calabria , and the islands of Sicily and Sardinia . The term Mezzogiorno, meaning midday in Italian, is a reference...
...peninsula south of the former Papal States. It comprised roughly the present regions of Campania , Abruzzi , Molise , Basilicata , Apulia , and Calabria . Naples was the capital. In the 11th and 12th cent. the Normans under Robert Guiscard and...
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