PONTINE MARSHES

pŏnˈtēn, –tīn, Ital. Pontina, low-lying region, c.300 sq mi (780 sq km), in S Latium, central Italy, between the Tyrrhenian Sea and the Apennine foothills; it is crossed by drainage canals. The Appian Way, a Roman-built road, passes through the region. In pre-Roman and early Roman times the area was populated and fertile, but it was later abandoned because of the malaria in its unhealthful marshlands. The Roman emperors Trajan and Theodoric and several popes started reclamation works, but a drainage system was not completed until the 1930s under Mussolini. The large estates in the area were then broken into lots, and farmers from N Italy settled there permanently. The first rural town, Littoria (now Latina), was inaugurated in 1932. Sabaudia, Pontinia, Aprilia, and Pomezia were founded in the following years. During World War II the drainage works were damaged and the region was flooded. Wheat and cotton are now produced, and livestock is raised.

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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: Pontine Marshes
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books on: Pontine Marshes  - 278 results

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...would come greater knowledge. Marsh speculated on the ways man...social and political progress, Marsh foresaw unlimited scientific...thieves letter, is arrived at! MARSH TO HENRY YULE , FEB. 15...Genoa, Girgenti, the Po, the Pontine Marshes, Sicily, and the Tiber...
...Littoria (1932, agricultural, now named Latina, in the Pontine Marshes area south of Rome); Sabaudia (1933, agricultural, Pontine Marshes); Pontinia (1934, agricultural, Pontine Marshes); Guidonia (1935, Air Force training base...
000 acres of the Pontine Marshes without paying any attention to the...visit the reclamation works in the Pontine Marshes. Nobody tells the bamboozled...16 The Pontine Marshes are divided into two parts...
...reclamation of the Pontino or Pontine Marshes , a region of some 75,000 hectares of marsh and dunes within 60 kilometers...The draining of the Pontine Marshes was completed in October...and the draining of the Pontine marshes in particular...
...difficulty. The cause of the fever-haunted Paludi Pontine or Pontine Marshes is apparently to be sought for elsewhere, and arises...surface again in the neighbourhood of Rome. The Pontine Marshes indicate a longitudinal cleavage on which...
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journal articles on: Pontine Marshes  - 7 results

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...him his projects to reclaim the Via Appia through the Pontine Marshes and to create a museum in the Vatican. Returning home...capital city where "thousands of workmen died in the marshes" (181). Nor was there reason for him to abrogate...
...Mussolinis economic battles was the Battle of the Marshes, designed to increase the availability of...swaths of previously uninhabitable and malarial marsh land in areas such as the Pontine Marshes were drained, whilst the newly created cities...
...succession and the breeding of large families. These preoccupations focus in his obsession with Mussolinis draining of the Pontine Marshes, of which Redman says nothing. Redman thinks that Pounds Jefferson and/or Mussolini contains a "coherent" political...
...Canevascini. Caprotti, F., 2007. Destructive creation: fascist urban planning, architecture and new towns in the Pontine Marshes. Journal of Historical Geography, 33 (3), 651-679. Castree, N., 2001. Commodity fetishism, geographical...
...brutal." The regime succeeded at absolutely nothing (neither in running the trains on time, nor the draining of the Pontine marshes, nor road building, nor in efforts to reduce the incidence of tuberculosis or malaria, nor in the provision of...
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magazine articles on: Pontine Marshes  - 3 results

 
 
...ancient programme for draining marshes in the vicinity of Rome...oeconomique urged drainage of the Pontine marshes in Italy both for reasons...thought to have eliminated marsh miasma, the Philadelphia...draining or drowning of extensive marshes. A product of the Enlightenment...
...Battle for Grain he was famously pictured bare-chested and wielding a farm implement, and at the draining of the Pontine marshes he harangued an adoring crowd half-naked. The removal of Mussolini by his own Fascist Grand Council in July 1943...
...companies, commanded by Captains Britt and Burleigh Packwood, moved forward across the Mussolini Canal into the Pontine Marshes with a mission to seize two key road junctions. This was an area that had been almost entirely free of enemy troops...


 

newspaper articles on: Pontine Marshes  - 6 results

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...800 squarekilometre area of the Pontine Marshes, south-east of Rome. Hitlers...time; second, he drained the Pontine Marshes, a feat that had eluded...by contrast, substance to the Pontine Marshes feat, described by Mack...
...and assembly. Romans of the classical era drained the Pontine Marshes outside the city to arrest the spread of malaria and...more farmland. The decline of Rome meant the return of marshes, mosquitoes, disease, death and depopulation. In...
...96. Gullit was washed up in Italy before he arrived at Chelsea while our own Paul Ince was in his international prime when he embarked for Inter-Milan. Gullit plays on here to rave notices. Ince has vanished into the Pontine Marshes.
...Winston Churchill famously described, Benito Mussolini, Italys SecondWorld War dictator, as the bullfrog of the Pontine Marshes. Had the great man been alive today, what phrase might he have conjured toridicule Maccarone and the neo-fascist...
...England fans entering Romes Olympic Stadium through its avenue of marble statues. Mussolini - or "Bullfrog of the Pontine marshes" as Winston Churchill dubbed him - is carved on a dazzling white obelisk as an echo from times long past. What a...
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encyclopedia articles on: Pontine Marshes  - 7 results

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PONTINE MARSHES pon ten, tin, Ital. Pontina, low-lying region, c.300 sq mi (780 sq km), in S Latium, central Italy, between the Tyrrhenian...
...Fascist economic program as a whole was a failure, but some programs of lasting value (e.g., the draining of the Pontine marshes and the construction of a network of superhighways) were undertaken. The problems caused by an increasing population...
...mountainous, with a narrow coastal plain, much of which has been reclaimed in the 20th cent. (see Campagna di Roma ; Pontine Marshes ). Agriculture forms the backbone of the regional economy; products include cereals, vegetables, grapes, olives...
...market, important stop on the Appian Way, c.40 mi (64 km) E of Rome. It was at the head of a canal through the Pontine Marshes. When Paul arrived here on his way to Rome, he was met by Christians from the city. The modern Italian successor...
...was succeeded by Hadrian. Trajan was an able military organizer and civic administrator. He partially drained the Pontine Marshes and restored the Appian Way, and at Rome he built an aqueduct, a theater, and the immense Forum of Trajan, containing...
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