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Introduction

 

Italy is a land celebrated for the arts, and not the least among the arts that have attained their highest expression in Italy is the art of hospitality. The Italian welcome is as warm and traditional as a glass of fine wine. This comparison is apt, for travelers in ancient times gave the country its first name: Land of Wines. Italians are such good hosts because they get so much practice welcoming visitors from all over the world.

 

Italy is one of the most popular vacation countries in Europe, all seasons being good for a visit. In summer, Italy is an international playground, with visitors from all continents mingling with vacationing Italians at the famous resorts. Spring comes early to Italy and autumn lingers - and so will the wise traveler who wants to enjoy at a more leisurely pace the art centers, the large cities and the holiday resorts such as those in the Lombardian lake region where spring and fall are ideal seasons.

 

In winter, the Italian Alps are unequaled for scenery and skiing. In northern Italy are some of the world's most renowned winter sports resorts, easily reached from such centers as Torino, chief city of the westernmost Piemonte region; from Milano, hub of the central mountain and lake district; and from Venezia, leading city of the eastern region. Skiing is also a summer sport in the Torino Alps and the lofty mountains surrounding the Valle d’Aosta.

General Info

 

 

Italy Map

Time
In terms of standard time zones, Italy is six hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time in the USA and Canada. Daylight saving time in Italy goes into effect each year usually from the end of March to the middle of October.

 

Holidays
Offices and Shops are closed all Sundays in Italy. In major tourist areas especially during high season many shops are now open.

 

list of National Statutory Holidays:

 

JANUARY 1

New Year's Day

JANUARY 6

Epiphany

 

Easter Sunday

 

Easter Monday

APRIL 25

Liberation Day

MAY 1

Labor Day

AUGUST 15

Assumption of the Virgin

NOVEMBER 1

All Saints Day

DECEMBER 8

Day of Immaculate Conception

DECEMBER 25

Christmas Day

DECEMBER 26

Santo Stefano (Boxing Day)

Offices and Shops are also closed in the following cities on the local feast days honoring their patron Saints:

APRIL 25

San Marco
(VENEZIA)

JUNE 24

San Giovanni Battista
(FIRENZE, GENOVA, TORINO)

JUNE 29

San Pietro e Paolo
(ROMA)

JULY 15

Santa Rosalia
(PALERMO)

SEPTEMBER 19

San Gennaro
(NAPOLI)

OCTOBER 4

San Petronio
(BOLOGNA)

OCTOBER 30

San Saturnino
(CAGLIARI)

NOVEMBER 3

San Giusto
(TRIESTE)

DECEMBER 6

San Nicola
(BARI)

DECEMBER 7

Sant'Ambrogio
(MILANO)

 

Italy's Profile

 

Area: 116,303 square miles
Population: 56,778,000
Population density: 487/sq. mile
Capital: Roma (2,775,000 inhabitants)

 

 

Other important cities:

Milano (1,369,000)

Firenze (403,000)

Messina (231,000)

Napoli (1,067,000)

Bari (342,000)

Trieste (231,000)

Torino (963,000)

Catania (333,000)

Padova (215,000)

Palermo (699,000)

Venezia (309,000)

Cagliari (204,000)

Genova (679,000)

Verona (256,000)

Brescia (195,000)

Bologna (404,000)

Taranto (232,000)

Perugia (153,000)

 

 Geographical Profile


There is a great deal of variety in the landscape in Italy, although it is characterized predominantly by two mountain chains: the Alps and the Apennines. The former extends over 600 miles from east to west. It consists of great massifs in the western sector, with peaks rising to over 14,000 feet, including Monte Bianco (Mont Blanc), Monte Rosa and Cervino (the Matterhorn). The the chain is lower in the eastern sector, although the mountains, the Dolomites, are still of extraordinary beauty.

 

At the foot of the Alpine arc stretches the vast Po Valley plain, cut down the middle by the course of the river Po, the longest in Italy (390 miles), which has its source in the Pian de Re (Monviso) and flows into the Adriatic through a magnificent delta. The Alpine foothills are characterized by large lakes: Lake Maggiore and the lakes of Como, Iseo and Garda. The Apennines form the backbone of the peninsula, stretching in a wide arc concave to the Tyrrhenian Sea. The Corno Grande (Gran Sasso d'Italia) is the highest peak. A large part of central Italy is characterized by a green hilly landscape, through which the rivers Arno and Tevere (Tiber) run. The southern section of the chain pushes out to the east forming the Gargano promontory and, sloping down further south, the Salentine peninsula. It then proceeds to the west with the Calabrian and Peloritano massif stretching across the Strait of Messina into Sicilia. The principal islands are Sicilia, rising up to the great volcanic cone of Etna (10,860 feet) and Sardegna. The main archipelagos are the Tremiti Islands in the Adriatic Sea, the Tuscan Archipelago, the Pontine Islands, the Aeolian Islands and the Egadi Islands in the Tyrrhenian Sea off the coast of Sicilia.

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