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  1. Abruzzo Citra. L' Abruzzo Citeriore (anche Abruzzo Citra, Abruzzo Basso, Abruzzo Inferiore, o Marrucina[1]) fu una unità amministrativa prima del Regno di Sicilia, poi del Regno di Napoli ed, infine, del Regno delle Due Sicilie.

  2. The Three Abruzzi. Anciently Abruzzo was not a political or ethnographic entity; it was inhabited by various populations (Sabines, Equi, Peligni, Marsi, Vestini) who maintained their name even after they were conquered by the Romans. Octavianus Augustus, the first Roman emperor, transformed the Abruzzi territory into the "Quarta Regio", that ...

  3. When the Romans conquered Abruzzo, it became known as the "Quarta Regio". In 1272 Charles I of Anjou divided the territory into two provinces, "ultra flumen Piscariae" or Abruzzo Ulteriore and "citra flumen Piscariae" or Abruzzo Citeriore, with a common governor residing in Chieti; in 1641 a second Governor was established in Aquila and in 1684 a third in Teramo.

  4. Mar 7, 2021 · The Kingdom of Italy substantially maintains the pre-unification provinces with the names Abruzzo Citeriore, Abruzzo Ulteriore I, Abruzzo Ulteriore II and Molise. 1806: Kingdom of Naples (Napoleonic) Abruzzo Ultra is divided into Abruzzo Ultra I (with the capital Teramo) and Abruzzo Ultra II (with the capital L’Aquila) 18th century

  5. San Valentino in Abruzzo Citeriore. San Valentino in Abruzzo Citeriore is a mountain hill town in the province of Pescara, part of the Abruzzo region in central Italy. Nestled in the Apennines, less than 40 kilometres (25 mi) from the Adriatic coast, the medieval town lies on the northern edge of the National Park of Majella.

  6. The Population. The population of this province passed from 344048 in 1881 to 387604 in 1901. The illiterates in 1881 included 82% of the inhabitants, a percentage that dropped to 55% in the city of Chieti. "The public school is more attended, but elementary schools are insufficient and ineffective both because of the obstacles caused by the ...

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  8. Nov 20, 2007 · In the Middle Ages the region was called Abruzzo, from the Latin Aprutium. Later, the region was divided into three areas, Abruzzo Citeriore, Abruzzo Ulteriore I and Abruzzo Ulteriore II. So if you’ve taken Italian you know that the plural of a word ending in an “o” ends in “i” – thus Abruzzi referred to all three of these areas.

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