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SANVITO

SANVITO

Screen Shot 2018-01-09 at 4.26.35 PM

Screen Shot 2018-01-09 at 4.26.35 PM

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Screen Shot 2018-01-09 at 4.26.58 PM

TRIESTE4

TRIESTE4

TRIESTE2

TRIESTE2

TRIESTE 1

TRIESTE 1

GORIZIA CASTELLO

GORIZIA CASTELLO

GORIZIA AQUARE

GORIZIA AQUARE

DALMAZIA ZARA

DALMAZIA ZARA

DALMAZIA COAST1

DALMAZIA COAST1

iSTRIA1

iSTRIA1

ISTRIA PULA

ISTRIA PULA

ISTRIA 4

ISTRIA 4

Venezia-Giulia (The Julian March)

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The term "Julian March" is a partial translation of the Italian name "Venezia Giulia" (or "Julian Venetia"), coined by the Italian Jewish historical linguist Graziadio Ascoli, who was born in Gorizia. In an 1863 newspaper article,[4] Ascoli focused on a wide geographical area north and east of Venice which was under Austrian rule; he called it Triveneto ("the three Venetian regions"). Ascoli divided Triveneto into three parts:

According to this definition, Triveneto overlaps the ancient Roman region of Regio X - Venetia et Histria introduced by Emperor Augustus in his administrative reorganization of Italy at the beginning of the first century AD. Ascoli (who was born in Gorizia) coined his terms for linguistic and cultural reasons, saying that the languages spoken in the three areas were substantially similar. His goal was to stress to the ruling Austrian Empire the region's[8] Latin and Venetian roots and the importance of the Italian linguistic element.[4]

The term "Venezia Giulia" did not catch on immediately, and began to be used widely only in the first decade of the 20th century.[4] It was used in official administrative acts by the Italian government in 1922–1923 and after 1946, when it was included in the name of the new region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia.

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ref   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_March

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