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  1. Provincia di Ancona (Italia) Poziția geografică în Italia Coordonate: 43°37′00″N 13°31′00″E  ( {{PAGENAME}} )  /  43.616666666667°N 13.516666666667

    • 231 loc./km²
    • 1,94 km²
    • 042
    • Ancona
  2. ISTAT. 042. The province of Ancona ( Italian: provincia di Ancona) is a province in the Marche region of Italy. Its capital is the city of Ancona, and the province borders the Adriatic Sea. The city of Ancona is also the capital of Marche. [2] To the north, the province is bordered by the Adriatic Sea, [3] and the Apennine Mountains to the west.

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  4. Enciclopedia Română, în trei volume, publicată de către ASTRA, este prima enciclopedie în limba română. În ședinta societății ASTRA din 7 februarie 1895, s-a decis a publica o „Enciclopedie Română” și a însărcinat pe membrul și prim-secretarul său, Dr. Corneliu Diaconovich, cu conducerea acestei lucrări. La redactarea ...

    • Maritime Relations and Warehouses
    • Coins
    • Art
    • Navigators
    • History
    • Communities in The Republic
    • Commercial Law
    • Alliance with Ragusa
    • Bibliography

    The fondachi (colonies with warehouses and accommodation buildings) of the Republic of Ancona] were continuously active in Constantinople, Alexandria and other Eastern Mediterranean ports, while the sorting of goods imported by land (especially textiles and spices) fell to the merchants of Lucca and Florence. In Constantinople there was perhaps the...

    The first reports of Ancona's medieval coinage begin in the 12th century when the independence of the city grew and it began to mint coinage without Imperial or papal oversight. The agontano was the currency used by Republic of Ancona during its golden age. It was a large silvercoin of 18–22 mm in diameter and a weight of 2.04–2.42 grams. Later and...

    The artistic history of the republic of Ancona has always been influenced by maritime relations with Dalmatia and the Levant. Its major medieval monuments show a union between Romanesque and Byzantine art. Among the most notable are the Duomo, with a Greek crossand Byzantine sculptures, and the church of Santa Maria di Portonovo. In the 14th centur...

    The navigator and archaeologist Cyriacus of Ancona, was a restlessly itinerant Italian navigator and humanist who came from a prominent family of merchants. He has been called the Father of Archaeology: "Cyriac of Ancona was the most enterprising and prolific recorder of Greek and Roman antiquities, particularly inscriptions, in the fifteenth centu...

    After 1000, Ancona became increasingly independent, eventually turning into an important maritime republic, often clashing against the nearby power of Venice. Ancona always had to guard against the designs of both the Holy Roman Empire and the papacy. It never attacked other maritime cities, but was always forced to defend itself.Despite a series o...

    Ancona had Greek, Albanian, Dalmatian, Armenian, Turkish and Jewish communities. Ancona, as well as Venice, became a very important destination for merchants from the Ottoman Empire during the 16th century. The Greeks formed the largest of the communities of foreign merchants. They were refugees from former Byzantine or Venetian territories that we...

    The Ancona trade in the Levant was the promoter of the birth of commercial law: the jurist Benvenuto Stracca (Ancona, 1509–1579) published in 1553 the treatise De mercatura seu mercatore tractats; it was one of the first, if not the first, legal imprint dealing specifically with commercial law. This treatise focused on merchants and merchant contra...

    Commercial competition among Venice, Ancona and Ragusa was very strong because all of them bordered the Adriatic Sea. They fought open battles on more than one occasion. Venice, aware of its major economic and military power, disliked competition from other maritime cities in the Adriatic. Several Adriatic ports were under Venetian rule, but Ancona...

    John Phillip Lomax (2004). "Ancona". In Christopher Kleinhenz (ed.). Medieval Italy: an Encyclopedia. Routledge. pp. 30–31. ISBN 0415939291.
    Peter Earle (1969), "The commercial development of Ancona, 1479–1551", Economic History Review, 2nd ser., vol. 22, pp. 28–44
    Joachim-Felix Leonhard, Ancona nel Basso Medioevo. La politica estera e commerciale dalla prima crociata al secolo XV Il lavoro editoriale, Ancona 1992 (original edition: Die Seestadt Ancona im Spä...
    William Smith, ed. (1872) [1854]. "Ancona". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. London: John Murray. hdl:2027/hvd.ah5cuq.
    • de facto independence, autonomous republic under high papal sovereignty
  5. Pop. (2000 est.) mun., 98,329. Ancona, capital of Ancona provincia and of Marche regione, in central Italy, on the Adriatic Sea on the farthest branch of the promontory that descends from the Conero massif. Founded by Syracusan colonists in about 390 bc, it was taken by Rome in the 2nd century bc and became a flourishing port,

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Province of Italy / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. The province of Ancona ( Italian: provincia di Ancona) is a province in the Marche region of Italy. Its capital is the city of Ancona, and the province borders the Adriatic Sea. The city of Ancona is also the capital of Marche.

  7. Aceasta este o listă de enciclopedii românești din diverse domenii.. Geografie ”Enciclopedia geografică a României”, Dan Ghinea, 2002. „Superlativele României. Mică enciclopedie”, Ioan Mărculeț (coord.), Editura Meronia, București,

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