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Milan| Province of northern Italy in western Lombardy region; capital Milan; area 1,982 sq km/765 sq mi; population (2000 est) 3,757,600. |
Milan| City in Monroe and Washtenaw counties, southeastern Michigan; population (1990) 4,000. Milan is on the Saline River, 21 km/13 mi south-southeast of Ann Arbor. |
| Timber and wood products, car plastics and parts, and furnaces are all made in Milan. A large federal correctional institution is sited immediately to the northeast of the city. |
Milan| Village in Erie and Huron counties, northern Ohio; population (1990) 1,500. Milan overlooks the Huron River, 19 km/12 mi south-southeast of Sandusky. Thomas Alva Edison was born here in 1847, and the house where he spent his first years has been preserved. |
| Situated in an agricultural district, Milan owes its distinctive New England architecture to settlers from Connecticut. It was once a centre for shipbuilding, but now its economy is based around light industry, including the manufacture of clay and wood products and beer. It is the site of a bird and wildlife sanctuary and the Ohio State Soldiers and Sailors Home (founded 1866). |
Milan| City in Gibson County, western Tennessee, 35 km/22 mi north-northeast of Jackson; population (1990) 7,500. |
| Milan is an agricultural distribution centre with various light manufacturing industries. The city also services the large Milan Arsenal, which is located to the southeast, along with a reservation of the Tennessee National Guard. There is an agricultural research station of the University of Tennessee just northeast of the city. |
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