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Palermo

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Palermo

Capital and chief seaport of Sicily; population (2001) 652,700. It is also capital of Palermo province. Palermo is situated on the fertile, citrus-growing northern coastal plain of the Conca d'Oro, on a bay of the Tyrrhenian Sea. Industries include shipbuilding, steel, glass, textiles, and chemicals. Palermo is the second-largest city in Sicily, and is the most important industrial centre and port with shipbuilding facilities in southern Italy after Naples. It was founded by the Phoenicians in the 8th century BC.

Features

Several buildings from Arab times still stand. The Norman-Byzantine legacy (11th–13th centuries) includes numerous churches; the magnificent Gothic cathedral containing the tomb of Frederick II; and the Palazzo dei Normanni including the Palatine Chapel with its mosaics. Today the palace houses the regional parliament of Sicily.

The bulk of the city is baroque including numerous churches and aristocratic palaces, and the royal palace and park of La Favorita beneath Monte Pellegrino. There is also a picture gallery, university (1777), and a macabre crypt of mummified bodies (19th century) in the Capuchin monastery. The city has an aristocratic tradition and an old, gloomy, and neglected appearance.

History

Of Phoenician origin, Palermo became the chief town of Sicily under the Arabs (831–1072) and has continued in that position under the Normans, Angevins, Spanish, and through to the present day. In the time of the Emperor Frederick II in the 13th century it made an important contribution to Italian literature. Palermo had its main commercial and cultural flowering in the 13th century.

Palermo

Province of Italy in northwest Sicily; capital Palermo; area 4,992 sq km/1,927 sq mi; population (2000 est) 1,238,000.



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The next point of interest will be Palermo, the most beautiful city of Sicily, which will be reached in one night from Naples.
Some people said she had gone to Naples in pursuit of Lord Steyne, whilst others averred that his Lordship quitted that city and fled to Palermo on hearing of Becky's arrival; some said she was living in Bierstadt, and had become a dame d'honneur to the Queen of Bulgaria; some that she was at Boulogne; and others, at a boarding-house at Cheltenham.
The very name assumed by his host of Monte Cristo and again repeated by the landlord of the Hotel de Londres, abundantly proved to him that his island friend was playing his philanthropic part on the shores of Piombino, Civita-Vecchio, Ostia, and Gaeta, as on those of Corsica, Tuscany, and Spain; and further, Franz bethought him of having heard his singular entertainer speak both of Tunis and Palermo, proving thereby how largely his circle of acquaintances extended.
 
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