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Tivoli

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Tivoli

Town in Lazio, Italy, 25 km/15 mi northeast of Rome, Italy; population (2001) 49,300. It has the remains of Hadrian's Villa, with gardens; and the Villa d'Este, with Renaissance gardens laid out in 1549 for Cardinal Ippolito d'Este. Wine is produced, and travertine (a decorative building stone) is quarried locally.

Tivoli stands on the Aniene, where the river forms a series of falls down to the Campagna di Roma; these falls now produce hydroelectric power for Rome. In the 1st century BC, at the time of the Roman poet Horace, Tibur was the resort of wealthy Romans, and there are ruins of Roman villas, mausolea, aqueducts, and a temple of Vesta. The modern town has a cathedral.



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
Dan MacDonald, pioneer saloonman and gambler on the upper Yukon, owner and proprietor of the Tivoli and all its games, wandered forlornly across the great vacant space of floor and joined the two at the stove.
Philip went to the Tivoli and saw Mildred with her companion, a smooth-faced young man with sleek hair and the spruce look of a commercial traveller, sitting in the second row of the stalls.
The traveller, who was going from Palestrina to Tivoli, had mistaken his way; the young man directed him; but as at a distance of a quarter of a mile the road again divided into three ways, and on reaching these the traveller might again stray from his route, he begged Luigi to be his guide.
 
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