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Walk around Salerno Italy 4K.
Salerno is a city and port on the Tyrrhenian Sea, in southern Italy, the administrative center of the province of Salerno. A convenient starting point for budget trips along the Amalfi Coast. It is also of great interest in itself.
0:00 Lungomare Salerno
7:38 Via Adolfo Cilento
8:00 Corso Giuseppe Garibaldi
8:45 Tribunale di Salerno
10:02 Via Adolfo Cilento
11:35 Corso Vittorio Emanuele
15:15 Piazza Sedile di Porta Nova
16:30 Via Mercanti
20:02 Via Duomo
21:10 Piazza Alfano I
21:35 Cattedrale di Santa Maria degli Angeli, San Matteo e San Gregorio Magno
23:50 Piazza Alfano I
24:50 Via Romualdo II Guarna
25:05 Piazza Abate Conforti
25:20 Chiesa dell’Addolorata
26:00 Via delle Botteghelle
27:45 Via Mercanti
28:23 Vicolo Antica Corte
29:20 Via Roma
35:10 Gap in record
35:10 Corso Vittorio Eman...
published: 18 Oct 2019
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Allied Invasion of Italy | Battle of Salerno | World War 2 Documentary
● Please SUPPORT my work on Patreon: https://bit.ly/2LT6opZ
● Visit my 2ND CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/2ILbyX8
►Facebook: https://bit.ly/2INA7yt
►Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Lz57nY
►Google+: https://bit.ly/2IPz7dl
✚ Watch my "WW2 in Europe" PLAYLIST: https://bit.ly/2HEkWHl
This film – originally titled as ‘Battle of Salerno’ – is a short documentary produced by the U.S. Army about the Allied invasion of Italy during World War 2. It pictures Operation Avalanche, the main invasion at Salerno by the American Fifth Army under Lieutenant General Mark Clark on 9 September, 1943. The scenes of the documentary were filmed under fire by combat photographers. It was an episode of ’The Big Picture’ TV series and published in 1958.
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND / CONTEXT
In the final push to defeat the Axis po...
published: 21 May 2017
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Sabrina Salerno - ERASE REWIND
https://itunes.apple.com/it/album/all-of-me/id1027730690
http://vevo.ly/SaWwkx
published: 23 Feb 2016
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Salerno - Piccola Grande Italia
Capoluogo della omonima provincia campana, ha circa centoquarantamila abitanti. Sorge ai piedi della collina Bonadies, con la costiera amalfitana a nord e la costa cilentana a sud. Salerno è gemellata con Tohno (Giappone), dal 1984.
published: 29 Dec 2010
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What Is Salerno-Style Pizza? | Food Skills
For those craving the fresh ingredients of Naples, but aren't in the mood for Neapolitan pizza’s ultra-puffy crust, Salerno-style pies might be the ideal way to combine cheese, dough, and tomato sauce. Named after Salerno’s area code, and helmed by celebrated chef Roberto Paciullo, Zero Otto Nove is one of the few restaurants in NYC specializing in the southern Italian city’s unique approach to pizza-making. In this continuation of Food Skills’ deep-dive into NYC’s “real” Little Italy in the Bronx, chef Paciullo explains how his Salernitano pizza has become a surprise hit on the corner of Arthur Avenue and East 186th Street. Cooked extra crisp, and topped with Salerno-specific ingredients, like anchovies and capers, the pizza at Zero Otto Nove is both comfortingly familiar and exhilarating...
published: 16 Jul 2018
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SALERNO, ITALIA
Salerno is an ancient city and comune in Campania (southwestern Italy) and is the capital of the province of the same name. It is located on the Gulf of Salerno on the Tyrrhenian Sea. The city is divided into three distinct zones: the medieval sector, the 19th century sector and the more densely populated post-war area, with its several apartment blocks.
Human settlement at Salerno has a rich and vibrant past, dating back to pre-historic times. The site has been one of the most important and strategic ports on the Mediterranean sea, yielding a rich Greco-Roman heritage. It was an independent Lombard principality, Principality of Salerno, in the early Middle Ages. During this time, the Schola Medica Salernitana, the first medical school in the world, was founded. In the 16th century, under...
published: 09 Nov 2019
51:52
Walk around Salerno Italy 4K.
Salerno is a city and port on the Tyrrhenian Sea, in southern Italy, the administrative center of the province of Salerno. A convenient starting point for budge...
Salerno is a city and port on the Tyrrhenian Sea, in southern Italy, the administrative center of the province of Salerno. A convenient starting point for budget trips along the Amalfi Coast. It is also of great interest in itself.
0:00 Lungomare Salerno
7:38 Via Adolfo Cilento
8:00 Corso Giuseppe Garibaldi
8:45 Tribunale di Salerno
10:02 Via Adolfo Cilento
11:35 Corso Vittorio Emanuele
15:15 Piazza Sedile di Porta Nova
16:30 Via Mercanti
20:02 Via Duomo
21:10 Piazza Alfano I
21:35 Cattedrale di Santa Maria degli Angeli, San Matteo e San Gregorio Magno
23:50 Piazza Alfano I
24:50 Via Romualdo II Guarna
25:05 Piazza Abate Conforti
25:20 Chiesa dell’Addolorata
26:00 Via delle Botteghelle
27:45 Via Mercanti
28:23 Vicolo Antica Corte
29:20 Via Roma
35:10 Gap in record
35:10 Corso Vittorio Emanuele
39:20 Piazza Vittorio Veneto
39:40 Stazione Salerno
40:30 Chiesa Parrocchiale del Sacro Cuore
41:25 Via Clemente Mauro
43:10 Piazza della Concordia
45:35 Via Ulisse Abbagnano
46:10 Corso Giuseppe Garibaldi
49:55 Via Adolfo Cilento
50:43 Via dei Principati
51:18 Piazza XXIV Maggio
https://wn.com/Walk_Around_Salerno_Italy_4K.
Salerno is a city and port on the Tyrrhenian Sea, in southern Italy, the administrative center of the province of Salerno. A convenient starting point for budget trips along the Amalfi Coast. It is also of great interest in itself.
0:00 Lungomare Salerno
7:38 Via Adolfo Cilento
8:00 Corso Giuseppe Garibaldi
8:45 Tribunale di Salerno
10:02 Via Adolfo Cilento
11:35 Corso Vittorio Emanuele
15:15 Piazza Sedile di Porta Nova
16:30 Via Mercanti
20:02 Via Duomo
21:10 Piazza Alfano I
21:35 Cattedrale di Santa Maria degli Angeli, San Matteo e San Gregorio Magno
23:50 Piazza Alfano I
24:50 Via Romualdo II Guarna
25:05 Piazza Abate Conforti
25:20 Chiesa dell’Addolorata
26:00 Via delle Botteghelle
27:45 Via Mercanti
28:23 Vicolo Antica Corte
29:20 Via Roma
35:10 Gap in record
35:10 Corso Vittorio Emanuele
39:20 Piazza Vittorio Veneto
39:40 Stazione Salerno
40:30 Chiesa Parrocchiale del Sacro Cuore
41:25 Via Clemente Mauro
43:10 Piazza della Concordia
45:35 Via Ulisse Abbagnano
46:10 Corso Giuseppe Garibaldi
49:55 Via Adolfo Cilento
50:43 Via dei Principati
51:18 Piazza XXIV Maggio
- published: 18 Oct 2019
- views: 14440
23:47
Allied Invasion of Italy | Battle of Salerno | World War 2 Documentary
● Please SUPPORT my work on Patreon: https://bit.ly/2LT6opZ
● Visit my 2ND CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/2ILbyX8
►Facebook: https://bit.ly/2INA7yt
►Twitter: https://b...
● Please SUPPORT my work on Patreon: https://bit.ly/2LT6opZ
● Visit my 2ND CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/2ILbyX8
►Facebook: https://bit.ly/2INA7yt
►Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Lz57nY
►Google+: https://bit.ly/2IPz7dl
✚ Watch my "WW2 in Europe" PLAYLIST: https://bit.ly/2HEkWHl
This film – originally titled as ‘Battle of Salerno’ – is a short documentary produced by the U.S. Army about the Allied invasion of Italy during World War 2. It pictures Operation Avalanche, the main invasion at Salerno by the American Fifth Army under Lieutenant General Mark Clark on 9 September, 1943. The scenes of the documentary were filmed under fire by combat photographers. It was an episode of ’The Big Picture’ TV series and published in 1958.
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND / CONTEXT
In the final push to defeat the Axis powers of Italy and Germany during World War 2, the United States and Great Britain, the leading Allied powers, planned to invade Italy. The Italian Campaign, from July 10, 1943, to May 2, 1945, was a series of Allied beach landings and land battles from Sicily and southern Italy up the Italian mainland toward Germany. The campaign seared into history the names of such places as Anzio, Salerno and Monte Cassino, as Allied armies severed the German-Italian Axis in fierce fighting and threatened the southern flank of Germany. The Allied advance through Italy produced some of the most bitter, costly fighting of the war, much of it in treacherous mountain terrain.
The Allied plan:
In Casablanca, Morocco, in January 1943, Allied leaders decided to use their massive military resources in the Mediterranean to launch an invasion of Italy, which British Prime Minister Winston Churchill called the “soft underbelly of Europe”. The objectives were to remove Italy from the war, secure the Mediterranean Sea and force Germany to divert some divisions from the Russian front and other German divisions from northern France, where the Allies were planning their cross-Channel landing at Normandy, France.
Italy surrenders, Germany fights on:
On July 10, 1943, Operation Husky, the code name for the invasion of Sicily, began with airborne and amphibious landings on the island’s southern shores. Jarred by the Allied invasion, the Italian fascist regime fell rapidly into disrepute, as the Allies had hoped. On July 24, 1943, Prime Minister Benito Mussolini was deposed and arrested. A new provisional government was set up under Marshal Pietro Badoglio, who had opposed Italy’s alliance with Nazi Germany and who immediately began secret discussions with the Allies about an armistice.
On August 17, 1943, Allied forces marched on the major port city of Messina (Sicily), expecting to fight one final battle; instead, they discovered some 100,000 German and Italian troops had managed to escape to the Italian mainland. The battle for Sicily was complete, but German losses had not been severe, and the Allies’ failure to capture the fleeing Axis armies undermined their victory.
Meanwhile, the German command deployed 16 new divisions on the Italian mainland. German leader Adolf Hitler did not want to let the Allies establish air bases in Italy that could threaten Germany’s southern cities as well as its primary oil supplies in Romania. He instructed his army group commander in southern Italy, Field Marshal Albert Kesselring, to make the Allies pay dearly for every inch of their advance.
Battle of Salerno (Operation Avalanche):
On 9 September 1943, the U.S. 5th Army under Lieutenant General Mark W. Clark landed along the Salerno coastline while British Commando units and their American counterparts, the U.S. Rangers, landed on the peninsula itself. Salerno had been chosen as the first site for invasion of the peninsula because it was the northern-most point to which the Allies could fly planes from its bases in Sicily. Rockets launched from landing craft provided cover, and the beach landings went relatively smoothly. It wasn’t until two days later that the Germans, with some Italian troops coerced into service, mounted a heavy counterattack on the beachhead. But Clark called in the 82nd Airborne for support, and by the 15th, Salerno was in Allied hands. Meanwhile, the British 1st Airborne Division, having successfully landed at Taranto, captured the airfield at Foggia.
With the Salerno beachhead secure, the Fifth Army began its attack northwest towards Naples on 19 September.
Clark was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the second-highest U.S. award for valor in combat.
Allied Invasion of Italy | Battle of Salerno | World War 2 Documentary
TBFA_0120 (DM_0064)
NOTE: THE VIDEO DOCUMENTS HISTORICAL EVENTS. SINCE IT WAS PRODUCED DECADES AGO, IT HAS HISTORICAL VALUES AND CAN BE CONSIDERED AS A VALUABLE HISTORICAL DOCUMENT. THE VIDEO HAS BEEN UPLOADED WITH EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES. ITS TOPIC IS REPRESENTED WITHIN HISTORICAL CONTEXT. THE VIDEO DOES NOT CONTAIN SENSITIVE SCENES AT ALL!
https://wn.com/Allied_Invasion_Of_Italy_|_Battle_Of_Salerno_|_World_War_2_Documentary
● Please SUPPORT my work on Patreon: https://bit.ly/2LT6opZ
● Visit my 2ND CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/2ILbyX8
►Facebook: https://bit.ly/2INA7yt
►Twitter: https://bit.ly/2Lz57nY
►Google+: https://bit.ly/2IPz7dl
✚ Watch my "WW2 in Europe" PLAYLIST: https://bit.ly/2HEkWHl
This film – originally titled as ‘Battle of Salerno’ – is a short documentary produced by the U.S. Army about the Allied invasion of Italy during World War 2. It pictures Operation Avalanche, the main invasion at Salerno by the American Fifth Army under Lieutenant General Mark Clark on 9 September, 1943. The scenes of the documentary were filmed under fire by combat photographers. It was an episode of ’The Big Picture’ TV series and published in 1958.
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND / CONTEXT
In the final push to defeat the Axis powers of Italy and Germany during World War 2, the United States and Great Britain, the leading Allied powers, planned to invade Italy. The Italian Campaign, from July 10, 1943, to May 2, 1945, was a series of Allied beach landings and land battles from Sicily and southern Italy up the Italian mainland toward Germany. The campaign seared into history the names of such places as Anzio, Salerno and Monte Cassino, as Allied armies severed the German-Italian Axis in fierce fighting and threatened the southern flank of Germany. The Allied advance through Italy produced some of the most bitter, costly fighting of the war, much of it in treacherous mountain terrain.
The Allied plan:
In Casablanca, Morocco, in January 1943, Allied leaders decided to use their massive military resources in the Mediterranean to launch an invasion of Italy, which British Prime Minister Winston Churchill called the “soft underbelly of Europe”. The objectives were to remove Italy from the war, secure the Mediterranean Sea and force Germany to divert some divisions from the Russian front and other German divisions from northern France, where the Allies were planning their cross-Channel landing at Normandy, France.
Italy surrenders, Germany fights on:
On July 10, 1943, Operation Husky, the code name for the invasion of Sicily, began with airborne and amphibious landings on the island’s southern shores. Jarred by the Allied invasion, the Italian fascist regime fell rapidly into disrepute, as the Allies had hoped. On July 24, 1943, Prime Minister Benito Mussolini was deposed and arrested. A new provisional government was set up under Marshal Pietro Badoglio, who had opposed Italy’s alliance with Nazi Germany and who immediately began secret discussions with the Allies about an armistice.
On August 17, 1943, Allied forces marched on the major port city of Messina (Sicily), expecting to fight one final battle; instead, they discovered some 100,000 German and Italian troops had managed to escape to the Italian mainland. The battle for Sicily was complete, but German losses had not been severe, and the Allies’ failure to capture the fleeing Axis armies undermined their victory.
Meanwhile, the German command deployed 16 new divisions on the Italian mainland. German leader Adolf Hitler did not want to let the Allies establish air bases in Italy that could threaten Germany’s southern cities as well as its primary oil supplies in Romania. He instructed his army group commander in southern Italy, Field Marshal Albert Kesselring, to make the Allies pay dearly for every inch of their advance.
Battle of Salerno (Operation Avalanche):
On 9 September 1943, the U.S. 5th Army under Lieutenant General Mark W. Clark landed along the Salerno coastline while British Commando units and their American counterparts, the U.S. Rangers, landed on the peninsula itself. Salerno had been chosen as the first site for invasion of the peninsula because it was the northern-most point to which the Allies could fly planes from its bases in Sicily. Rockets launched from landing craft provided cover, and the beach landings went relatively smoothly. It wasn’t until two days later that the Germans, with some Italian troops coerced into service, mounted a heavy counterattack on the beachhead. But Clark called in the 82nd Airborne for support, and by the 15th, Salerno was in Allied hands. Meanwhile, the British 1st Airborne Division, having successfully landed at Taranto, captured the airfield at Foggia.
With the Salerno beachhead secure, the Fifth Army began its attack northwest towards Naples on 19 September.
Clark was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the second-highest U.S. award for valor in combat.
Allied Invasion of Italy | Battle of Salerno | World War 2 Documentary
TBFA_0120 (DM_0064)
NOTE: THE VIDEO DOCUMENTS HISTORICAL EVENTS. SINCE IT WAS PRODUCED DECADES AGO, IT HAS HISTORICAL VALUES AND CAN BE CONSIDERED AS A VALUABLE HISTORICAL DOCUMENT. THE VIDEO HAS BEEN UPLOADED WITH EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES. ITS TOPIC IS REPRESENTED WITHIN HISTORICAL CONTEXT. THE VIDEO DOES NOT CONTAIN SENSITIVE SCENES AT ALL!
- published: 21 May 2017
- views: 139224
3:09
Sabrina Salerno - ERASE REWIND
https://itunes.apple.com/it/album/all-of-me/id1027730690
http://vevo.ly/SaWwkx
https://itunes.apple.com/it/album/all-of-me/id1027730690
http://vevo.ly/SaWwkx
https://wn.com/Sabrina_Salerno_Erase_Rewind
https://itunes.apple.com/it/album/all-of-me/id1027730690
http://vevo.ly/SaWwkx
- published: 23 Feb 2016
- views: 382041
23:45
Salerno - Piccola Grande Italia
Capoluogo della omonima provincia campana, ha circa centoquarantamila abitanti. Sorge ai piedi della collina Bonadies, con la costiera amalfitana a nord e la co...
Capoluogo della omonima provincia campana, ha circa centoquarantamila abitanti. Sorge ai piedi della collina Bonadies, con la costiera amalfitana a nord e la costa cilentana a sud. Salerno è gemellata con Tohno (Giappone), dal 1984.
https://wn.com/Salerno_Piccola_Grande_Italia
Capoluogo della omonima provincia campana, ha circa centoquarantamila abitanti. Sorge ai piedi della collina Bonadies, con la costiera amalfitana a nord e la costa cilentana a sud. Salerno è gemellata con Tohno (Giappone), dal 1984.
- published: 29 Dec 2010
- views: 25582
4:00
What Is Salerno-Style Pizza? | Food Skills
For those craving the fresh ingredients of Naples, but aren't in the mood for Neapolitan pizza’s ultra-puffy crust, Salerno-style pies might be the ideal way to...
For those craving the fresh ingredients of Naples, but aren't in the mood for Neapolitan pizza’s ultra-puffy crust, Salerno-style pies might be the ideal way to combine cheese, dough, and tomato sauce. Named after Salerno’s area code, and helmed by celebrated chef Roberto Paciullo, Zero Otto Nove is one of the few restaurants in NYC specializing in the southern Italian city’s unique approach to pizza-making. In this continuation of Food Skills’ deep-dive into NYC’s “real” Little Italy in the Bronx, chef Paciullo explains how his Salernitano pizza has become a surprise hit on the corner of Arthur Avenue and East 186th Street. Cooked extra crisp, and topped with Salerno-specific ingredients, like anchovies and capers, the pizza at Zero Otto Nove is both comfortingly familiar and exhilaratingly unique. Pairing ocean flavors with basil and olives, the restaurant’s signature Marinara pie is a must-try for thin-crust pizza lovers everywhere.
Subscribe to First We Feast on YouTube: http://goo.gl/UxFzhK
Check out more of First We Feast here:
http://firstwefeast.com/
https://twitter.com/firstwefeast
https://www.facebook.com/FirstWeFeast
http://instagram.com/firstwefeast
First We Feast videos offer an iconoclastic view into the culinary world, taking you behind-the-scenes with some of the country's best chefs and finding the unexpected places where food and pop culture intersect.
https://wn.com/What_Is_Salerno_Style_Pizza_|_Food_Skills
For those craving the fresh ingredients of Naples, but aren't in the mood for Neapolitan pizza’s ultra-puffy crust, Salerno-style pies might be the ideal way to combine cheese, dough, and tomato sauce. Named after Salerno’s area code, and helmed by celebrated chef Roberto Paciullo, Zero Otto Nove is one of the few restaurants in NYC specializing in the southern Italian city’s unique approach to pizza-making. In this continuation of Food Skills’ deep-dive into NYC’s “real” Little Italy in the Bronx, chef Paciullo explains how his Salernitano pizza has become a surprise hit on the corner of Arthur Avenue and East 186th Street. Cooked extra crisp, and topped with Salerno-specific ingredients, like anchovies and capers, the pizza at Zero Otto Nove is both comfortingly familiar and exhilaratingly unique. Pairing ocean flavors with basil and olives, the restaurant’s signature Marinara pie is a must-try for thin-crust pizza lovers everywhere.
Subscribe to First We Feast on YouTube: http://goo.gl/UxFzhK
Check out more of First We Feast here:
http://firstwefeast.com/
https://twitter.com/firstwefeast
https://www.facebook.com/FirstWeFeast
http://instagram.com/firstwefeast
First We Feast videos offer an iconoclastic view into the culinary world, taking you behind-the-scenes with some of the country's best chefs and finding the unexpected places where food and pop culture intersect.
- published: 16 Jul 2018
- views: 342276
24:49
SALERNO, ITALIA
Salerno is an ancient city and comune in Campania (southwestern Italy) and is the capital of the province of the same name. It is located on the Gulf of Salerno...
Salerno is an ancient city and comune in Campania (southwestern Italy) and is the capital of the province of the same name. It is located on the Gulf of Salerno on the Tyrrhenian Sea. The city is divided into three distinct zones: the medieval sector, the 19th century sector and the more densely populated post-war area, with its several apartment blocks.
Human settlement at Salerno has a rich and vibrant past, dating back to pre-historic times. The site has been one of the most important and strategic ports on the Mediterranean sea, yielding a rich Greco-Roman heritage. It was an independent Lombard principality, Principality of Salerno, in the early Middle Ages. During this time, the Schola Medica Salernitana, the first medical school in the world, was founded. In the 16th century, under the Sanseverino family, among the most powerful feudal lords in southern Italy, the city became a great centre of learning, culture and the arts, and the family hired several of the greatest intellectuals of the time.Later, in 1694, the city was struck by several catastrophic earthquakes and plagues.After a period of Spanish rule which would last until the 18th century, Salerno became part of the Parthenopean Republic.
In recent history the city hosted Victor Emmanuel III, the King of Italy, who moved from Rome in 1943 after Italy negotiated a peace with the Allies in World War II, making Salerno the home of the "government of the South" (Regno del Sud) and therefore provisional government seat for six months. Some of the Allied landings during Operation Avalanche (the invasion of Italy) occurred near Salerno. Today Salerno is an important cultural centre in Campania and Italy.
A patron saint of Salerno is Saint Matthew, the Apostle, whose relics are kept here at the crypt of Salerno Cathedral.
https://wn.com/Salerno,_Italia
Salerno is an ancient city and comune in Campania (southwestern Italy) and is the capital of the province of the same name. It is located on the Gulf of Salerno on the Tyrrhenian Sea. The city is divided into three distinct zones: the medieval sector, the 19th century sector and the more densely populated post-war area, with its several apartment blocks.
Human settlement at Salerno has a rich and vibrant past, dating back to pre-historic times. The site has been one of the most important and strategic ports on the Mediterranean sea, yielding a rich Greco-Roman heritage. It was an independent Lombard principality, Principality of Salerno, in the early Middle Ages. During this time, the Schola Medica Salernitana, the first medical school in the world, was founded. In the 16th century, under the Sanseverino family, among the most powerful feudal lords in southern Italy, the city became a great centre of learning, culture and the arts, and the family hired several of the greatest intellectuals of the time.Later, in 1694, the city was struck by several catastrophic earthquakes and plagues.After a period of Spanish rule which would last until the 18th century, Salerno became part of the Parthenopean Republic.
In recent history the city hosted Victor Emmanuel III, the King of Italy, who moved from Rome in 1943 after Italy negotiated a peace with the Allies in World War II, making Salerno the home of the "government of the South" (Regno del Sud) and therefore provisional government seat for six months. Some of the Allied landings during Operation Avalanche (the invasion of Italy) occurred near Salerno. Today Salerno is an important cultural centre in Campania and Italy.
A patron saint of Salerno is Saint Matthew, the Apostle, whose relics are kept here at the crypt of Salerno Cathedral.
- published: 09 Nov 2019
- views: 7706