Autopsy (original Italian title Macchie solari, also known as The Victim and Corpse) is a 1975 Italian giallo-horror film directed by Armando Crispino. It achieved a cult status for its truculent morgue scenes. The Italian title translates as Sunspots.
Allmovie wrote, "This creepy whodunit [...] offers a few chills but is ultimately unsatisfying."
Maquis (French) or macchia (Italian: macchia mediterranea) is a shrubland biome in the Mediterranean region, typically consisting of densely growing evergreen shrubs due to a history of long term deforestation, pastoral land use, overgrazing, man-driven erosion, poor soil management, and land degradation. Further degradation of the maquis or macchia results in the less dense vegetation of a garrigue.
Macchie is in the Italian region of the Marche. It is a Frazione of Castelsantangelo sul Nera. For ISTAT in 2001 there were 16 people in Macchie. The village is placed at 1078 metres in the center of Monti Sibillini National Park.
The name Macchie derives from the woods (in Italian: macchie) that surround the village. It is a mountainous area in the national park of the Sibillini mountains. Below the village one can admire the Vallinfante valley and nearby the Passo Cattivo, Porche di Vallinfante, Colle La Croce, Monte Pagliano, Monte Prata and Monte Cardosa. The village is also at the foot of Monte Cornaccione which, however, cannot be seen entirely from the village.
There are two churches in Macchie: St. Anthony's (in Italian: Chiesa di Sant'Antonio) and St. John's(in Italian: Chiesa di San Giovanni Battista). At about 100 metres below the village there ia a chapel: The Little Virgin (in Italian: La Madonnella), dedicated to the latter. It was restored and consecrated again in August 2007. Likewise another chapel, along a nearby mountain: The Virgin of Forcella's Chapel (in Italian: Cappella della Madonna della Forcella), was completely rebuilt in the summer of 2008 by a group of volunteers.
Macchie is a frazione of the comune of Castiglione del Lago in the Province of Perugia, Umbria, central Italy. It stands at an elevation of 274 metres above sea level. At the time of the Istat census of 2001 it had 763 inhabitants.
Solari may refer to:
Pavle Solarić (7 August 1779 – 18 January 1821) was a Serbian linguist, geographer, archaeologist, poet and man of letters. He was one of Dositej Obradović's early students and an ardent disciple. He published Obradović's Mezimac.
Solarić was born into a Serbian Orthodox clerical family in the village of Velika Pisanica near Bjelovar, then part of the Kingdom of Slavonia, a province of the Habsburg Empire (now part of Croatia). Solarić completed his education at Zagreb and Sremski Karlovci, graduating in 1803 with a degree in philosophy and linguistics. He left for Italy where he dedicated himself to writing and research. He was a successful translator from French, Italian and German. He became a corrector of the Slavic printing office in Venice, a municipal government post he held until his death.
In 1804 he wrote "Graždansko Zemljeopisanie" (Geography in Civil Letters), the first book written by a Serb in the language of the common folk. The book is now part of the private library of Joca Vujić.
Solari is a village in Gabrovo Municipality, in Gabrovo Province, in northern central Bulgaria.
Coordinates: 42°56′N 25°19′E / 42.933°N 25.317°E / 42.933; 25.317