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Wikipedia

Parma

Parma (Italian pronunciation: [ˈparma] (listen); Emilian: Pärma, pronounced [ˈpɛːʁma]) is a city in the northern Italian region of Emilia-Romagna known for its architecture, music, art, prosciutto (ham), cheese and surrounding countryside. With a population of 198,292 inhabitants, Parma is the second most populous city in Emilia-Romagna after Bologna, the region's capital. The city is home to the University of Parma, one of the oldest universities in the world. Parma is divided into two parts by the stream of the same name. The district on the far side of the river is Oltretorrente. Parma's Etruscan name was adapted by Romans to describe the round shield called Parma.

Parma
Pärma (Emilian)
Comune di Parma
Palazzo del Governatore
Location of Parma
Parma
Location of Parma in Emilia-Romagna
Parma
Parma (Emilia-Romagna)
Coordinates: 44°48′05.3″N 10°19′40.8″E / 44.801472°N 10.328000°E / 44.801472; 10.328000Coordinates: 44°48′05.3″N 10°19′40.8″E / 44.801472°N 10.328000°E / 44.801472; 10.328000
CountryItaly
RegionEmilia-Romagna
ProvinceParma (PR)
FrazioniSee list
Government
 • MayorMichele Guerra
Area
 • Total260.77 km2 (100.68 sq mi)
Elevation
55 m (180 ft)
Population
 (28 of October 2020)[2]
 • Total198,292
 • Density760/km2 (2,000/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Parmesan, Parmigiano
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
43121-43126
Dialing code0521
Patron saintSant'Ilario di Poitiers, Sant'Onorato, San Rocco
Saint dayJanuary 13
WebsiteOfficial website

The Italian poet Attilio Bertolucci (born in a hamlet in the countryside) wrote: "As a capital city it had to have a river. As a little capital it received a stream, which is often dry", with reference to the time when the city was capital of the independent Duchy of Parma.

History

Historical affiliations

  Roman Republic 183–27 BC
  Roman Empire 27 BC–285 AD
  Western Roman Empire 285–476
  Kingdom of Odoacer 476–493
  Ostrogothic Kingdom 493–553
  Eastern Roman Empire 553-568
  Lombard Kingdom 568–773
  Carolingian Empire 773–781
  Regnum Italiae 781–1014
  Holy Roman Empire 1014–1114
  Free Commune 1114–1341
  Duchy of Milan 1341–1513
  Papal States 1513–1554
  Duchy of Parma 1554–1808
  First French Empire 1808–1814
  Duchy of Parma, Piacenza, and Guastalla 1814–1848
  Duchy of Parma 1851–1859
  United Provinces of Central Italy 1859–1860
  Kingdom of Italy 1861–1946
  Italian Republic 1946–present

Prehistory

Parma was already a built-up area in the Bronze Age. In the current position of the city rose a terramare.[3] The "terramare" (marl earth) were ancient villages built of wood on piles according to a defined scheme and squared form; constructed on dry land and generally in proximity to the rivers. During this age (between 1500 BC and 800 BC) the first necropolis (on the sites of the present-day Piazza Duomo and Piazzale della Macina) were constructed.

Antiquity

The city was most probably founded and named by the Etruscans, for a parma or palma (circular shield) was a Latin borrowing, as were many Roman terms for particular arms, and the names Parmeal, Parmni and Parmnial appear in Etruscan inscriptions. Diodorus Siculus[4] reported that the Romans had changed their rectangular shields for round ones, imitating the Etruscans. Whether the Etruscan encampment acquired its name from its round shape, like a shield, or from its metaphorical function as a shield against the Gauls to the north, remains uncertain.

The Roman colony was founded in 183 BC, together with Mutina (Modena); 2,000 families were settled. Parma had a certain importance as a road hub over the Via Aemilia and the Via Claudia. It had a forum, in what is today the central Garibaldi Square. In April 43 BC the city was destroyed.[5] Subsequently Augustus rebuilt it. During the Roman Empire, it gained the title of Julia for its loyalty to the imperial house.

Attila sacked the city in 452,[6] and the Germanic king Odoacer later gifted it to his followers. During the Gothic War, however, Totila destroyed it. It was then part of the Byzantine Exarchate of Ravenna (changing its name to Chrysopolis, "Golden City", probably due to the presence of the imperial treasury) and, from 569, of the Lombard Kingdom of Italy. During the Middle Ages, Parma became an important stage of the Via Francigena, the main road connecting Rome to Northern Europe; several castles, hospitals and inns were built in the following centuries to host the increasing number of pilgrims who passed by Parma and Fidenza, following the Apennines via Collecchio, Berceto and the Corchia ranges before descending the Passo della Cisa into Tuscany, heading finally south toward Rome.

The city had a medieval Jewish community.[7] The Palatine Library houses the largest collection of Hebrew manuscripts in Italy, and the second-largest in the world after the Bodleian Library in Oxford.[8]

Middle Ages

 

Under Frankish rule, Parma became the capital of a county in 774. Like most northern Italian cities, it was nominally a part of the Holy Roman Empire created by Charlemagne, but locally ruled by its bishops, the first being Guibodus. In the subsequent struggles between the Papacy and the Empire, Parma was usually a member of the Imperial party. Two of its bishops became antipopes: Càdalo, founder of the cathedral, as Honorius II; and Guibert, as Clement III. An almost independent commune was created around 1140; a treaty between Parma and Piacenza of 1149 is the earliest document of a comune headed by consuls.[9] After the Peace of Constance in 1183 confirmed the Italian communes' rights of self-governance, long-standing quarrels with the neighbouring communes of Reggio Emilia, Piacenza and Cremona became harsher, with the aim of controlling the vital trading line over the Po River.

The struggle between Guelphs and Ghibellines was a feature of Parma too. In 1213, her podestà was the Guelph Rambertino Buvalelli. Then, after a long stance alongside the emperors, the Papist families of the city gained control in 1248. The city was besieged in 1247–48 by Emperor Frederick II, who was however crushed in the battle that ensued.

By 1328, Rolando de' Rossi was made signore of Parma. In 1331, the city submitted to King John of Bohemia. Parma fell under the control of Milan in 1341. After a short-lived period of independence under the Terzi family (1404–1409), the Sforza imposed their rule (1440–1449) through their associated families of Pallavicino, Rossi, Sanvitale and Da Correggio. These created a kind of new feudalism, building towers and castles throughout the city and the land. These fiefs evolved into truly independent states: the Landi governed the higher Taro's valley from 1257 to 1682. The Pallavicino seignory extended over the eastern part of today's province, with the capital in Busseto. Parma's territories were an exception for Northern Italy, as its feudal subdivision frequently continued until more recent years. For example, Solignano was a Pallavicino family possession until 1805, and San Secondo belonged to the Rossi well into the 19th century.

Modern era

 
Parma in the 15th century

Between the 14th and the 15th centuries, Parma was at the centre of the Italian Wars. The Battle of Fornovo was fought in its territory. The French held the city in 1500–1521, with a short Papal parenthesis in 1512–1515. After the foreigners were expelled, Parma belonged to the Papal States until 1545.

In that year the Farnese pope, Paul III, detached Parma and Piacenza from the Papal States and gave them as a duchy to his illegitimate son, Pier Luigi Farnese, whose descendants ruled in Parma until 1731, when Antonio Farnese, last male of the Farnese line, died. In 1594 a constitution was promulgated, the University enhanced and the Nobles' College founded. The war to reduce the barons' power continued for several years: in 1612 Barbara Sanseverino was executed in the central square of Parma, together with six other nobles charged of plotting against the duke. At the end of the 17th century, after the defeat of Pallavicini (1588) and Landi (1682) the Farnese duke could finally hold with firm hand all Parmense territories. The castle of the Sanseverino in Colorno was turned into a luxurious summer palace by Ferdinando Bibiena.

In the Treaty of London (1718) it was promulgated that the heir to the combined Duchy of Parma and Piacenza would be Elisabeth Farnese's elder son with Philip V of Spain, Don Carlos. In 1731, the fifteen-year-old Don Carlos became Charles I Duke of Parma and Piacenza, at the death of his childless great uncle Antonio Farnese. In 1734, Charles I conquered the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily, and was crowned as the King of Naples and Sicily on 3 July 1735, leaving the Duchy of Parma to his brother Philip (Filippo I di Borbone-Parma). All the outstanding art collections of the duke's palaces of Parma, Colorno and Sala Baganza were moved to Naples.

Parma was under French influence after the Peace of Aachen (1748). Parma became a modern state with the energetic action of prime minister Guillaume du Tillot. He created the bases for a modern industry and fought strenuously against the church's privileges. The city lived a period of particular splendour: the Biblioteca Palatina (Palatine Library), the Archaeological Museum, the Picture Gallery and the Botanical Garden were founded, together with the Royal Printing Works directed by Giambattista Bodoni, aided by the Amoretti Brothers as skilled and inspired punchcutters.

Contemporary age

 
Parma in 1832

During the Napoleonic Wars (1802–1814), Parma was annexed to France and made capital of the Taro Department. Under its French name, Parme, it was also created a duché grand-fief de l'Empire for Charles-François Lebrun, duc de Plaisance, the Emperor's Arch-Treasurer, on 24 April 1808 (extinguished in 1926).

After the restoration of the Duchy of Parma by the 1814–15 Vienna Congress, the Risorgimento's upheavals had no fertile ground in the tranquil duchy. In 1847, after Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma's death, it passed again to the House of Bourbon, the last of whom was stabbed in the city and left it to his widow, Luisa Maria of Berry. On 15 September 1859 the dynasty was declared deposed, and Parma entered the newly formed province of Emilia under Luigi Carlo Farini. With the plebiscite of 1860 the former duchy became part of the unified Kingdom of Italy.

The loss of the capital role provoked an economic and social crisis in Parma. It started to recover its role of industrial prominence after the railway connection with Piacenza and Bologna of 1859, and with Fornovo and Suzzara in 1883. Trade unions were strong in the city, in which a notable General Strike was declared from 1 May to 6 June 1908. The struggle with Fascism had its most dramatic moment in August 1922, when the regime officer Italo Balbo attempted to enter the popular quarter of Oltretorrente. The citizens organized into the Arditi del Popolo ("People's champions") and pushed back the squadristi. This episode is considered the first example of Resistance in Italy.

 
View of Palazzo della Pilotta in Piazza della Pace. The rebuilt part on the right is where once was the church of St.Peter.

During World War II, Parma was a strong centre of partisan resistance. The train station and marshalling yards were targets for high altitude bombing by the Allies in the spring of 1944. Much of the Palazzo della Pilotta, situated not far (half a mile) from the train station, was destroyed. Along with it the Teatro Farnese and part of the Biblioteca Palatina were destroyed by Allied bombs; some 21,000 volumes of the library's collection were lost. Several other monuments were also damaged: Palazzo del Giardino, Steccata and San Giovanni churches, Palazzo Ducale, Paganini theater and the monument to Verdi. However, Parma did not see widespread destruction during the war. Parma was liberated from the German occupation (1943–1945) on 26 April 1945 by the partisan resistance and the Brazilian Expeditionary Force.[10]

Geography

Climate

In Parma, the average annual high temperature is 17 °C (63 °F), the annual low temperature is 9 °C (48 °F), and the annual precipitation is 777 millimetres (30.59 inches).

The following data comes from the weather station located at the university in the city center. It is affected by the urban heat island phenomenon. Parma has a mid-latitude, four-season humid subtropical climate (Köppen: Cfa) with heavy continental influences due to the city's inland position. Relatively nearby coastal areas like Genoa have far milder climates with cooler summers and milder winters, with the mountains separating Parma from the Mediterranean Sea acting as a barrier to the sea air. The city receives approximately 45 cm of snow each winter.

Climate data for Parma (city center)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 4.1
(39.4)
7.5
(45.5)
13.2
(55.8)
18.0
(64.4)
22.8
(73.0)
27.3
(81.1)
30.1
(86.2)
29.3
(84.7)
24.8
(76.6)
17.8
(64.0)
10.3
(50.5)
5.4
(41.7)
17.6
(63.7)
Daily mean °C (°F) 1.3
(34.3)
3.9
(39.0)
8.9
(48.0)
13.1
(55.6)
17.6
(63.7)
21.8
(71.2)
24.4
(75.9)
23.9
(75.0)
19.9
(67.8)
13.9
(57.0)
7.6
(45.7)
2.9
(37.2)
13.3
(55.9)
Average low °C (°F) −1.5
(29.3)
0.4
(32.7)
4.5
(40.1)
8.3
(46.9)
12.5
(54.5)
16.3
(61.3)
18.6
(65.5)
18.2
(64.8)
15.0
(59.0)
10.1
(50.2)
4.8
(40.6)
0.4
(32.7)
9.0
(48.2)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 57
(2.2)
55
(2.2)
65
(2.6)
76
(3.0)
73
(2.9)
56
(2.2)
37
(1.5)
48
(1.9)
67
(2.6)
96
(3.8)
84
(3.3)
73
(2.9)
777
(30.6)
Source: Archivio climatico Enea-Casaccia (1961-1990)[11]

Main sights

 
Late Mannerist façade of the church of San Giovanni Evangelista, by Simone Moschino (1604), with sculpture by Giambattista Carra da Bissone[12]
 
Façade of the church of San Francesco. It was the city's jail.
 
Opera house programme near Teatro Regio

Churches

Palaces

  • Palazzo della Pilotta (1583): it houses the Academy of Fine Arts with artists of the School of Parma, the Palatine Library, the National Gallery, the Archaeological Museum, the Bodoni Museum[13] and the Farnese Theatre. It was partially destroyed during World War II
  • Palazzo del Giardino, built from 1561 for Duke Ottavio Farnese on a design by Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola. Built on the former Sforza castle area, it was enlarged in the 17th–18th centuries. It includes the Palazzo Eucherio Sanvitale, with interesting decorations dating from the 16th centuries and attributed to Gianfrancesco d'Agrate, and a fresco by Parmigianino. Annexed is the Ducal Park also by Vignola. It was turned into a French-style garden in 1749.
  • Palazzo del Comune, built in 1627.
  • Palazzo del Governatore ("Governor's Palace"), dating from the 13th century.
  • Bishop's Palace (1055).
  • Ospedale Vecchio ("Old Hospital"), created in 1250 and later renovated in Renaissance times.

Other sites of interest

Demographics

ISTAT 1 January 2016[14][15]
Parma Italy
18 years old and under 16.46% 17.45%
65 years old and over 22.64% 22.04%
Foreign Population 15.91% 8.29%
Births/1,000 people 8.62 b 8.01 b
Largest resident foreign-born groups
(1/1/2016)[15]
Country of birth Population
  Moldova 4,967
  Romania 3,513
  Albania 2,661
  Philippines 2,570
  Tunisia 1,561
  Nigeria 1,450
  Ukraine 1,292
  Morocco 1,264
  Ghana 1,104
  Ivory Coast 938
  China 819

On 1 January 2016 there were 192,836 resident citizens in Parma, of whom 47.64% were male and 52.36% were female.[2] Minors (children aged 18 and younger) totalled 16.46% of the population compared to pensioners who numbered 22.64%. This compares with the Italian average of 17.45% and 22.04% respectively.[14] In the fourteen years between 2002 and 2016, the population of Parma experienced 17.72% growth, while Italy as a whole grew by 6.45%. In the same period foreign born residents in Parma experienced +385.02% growth, while in Italy growth was of +274.75%. [16] The current birth rate of Parma is 8.62 births per 1,000 inhabitants compared to the Italian average of 8.01 births.

As of 1 January 2016, 84.09% of the population was Italian. The largest foreign group came from other parts of Europe (namely Moldova, Romania, Albania, and Ukraine: 6.45%), followed by Sub-Saharan Africa (namely Ghana, Nigeria and Ivory Coast: 1.81%), North Africa (namely Morocco and Tunisia: 1.46%) and the Philippines: 1.33%.[15]

Culture

Food and cuisine

 
Caffè Teatro Regio in front of the theatre

Parma is famous for its food and rich gastronomical tradition: two of its specialties are Parmigiano Reggiano cheese (also produced in Reggio Emilia), and Prosciutto di Parma (Parma ham), both given Protected Designation of Origin status. Parma also claims several stuffed pasta dishes such as "tortelli d'erbetta" and "anolini in brodo".

In 2004 Parma was appointed the seat of the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) and was appointed to the Creative Cities Network as UNESCO City of Gastronomy. Parma also has two food multinationals, Barilla and Parmalat and a medium-large food tourism sector represented by Parma Golosa and Food Valley companies.

Frazioni

The comune (municipality) of Parma is subdivided into a number of frazioni: Alberi, Baganzola, Bedonia, Beneceto, Borgo Val di Taro, Botteghino, Ca'Terzi, Calestano, Carignano, Carpaneto, Cartiera, Casalbaroncolo, Casalora di Ravadese, Casaltone, Case Capelli, Case Cocconi, Case Crostolo, Case Nuove, Case Rosse, Case Vecchie, Casino dalla Rosa, Casagnola, Castelletto, Castelnovo, Cervara, Chiozzola, Coloreto, Colorno, Corcagnano, Eia, Fontanini, Fontanellato, Gaione, Ghiaiata Nuova, Il Moro, La Catena, La Palazzina, Malandriano, Marano, Marore, Martorano, Molino di Malandriano, Osteria San Martino, Panocchia, Paradigna, Pedrignano, Pilastrello, Pizzolese, Ponte, Porporano, Pozzetto Piccolo, Quercioli, Ravadese, Ronco Pascolo, Rosa, San Pancrazio, San Prospero, San Ruffino, San Secondo, Sissa, Soragna, Terenzo, Tizzano Val Parma, Traversetolo, Trecasali, Valera, Viarolo, Viazza, Vicofertile, Vicomero, Vigatto, Vigheffio, Vigolante.

Notable people

Painters and sculptors

 
Detail of Correggio's frescoes in the Camera di San Paolo

Others

Sport

 
Parma F.C. fans at the Stadio Ennio Tardini, one of the oldest stadiums in Italy

Parma Calcio 1913, founded in 2015, is a Serie B (second division) football club. It replaced Parma F.C., which went bankrupt in 2015. It plays in the city's Stadio Ennio Tardini, which opened in 1923 and seats up to 23,000.

Parma's other sport team is the rugby union club Zebre which competes in Pro14, one of the top rugby competitions in the world. Parma also is home to two rugby union teams in the top national division, Overmach Rugby Parma and SKG Gran Rugby.

Parma Panthers is the Parma American football team which provided the basis for John Grisham's book Playing for Pizza. Stadio Sergio Lanfranchi is the ground of rugby and American football teams.

Pallavolo Parma and Parma Baseball are other sports teams in the city. Nino Cavalli Stadium is a baseball stadium located in Parma.[17] It is the home stadium of Parma Baseball of the Italian Baseball League.[18]

Economy and infrastructure

Parma has a thriving economy, and the food sector is very developed. Some of the players in this sector include Barilla which is based in the city. Chiesi Farmaceutici in the pharma industry is headquartered in Parma. The European Food Safety Authority is also based in Parma.

Transport

Parma railway station is on the Milan–Bologna railway system.

The Parma trolleybus system has been in operation since 1953. It replaced an earlier tramway network, and presently comprises four trolleybus routes.

Aeroporto Internazionale di Parma, Parma's airport, offers commercial flights to cities in a number of European countries.

Twin towns – sister cities

Parma is twinned with:[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Popolazione residente Anno 2016". GeoDemo - ISTAT (in Italian). Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  3. ^ "Archaeology in Emilia Romagna page".
  4. ^ XXII, 2,2; XXVIII, 2,1
  5. ^ The Letters of Cicero: B.C. 44-43. G. Bell and Sons. 1900.
  6. ^ Domenico, Roy Palmer (2002). "Parma". The Regions of Italy: A Reference Guide to History and Culture. Westport, Connecticur: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 93. ISBN 9780313307331. Retrieved 5 May 2019. Atila the Hun put Parma to the torch in 452, as did Totila the Ostrogoth in the mid-500s. It was rebuilt a number of times as a Lombard capital, the site of a Byzantine treasury, and, from the ninth century, a bishopric.
  7. ^ Italy's poetic Parma region - "Italy has one of the oldest European Diaspora communities and a Jewish presence has been documented in Rome for more than 2,200 years. However, Jews only arrived in the Emilia-Romagna region during the 13th century."
  8. ^ Parma - "The Palatine Library is as well home to the largest Italian collection of Hebrew manuscripts, and the second largest in the world after the Bodleian Library in Oxford. The documents were a gift of Maria Luigia Duchess."
  9. ^ G. Drei, Le Carte degli archivi parmensi del secolo XII (Parma, 1950) doc. no. 194; the genesis of the Parmesan commune is studied by R. Schumann, "Authority and the commune: Parma, 833–1033", (Parma: Deputazione di storia patria, series 2.2, VIII) 1973.
  10. ^ . Pitoresco.com. Archived from the original on 10 April 2008. Retrieved 6 May 2009.
  11. ^ . clisun.casaccia.enea.it. Archived from the original on 3 November 2014.
  12. ^ "Monastero di San Giovanni, la chiesa" (in Italian).
  13. ^ "Bodoni Museum". briar press official website. briar press. Retrieved 23 October 2009.
  14. ^ a b "Popolazione residente - Bilancio demografico Anno 2015". GeoDemo - Istat (in Italian). Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  15. ^ a b c "Cittadini stranieri - Bilancio demografico Anno 2015". GeoDemo - Istat (in Italian). Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  16. ^ "Bilancio demografico intercensuario Anno 2002". GeoDemo - Istat (in Italian). Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  17. ^ "Stadium Of Baseball Nino Cavalli — Punto dinteresse in Parma, Via Teresa Confalonieri Casati, 22, 43125 Parma PR, Italy". parma-emilia-romagna.catalogo-online.it.
  18. ^ "Parma Baseball - LE MODALITA' DI ACCESSO E I PREZZI DEI BIGLIETTI PER GARA TRE E L'EVENTUALE GARA QUATTRO. SI GIOCA MARTEDI' E MERCOLEDI' ALLE 20.30". www.parmabaseball.it.
  19. ^ "Gemellaggi". comune.parma.it (in Italian). Parma. Retrieved 16 December 2019.

Bibliography

External links

  • Live-streaming webcam on Garibaldi Square
  • Parma's view from satellite (Google Earth)
  • Video Introduction to Parma and the Parmigiano Reggiano
  • Video Brief History of Parma
  • The European Food Safety Authority Website
  • Photo Gallery by Leonardo Bellotti (in Italian)
  • Parma on The Campanile Project

parma, this, article, about, italian, city, other, uses, disambiguation, italian, pronunciation, ˈparma, listen, emilian, pärma, pronounced, ˈpɛːʁma, city, northern, italian, region, emilia, romagna, known, architecture, music, prosciutto, cheese, surrounding,. This article is about the Italian city For other uses see Parma disambiguation Parma Italian pronunciation ˈparma listen Emilian Parma pronounced ˈpɛːʁma is a city in the northern Italian region of Emilia Romagna known for its architecture music art prosciutto ham cheese and surrounding countryside With a population of 198 292 inhabitants Parma is the second most populous city in Emilia Romagna after Bologna the region s capital The city is home to the University of Parma one of the oldest universities in the world Parma is divided into two parts by the stream of the same name The district on the far side of the river is Oltretorrente Parma s Etruscan name was adapted by Romans to describe the round shield called Parma Parma Parma Emilian ComuneComune di ParmaPalazzo del GovernatoreFlagCoat of armsLocation of ParmaParmaLocation of Parma in Emilia RomagnaShow map of ItalyParmaParma Emilia Romagna Show map of Emilia RomagnaCoordinates 44 48 05 3 N 10 19 40 8 E 44 801472 N 10 328000 E 44 801472 10 328000 Coordinates 44 48 05 3 N 10 19 40 8 E 44 801472 N 10 328000 E 44 801472 10 328000CountryItalyRegionEmilia RomagnaProvinceParma PR FrazioniSee listGovernment MayorMichele GuerraArea 1 Total260 77 km2 100 68 sq mi Elevation55 m 180 ft Population 28 of October 2020 2 Total198 292 Density760 km2 2 000 sq mi Demonym s Parmesan ParmigianoTime zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code43121 43126Dialing code0521Patron saintSant Ilario di Poitiers Sant Onorato San RoccoSaint dayJanuary 13WebsiteOfficial websiteThe Italian poet Attilio Bertolucci born in a hamlet in the countryside wrote As a capital city it had to have a river As a little capital it received a stream which is often dry with reference to the time when the city was capital of the independent Duchy of Parma Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 Antiquity 1 3 Middle Ages 1 4 Modern era 1 5 Contemporary age 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 2 2 Main sights 2 2 1 Churches 2 2 2 Palaces 2 2 3 Other sites of interest 3 Demographics 4 Culture 4 1 Food and cuisine 5 Frazioni 6 Notable people 6 1 Painters and sculptors 6 2 Others 7 Sport 8 Economy and infrastructure 8 1 Transport 9 Twin towns sister cities 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksHistory EditFor a chronological guide see Timeline of Parma Historical affiliations Roman Republic 183 27 BC Roman Empire 27 BC 285 AD Western Roman Empire 285 476 Kingdom of Odoacer 476 493 Ostrogothic Kingdom 493 553 Eastern Roman Empire 553 568 Lombard Kingdom 568 773 Carolingian Empire 773 781 Regnum Italiae 781 1014 Holy Roman Empire 1014 1114 Free Commune 1114 1341 Duchy of Milan 1341 1513 Papal States 1513 1554 Duchy of Parma 1554 1808 First French Empire 1808 1814 Duchy of Parma Piacenza and Guastalla 1814 1848 Duchy of Parma 1851 1859 United Provinces of Central Italy 1859 1860 Kingdom of Italy 1861 1946 Italian Republic 1946 present Prehistory Edit Parma was already a built up area in the Bronze Age In the current position of the city rose a terramare 3 The terramare marl earth were ancient villages built of wood on piles according to a defined scheme and squared form constructed on dry land and generally in proximity to the rivers During this age between 1500 BC and 800 BC the first necropolis on the sites of the present day Piazza Duomo and Piazzale della Macina were constructed Antiquity Edit The city was most probably founded and named by the Etruscans for a parma or palma circular shield was a Latin borrowing as were many Roman terms for particular arms and the names Parmeal Parmni and Parmnial appear in Etruscan inscriptions Diodorus Siculus 4 reported that the Romans had changed their rectangular shields for round ones imitating the Etruscans Whether the Etruscan encampment acquired its name from its round shape like a shield or from its metaphorical function as a shield against the Gauls to the north remains uncertain The Roman colony was founded in 183 BC together with Mutina Modena 2 000 families were settled Parma had a certain importance as a road hub over the Via Aemilia and the Via Claudia It had a forum in what is today the central Garibaldi Square In April 43 BC the city was destroyed 5 Subsequently Augustus rebuilt it During the Roman Empire it gained the title of Julia for its loyalty to the imperial house Attila sacked the city in 452 6 and the Germanic king Odoacer later gifted it to his followers During the Gothic War however Totila destroyed it It was then part of the Byzantine Exarchate of Ravenna changing its name to Chrysopolis Golden City probably due to the presence of the imperial treasury and from 569 of the Lombard Kingdom of Italy During the Middle Ages Parma became an important stage of the Via Francigena the main road connecting Rome to Northern Europe several castles hospitals and inns were built in the following centuries to host the increasing number of pilgrims who passed by Parma and Fidenza following the Apennines via Collecchio Berceto and the Corchia ranges before descending the Passo della Cisa into Tuscany heading finally south toward Rome The city had a medieval Jewish community 7 The Palatine Library houses the largest collection of Hebrew manuscripts in Italy and the second largest in the world after the Bodleian Library in Oxford 8 Middle Ages Edit Baptistery of Parma 1196 1270 Under Frankish rule Parma became the capital of a county in 774 Like most northern Italian cities it was nominally a part of the Holy Roman Empire created by Charlemagne but locally ruled by its bishops the first being Guibodus In the subsequent struggles between the Papacy and the Empire Parma was usually a member of the Imperial party Two of its bishops became antipopes Cadalo founder of the cathedral as Honorius II and Guibert as Clement III An almost independent commune was created around 1140 a treaty between Parma and Piacenza of 1149 is the earliest document of a comune headed by consuls 9 After the Peace of Constance in 1183 confirmed the Italian communes rights of self governance long standing quarrels with the neighbouring communes of Reggio Emilia Piacenza and Cremona became harsher with the aim of controlling the vital trading line over the Po River The struggle between Guelphs and Ghibellines was a feature of Parma too In 1213 her podesta was the Guelph Rambertino Buvalelli Then after a long stance alongside the emperors the Papist families of the city gained control in 1248 The city was besieged in 1247 48 by Emperor Frederick II who was however crushed in the battle that ensued By 1328 Rolando de Rossi was made signore of Parma In 1331 the city submitted to King John of Bohemia Parma fell under the control of Milan in 1341 After a short lived period of independence under the Terzi family 1404 1409 the Sforza imposed their rule 1440 1449 through their associated families of Pallavicino Rossi Sanvitale and Da Correggio These created a kind of new feudalism building towers and castles throughout the city and the land These fiefs evolved into truly independent states the Landi governed the higher Taro s valley from 1257 to 1682 The Pallavicino seignory extended over the eastern part of today s province with the capital in Busseto Parma s territories were an exception for Northern Italy as its feudal subdivision frequently continued until more recent years For example Solignano was a Pallavicino family possession until 1805 and San Secondo belonged to the Rossi well into the 19th century Modern era Edit Parma in the 15th century This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Parma news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Between the 14th and the 15th centuries Parma was at the centre of the Italian Wars The Battle of Fornovo was fought in its territory The French held the city in 1500 1521 with a short Papal parenthesis in 1512 1515 After the foreigners were expelled Parma belonged to the Papal States until 1545 In that year the Farnese pope Paul III detached Parma and Piacenza from the Papal States and gave them as a duchy to his illegitimate son Pier Luigi Farnese whose descendants ruled in Parma until 1731 when Antonio Farnese last male of the Farnese line died In 1594 a constitution was promulgated the University enhanced and the Nobles College founded The war to reduce the barons power continued for several years in 1612 Barbara Sanseverino was executed in the central square of Parma together with six other nobles charged of plotting against the duke At the end of the 17th century after the defeat of Pallavicini 1588 and Landi 1682 the Farnese duke could finally hold with firm hand all Parmense territories The castle of the Sanseverino in Colorno was turned into a luxurious summer palace by Ferdinando Bibiena In the Treaty of London 1718 it was promulgated that the heir to the combined Duchy of Parma and Piacenza would be Elisabeth Farnese s elder son with Philip V of Spain Don Carlos In 1731 the fifteen year old Don Carlos became Charles I Duke of Parma and Piacenza at the death of his childless great uncle Antonio Farnese In 1734 Charles I conquered the kingdoms of Naples and Sicily and was crowned as the King of Naples and Sicily on 3 July 1735 leaving the Duchy of Parma to his brother Philip Filippo I di Borbone Parma All the outstanding art collections of the duke s palaces of Parma Colorno and Sala Baganza were moved to Naples Parma was under French influence after the Peace of Aachen 1748 Parma became a modern state with the energetic action of prime minister Guillaume du Tillot He created the bases for a modern industry and fought strenuously against the church s privileges The city lived a period of particular splendour the Biblioteca Palatina Palatine Library the Archaeological Museum the Picture Gallery and the Botanical Garden were founded together with the Royal Printing Works directed by Giambattista Bodoni aided by the Amoretti Brothers as skilled and inspired punchcutters Contemporary age Edit Parma in 1832 During the Napoleonic Wars 1802 1814 Parma was annexed to France and made capital of the Taro Department Under its French name Parme it was also created a duche grand fief de l Empire for Charles Francois Lebrun duc de Plaisance the Emperor s Arch Treasurer on 24 April 1808 extinguished in 1926 After the restoration of the Duchy of Parma by the 1814 15 Vienna Congress the Risorgimento s upheavals had no fertile ground in the tranquil duchy In 1847 after Marie Louise Duchess of Parma s death it passed again to the House of Bourbon the last of whom was stabbed in the city and left it to his widow Luisa Maria of Berry On 15 September 1859 the dynasty was declared deposed and Parma entered the newly formed province of Emilia under Luigi Carlo Farini With the plebiscite of 1860 the former duchy became part of the unified Kingdom of Italy The loss of the capital role provoked an economic and social crisis in Parma It started to recover its role of industrial prominence after the railway connection with Piacenza and Bologna of 1859 and with Fornovo and Suzzara in 1883 Trade unions were strong in the city in which a notable General Strike was declared from 1 May to 6 June 1908 The struggle with Fascism had its most dramatic moment in August 1922 when the regime officer Italo Balbo attempted to enter the popular quarter of Oltretorrente The citizens organized into the Arditi del Popolo People s champions and pushed back the squadristi This episode is considered the first example of Resistance in Italy View of Palazzo della Pilotta in Piazza della Pace The rebuilt part on the right is where once was the church of St Peter During World War II Parma was a strong centre of partisan resistance The train station and marshalling yards were targets for high altitude bombing by the Allies in the spring of 1944 Much of the Palazzo della Pilotta situated not far half a mile from the train station was destroyed Along with it the Teatro Farnese and part of the Biblioteca Palatina were destroyed by Allied bombs some 21 000 volumes of the library s collection were lost Several other monuments were also damaged Palazzo del Giardino Steccata and San Giovanni churches Palazzo Ducale Paganini theater and the monument to Verdi However Parma did not see widespread destruction during the war Parma was liberated from the German occupation 1943 1945 on 26 April 1945 by the partisan resistance and the Brazilian Expeditionary Force 10 Geography EditClimate Edit In Parma the average annual high temperature is 17 C 63 F the annual low temperature is 9 C 48 F and the annual precipitation is 777 millimetres 30 59 inches The following data comes from the weather station located at the university in the city center It is affected by the urban heat island phenomenon Parma has a mid latitude four season humid subtropical climate Koppen Cfa with heavy continental influences due to the city s inland position Relatively nearby coastal areas like Genoa have far milder climates with cooler summers and milder winters with the mountains separating Parma from the Mediterranean Sea acting as a barrier to the sea air The city receives approximately 45 cm of snow each winter Climate data for Parma city center Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 4 1 39 4 7 5 45 5 13 2 55 8 18 0 64 4 22 8 73 0 27 3 81 1 30 1 86 2 29 3 84 7 24 8 76 6 17 8 64 0 10 3 50 5 5 4 41 7 17 6 63 7 Daily mean C F 1 3 34 3 3 9 39 0 8 9 48 0 13 1 55 6 17 6 63 7 21 8 71 2 24 4 75 9 23 9 75 0 19 9 67 8 13 9 57 0 7 6 45 7 2 9 37 2 13 3 55 9 Average low C F 1 5 29 3 0 4 32 7 4 5 40 1 8 3 46 9 12 5 54 5 16 3 61 3 18 6 65 5 18 2 64 8 15 0 59 0 10 1 50 2 4 8 40 6 0 4 32 7 9 0 48 2 Average precipitation mm inches 57 2 2 55 2 2 65 2 6 76 3 0 73 2 9 56 2 2 37 1 5 48 1 9 67 2 6 96 3 8 84 3 3 73 2 9 777 30 6 Source Archivio climatico Enea Casaccia 1961 1990 11 Main sights Edit Late Mannerist facade of the church of San Giovanni Evangelista by Simone Moschino 1604 with sculpture by Giambattista Carra da Bissone 12 Facade of the church of San Francesco It was the city s jail Opera house programme near Teatro Regio Churches Edit Parma Cathedral Romanesque church houses a 12th century sculpture by Benedetto Antelami and a 16th century fresco masterpiece by Antonio da Correggio Baptistery construction began in 1196 by Antelami stands adjacent to the cathedral San Giovanni Evangelista Abbey church originally constructed in the 10th century behind the Cathedral s apse rebuilt in 1498 and 1510 It has a late Mannerist facade and a bell tower designed by Simone Moschino The cupola is frescoed with an influential masterpiece of the Renaissance the Vision of St John the Evangelist 1520 1522 by Correggio which heralded illusionistic perspective ceilings Cloisters and library are also notable Sanctuary of Santa Maria della Steccata Sant Uldarico Parma 1411 San Paolo Parma 11th century Former Benedictine convent houses Correggio s frescoes in the Camera di San Paolo 1519 1520 and works by Alessandro Araldi San Francesco del Prato 13th century Gothic church served as jail from Napoleonic era until 1990s during which the 16 windows in the facade were opened The Oratory of the Concezione houses frescoes by Michelangelo Anselmi and Francesco Rondani Santa Croce 12th century church in Romanesque style had a nave and two aisles with a semicircular apse Rebuilt in 1415 and again in 1635 1666 The frescoes in the nave by Giovanni Maria Conti Francesco Reti and Antonio Lombardi date to this period San Sepolcro church built in 1275 over a pre existing religious building Interiors were largely renovated in 1506 1603 and finally 1701 The Baroque bell tower was built in 1616 and the bells were completed in 1753 Adjacent is a former monastery 1493 1495 of the Regular Canons of the Lateran Santa Caterina d Alessandria 14th century church Santa Maria del Quartiere 1604 1619 church characterized by an unusual hexagonal plan The cupola is decorated with frescoes by Pier Antonio Bernabei and pupils San Rocco late Baroque style church rebuilt in 1754 and dedicated to one of Parma s patron saints Santa CristinaPalaces Edit Palazzo della Pilotta 1583 it houses the Academy of Fine Arts with artists of the School of Parma the Palatine Library the National Gallery the Archaeological Museum the Bodoni Museum 13 and the Farnese Theatre It was partially destroyed during World War II Palazzo del Giardino built from 1561 for Duke Ottavio Farnese on a design by Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola Built on the former Sforza castle area it was enlarged in the 17th 18th centuries It includes the Palazzo Eucherio Sanvitale with interesting decorations dating from the 16th centuries and attributed to Gianfrancesco d Agrate and a fresco by Parmigianino Annexed is the Ducal Park also by Vignola It was turned into a French style garden in 1749 Palazzo del Comune built in 1627 Palazzo del Governatore Governor s Palace dating from the 13th century Bishop s Palace 1055 Ospedale Vecchio Old Hospital created in 1250 and later renovated in Renaissance times Other sites of interest Edit The Teatro Farnese was constructed in 1618 1619 by Giovan Battista Aleotti totally in wood It was commissioned by Duke Ranuccio I for the visit of Cosimo I de Medici The Cittadella a large fortress erected in the 16th century by order of Duke Alessandro Farnese close to the old walls The Pons Lapidis also known as Roman Bridge or Theoderic s Bridge a Roman structure in stone dating from the reign of Augustus The Orto Botanico di Parma is a botanical garden maintained by the University of Parma The Teatro Regio Royal Theatre built in 1821 1829 by Nicola Bettoli It has a Neo Classical facade and a porch with double window order It is the city s opera house The Auditorium Niccolo Paganini designed by Renzo Piano The Museum House of Arturo Toscanini where the musician was born Museo Lombardi It exhibits a prestigious collection of art and historical items regarding Maria Luigia of Habsburg and her first husband Napoleon Bonaparte important works and documents concerning the Duchy of Parma in the 18th and 19th centuries are also kept by the Museum Demographics EditISTAT 1 January 2016 14 15 Parma Italy18 years old and under 16 46 17 45 65 years old and over 22 64 22 04 Foreign Population 15 91 8 29 Births 1 000 people 8 62 b 8 01 bLargest resident foreign born groups 1 1 2016 15 Country of birth Population Moldova 4 967 Romania 3 513 Albania 2 661 Philippines 2 570 Tunisia 1 561 Nigeria 1 450 Ukraine 1 292 Morocco 1 264 Ghana 1 104 Ivory Coast 938 China 819On 1 January 2016 there were 192 836 resident citizens in Parma of whom 47 64 were male and 52 36 were female 2 Minors children aged 18 and younger totalled 16 46 of the population compared to pensioners who numbered 22 64 This compares with the Italian average of 17 45 and 22 04 respectively 14 In the fourteen years between 2002 and 2016 the population of Parma experienced 17 72 growth while Italy as a whole grew by 6 45 In the same period foreign born residents in Parma experienced 385 02 growth while in Italy growth was of 274 75 16 The current birth rate of Parma is 8 62 births per 1 000 inhabitants compared to the Italian average of 8 01 births As of 1 January 2016 update 84 09 of the population was Italian The largest foreign group came from other parts of Europe namely Moldova Romania Albania and Ukraine 6 45 followed by Sub Saharan Africa namely Ghana Nigeria and Ivory Coast 1 81 North Africa namely Morocco and Tunisia 1 46 and the Philippines 1 33 15 Culture EditFood and cuisine Edit Caffe Teatro Regio in front of the theatre Parma is famous for its food and rich gastronomical tradition two of its specialties are Parmigiano Reggiano cheese also produced in Reggio Emilia and Prosciutto di Parma Parma ham both given Protected Designation of Origin status Parma also claims several stuffed pasta dishes such as tortelli d erbetta and anolini in brodo In 2004 Parma was appointed the seat of the European Food Safety Authority EFSA and was appointed to the Creative Cities Network as UNESCO City of Gastronomy Parma also has two food multinationals Barilla and Parmalat and a medium large food tourism sector represented by Parma Golosa and Food Valley companies Parmigiano Reggiano cheese the true parmesan Prosciutto di Parma cured ham Tortelli d erbetta Anolini in brodoFrazioni EditThe comune municipality of Parma is subdivided into a number of frazioni Alberi Baganzola Bedonia Beneceto Borgo Val di Taro Botteghino Ca Terzi Calestano Carignano Carpaneto Cartiera Casalbaroncolo Casalora di Ravadese Casaltone Case Capelli Case Cocconi Case Crostolo Case Nuove Case Rosse Case Vecchie Casino dalla Rosa Casagnola Castelletto Castelnovo Cervara Chiozzola Coloreto Colorno Corcagnano Eia Fontanini Fontanellato Gaione Ghiaiata Nuova Il Moro La Catena La Palazzina Malandriano Marano Marore Martorano Molino di Malandriano Osteria San Martino Panocchia Paradigna Pedrignano Pilastrello Pizzolese Ponte Porporano Pozzetto Piccolo Quercioli Ravadese Ronco Pascolo Rosa San Pancrazio San Prospero San Ruffino San Secondo Sissa Soragna Terenzo Tizzano Val Parma Traversetolo Trecasali Valera Viarolo Viazza Vicofertile Vicomero Vigatto Vigheffio Vigolante Notable people EditPainters and sculptors Edit Michelangelo Anselmi painter born in Tuscany Benedetto Antelami architect and sculptor Alessandro Araldi painter Sisto Badalocchio painter Jacopo Bertoia Giacomo Zanguidi or Jacopo Zanguidi or Bertoja painter Amedeo Bocchi painter Giulio Carmignani painter Antonio da Correggio Antonio Allegri born in Correggio Reggio Emilia painter Detail of Correggio s frescoes in the Camera di San Paolo Francesco Marmitta painter Filippo Mazzola painter Francesco Mazzola best known as Il Parmigianino painter Girolamo Mazzola Bedoli painter Giovanni Maria Francesco Rondani painter Bartolomeo Schedoni painterOthers Edit Vittorio Adorni cyclist Deborah Lettieri dancer at Crazy Horse de Paris choreographer tv talent show judge Giovanni Amighetti composer musician Amoretti Brothers typographers and typefounders Bodoni s opponents Attilio Bertolucci poet Bernardo Bertolucci director Giuseppe Bertolucci director Giacomo Belli Musician Giambattista Bodoni typographer Vittorio Bottego explorer Cleofonte Campanini conductor Francesco Cura actor singer model Alex Di Gregorio cartoonist Elizabeth Farnese Queen of Spain Odoardo Farnese duke of Parma Alexander Farnese Duke of Parma military commander Adalgisa Gabbi 1857 1933 opera singer Francesco Gabriele Frola ballet dancer Vittorio Gallese physiologist Fiorello Giraud opera singer Giovannino Guareschi writer Adriano Malori cyclist Franco Nero actor Antonio Brianti architect Ferdinando Paer composer Niccolo Paganini composer musician buried in Parma Alex Szilasi pianist Arturo Toscanini conductor Paul Yeboah Bello FiGo singer Giuseppe Verdi opera composerSport Edit Parma F C fans at the Stadio Ennio Tardini one of the oldest stadiums in Italy Parma Calcio 1913 founded in 2015 is a Serie B second division football club It replaced Parma F C which went bankrupt in 2015 It plays in the city s Stadio Ennio Tardini which opened in 1923 and seats up to 23 000 Parma s other sport team is the rugby union club Zebre which competes in Pro14 one of the top rugby competitions in the world Parma also is home to two rugby union teams in the top national division Overmach Rugby Parma and SKG Gran Rugby Parma Panthers is the Parma American football team which provided the basis for John Grisham s book Playing for Pizza Stadio Sergio Lanfranchi is the ground of rugby and American football teams Pallavolo Parma and Parma Baseball are other sports teams in the city Nino Cavalli Stadium is a baseball stadium located in Parma 17 It is the home stadium of Parma Baseball of the Italian Baseball League 18 Economy and infrastructure EditParma has a thriving economy and the food sector is very developed Some of the players in this sector include Barilla which is based in the city Chiesi Farmaceutici in the pharma industry is headquartered in Parma The European Food Safety Authority is also based in Parma Transport Edit Parma railway station is on the Milan Bologna railway system The Parma trolleybus system has been in operation since 1953 It replaced an earlier tramway network and presently comprises four trolleybus routes Aeroporto Internazionale di Parma Parma s airport offers commercial flights to cities in a number of European countries Twin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Italy Parma is twinned with 19 Bourg en Bresse France Ljubljana Slovenia Shijiazhuang China Szeged Hungary Tours France Worms Germany Stockton United StatesSee also EditEuropean College of Parma University of ParmaReferences Edit Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011 Italian National Institute of Statistics Retrieved 16 March 2019 a b Popolazione residente Anno 2016 GeoDemo ISTAT in Italian Retrieved 1 August 2016 Archaeology in Emilia Romagna page XXII 2 2 XXVIII 2 1 The Letters of Cicero B C 44 43 G Bell and Sons 1900 Domenico Roy Palmer 2002 Parma The Regions of Italy A Reference Guide to History and Culture Westport Connecticur Greenwood Publishing Group p 93 ISBN 9780313307331 Retrieved 5 May 2019 Atila the Hun put Parma to the torch in 452 as did Totila the Ostrogoth in the mid 500s It was rebuilt a number of times as a Lombard capital the site of a Byzantine treasury and from the ninth century a bishopric Italy s poetic Parma region Italy has one of the oldest European Diaspora communities and a Jewish presence has been documented in Rome for more than 2 200 years However Jews only arrived in the Emilia Romagna region during the 13th century Parma The Palatine Library is as well home to the largest Italian collection of Hebrew manuscripts and the second largest in the world after the Bodleian Library in Oxford The documents were a gift of Maria Luigia Duchess G Drei Le Carte degli archivi parmensi del secolo XII Parma 1950 doc no 194 the genesis of the Parmesan commune is studied by R Schumann Authority and the commune Parma 833 1033 Parma Deputazione di storia patria series 2 2 VIII 1973 Mapa da rrea de operaushes Pitoresco com Archived from the original on 10 April 2008 Retrieved 6 May 2009 Archivio climatico Enea Casaccia clisun casaccia enea it Archived from the original on 3 November 2014 Monastero di San Giovanni la chiesa in Italian Bodoni Museum briar press official website briar press Retrieved 23 October 2009 a b Popolazione residente Bilancio demografico Anno 2015 GeoDemo Istat in Italian Retrieved 1 August 2016 a b c Cittadini stranieri Bilancio demografico Anno 2015 GeoDemo Istat in Italian Retrieved 1 August 2016 Bilancio demografico intercensuario Anno 2002 GeoDemo Istat in Italian Retrieved 1 August 2016 Stadium Of Baseball Nino Cavalli Punto dinteresse in Parma Via Teresa Confalonieri Casati 22 43125 Parma PR Italy parma emilia romagna catalogo online it Parma Baseball LE MODALITA DI ACCESSO E I PREZZI DEI BIGLIETTI PER GARA TRE E L EVENTUALE GARA QUATTRO SI GIOCA MARTEDI E MERCOLEDI ALLE 20 30 www parmabaseball it Gemellaggi comune parma it in Italian Parma Retrieved 16 December 2019 Bibliography EditSee also Bibliography of the history of ParmaExternal links EditLive streaming webcam on Garibaldi Square Parma s view from satellite Google Earth 360 photos of City of Parma Video Introduction to Parma and the Parmigiano Reggiano Video Brief History of Parma The European Food Safety Authority Website Photo Gallery by Leonardo Bellotti in Italian Parma on The Campanile ProjectParma at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons Travel guides from Wikivoyage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parma amp oldid 1133772020, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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