- Piedmontese: [tyˈriŋ] ; Italian:
Torino [toˈriːno] ; Latin:
Augusta Taurinorum, then Taurinum) is a city and an
important business and
cultural centre...
-
northern Italy. At the
approach to the west of the
important city of
Augusta Taurinorum (Turin, Italy),
Constantine met a
large force of
heavily armed Maxentian...
- Livy (late 1st c. BC), Taurinoí (Ταυρινοί) by
Strabo (early 1st c. AD),
Taurinorum by
Pliny (1st c. AD), and as Taurínōn (Ταυρίνων; var. Ταυρικῶν, Ταυρινῶν)...
-
Romans (c. 220 BC), who
founded several colonies there including Augusta Taurinorum (Turin) and
Eporedia (Ivrea).
After the fall of the
Western Roman Empire...
-
Strabo while constructing a road from
Aquae Statiellae (Acqui) to
Augusta Taurinorum (Turin). Alba was the
birthplace of
Publius Helvius Pertinax, briefly...
-
Romans (c. 220 BC), who
founded several colonies there including Augusta Taurinorum (Turin) and
Eporedia (Ivrea).
After the fall of the
Western Roman Empire...
- Italy. The gate
provided access through the city
walls of
Julia Augusta Taurinorum (modern Turin) from the
North side and, as a result, it
constituted the...
- Vagienna)
being 16 km to the south. Its
position on the road from
Augusta Taurinorum (modern Turin) to the
coast at Vada
Sabatia (modern Vado Ligure, near...
-
Luigi Tom****etti,
Charles Cocquelines, and
Luigi Bilio, 441–6.
Augustae Taurinorum: Seb.
Franco et
Henrico Dalmazzo editoribus. Salvator, Miranda. 1998....
- Piedmontese: [tyˈriŋ] ; Italian: Torino,
pronounced [toˈriːno] ; Latin:
Augusta Taurinorum, then Taurinum.
Common English name(s):
Turin Official English name(s):...