Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'City of Verona' has mentioned 'Italy' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
City in Veneto, Italy
This article is about the city in Italy.
Comune in Veneto, Italy
Verona (/vxc9x99xcbx88roxcax8anxc9x99/ vxc9x99-ROH-nxc9x99, Italian:xc2xa0[vexcbx88roxcbx90na] (listen); Venetian: Verona or Verxc3xb2na) is a city on the Adige River in Veneto, Italy, with 259,610 inhabitants.
It is unknown if Shakespeare ever visited Verona or Italy, but his plays have lured many visitors to Verona and surrounding cities.
But, after Verona was conquered by the Ostrogoths in 489, the Gothic domination of Italy began.
Verona became the ordinary residence of the kings of Italy, the government of the city becoming hereditary in the family of Count Milo, progenitor of the counts of San Bonifacio.
There were numerous outbreaks of the plague, and in 1629xe2x80x9333 Italy was struck by its worst outbreak in modern times.
In 1866, following the Third Italian War of Independence, Verona, along with the rest of Venetia, became part of United Italy.
Throughout Italy, the Jewish population was hit by the Manifesto of Race, a series of anti-Semitic laws passed in 1938, and after the invasion by Nazi Germany in 1943, deportations to Nazi concentration camps.
After World War II, as Italy joined the NATO alliance, Verona once again acquired its strategic importance, due to its geographical closeness to the Iron Curtain.
In the five years between 2002 and 2007, the population of Verona grew by 3.05%, while Italy as a whole grew by 3.85%.
Completed around 30 AD, it is the third-largest in Italy after Rome's Colosseum and the arena at Capua.
The church also houses the tomb of King Pippin of Italy (777xe2x80x93810).
Aleardo Aleardi, a poet Berto Barbarani, poet Paolo Bellasio, composer of the Renaissance; member of the Roman School Stefano Bernardi, baroque composer Massimo Bubola, singer-songwriter born in Terrazzo Paolo Caliari, well known as "Veronese", painter Lou Campi, professional bowler Mario Capecchi, Nobel prize in Medicine, 2007 Giovanni Francesco Caroto, painter Catullus, Latin poet Walter Chiari, actor Gigliola Cinquetti, a singer who brought Italy its first Eurovision Song Contest win in 1964 Lorenzo Comendich, painter Damiano Cunego, former world number 1 cyclist and former Giro d'Italia winner Giorgio de Stefani, tennis player, finalist at the 1932 French Open Franco Donatoni, composer Gino Fano, mathematician Girolamo Fracastoro, also known as Fracastorius, renowned scholar, physician, and poet Giovanni Giocondo, architect and scholar Girolamo dai Libri, illuminator of manuscripts and painter Romano Guardini, theologian Marc' Antonio Ingegneri, composer, teacher of Claudio Monteverdi Ernestine von Kirchsberg, Austrian landscape painter Cesare Lombroso, criminologist Scipione Maffei, writer and historian Matteo Manassero, British amateur golf champion, 2009 Arnoldo Mondadori, editor Romeo Montague and Juliet Capulet, fictional characters from the well known Shakespearian play Romeo and Juliet Marcantonio Negri, Baroque composer, associate of Monteverdi Carlo Pedrotti, 19th-century composer, conductor, voice teacher, and opera administrator St. Peter Martyr, Dominican preacher and saint Ippolito Pindemonte, poet Ratherius, Medieval bishop and writer Francesca Rettondini, actress Carlo Rovelli, physicist and writer Vincenzo Ruffo, composer of the Renaissance Emilio Salgari, novelist Antonio Salieri, composer Michele Sammicheli, architect Sara Simeoni, the former world high jump primatist and Olympic gold medalist Marco Stroppa, composer Bartolomeo Tromboncino, composer of the Renaissance period Giorgio Zancanaro, baritone
It has had an association with many important people and events that have been significant in the history of Europe, such as Theoderic the Great, king of Ostrogoths, Alboin and Rosamund, the Lombard Dukes, Charlemagne and Pippin of Italy, Berengar I, and Dante.
It is considered to be the ninth busiest railway station in Italy, handling approximately 68,000 passengers per day, or 25 million passengers per year.
Although no surviving evidence suggests that Shakespeare had ever been to the city, or even the nation of Italy, for that matter, the city's presence in his work has inspired increased tourism to Verona and the surrounding areas ever since.