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list of city travel guides Italy | |
Trapani travel guide | books | maps | hotels | flights | car rentals |
Trento travel guide | books | maps | hotels | flights | car rentals |
Treviso travel guide | books | maps | hotels | flights | car rentals |
Trieste travel guide | books | maps | hotels | flights | car rentals |
Udine travel guide | books | maps | hotels | flights | car rentals |
Varese travel guide | books | maps | hotels | flights | car rentals |
Vasto travel guide | books | maps | hotels | flights | car rentals |
Vercelli travel guide | books | maps | hotels | flights | car rentals |
Verona travel guide | books | maps | hotels | flights | car rentals |
Vicenza travel guide | books | maps | hotels | flights | car rentals |
Viterbo travel guide | books | maps | hotels | flights | car rentals |
The Italian Republic or Italy (Italian: Italia) is a country in the south of Europe, consisting mainly of a boot-shaped peninsula together with two large islands in the Mediterranean Sea: Sicily and Sardinia. To the north, where it borders France, Switzerland, Austria and Slovenia, the country is bounded by the Alps. The independent countries of San Marino and the Vatican City are enclaves within Italian territory.
Italy consists predominantly of a large peninsula with a distinctive boot shape that extends into the Mediterranean Sea, where together with its two main islands Sicily and Sardinia it creates distinct bodies of water, such as the Adriatic Sea to the north-east, the Ionian Sea to the south-east, the Tyrrhenian Sea to the south-west and finally the Ligurian Sea to the north-west.
The Apennine mountains form the backbone of this peninsula, leading north-west to where they join the Alps, the mountain range that then forms an arc enclosing Italy from the north. Here is also found a large alluvial plain, the Po-Venetian plain, drained by the Po River and its many tributaries flowing down from the Alps, Apennines and Dolomites. Other well-known rivers include the Tiber, Adige and Arno.
Its highest point is the Mont Blanc (Monte Bianco) at 4,810 m, but Italy is more typically associated with two famous volcanoes: the currently dormant Vesuvius near Naples and the very active Etna on Sicily.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Italy".
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