A report on OderzoVeneto and Lombards

Lombard possessions in Italy: the Lombard Kingdom (Neustria, Austria and Tuscia) and the Lombard Duchies of Spoleto and Benevento
Remains of a Roman villa in the Roman Forum
Distribution of Langobardic burial fields at the Lower Elbe Lands (according to W. Wegewitz)
Venice, the primary tourist destination and the capital of Veneto
Lombard migration from Scandinavia
Lake Alleghe near Belluno
Lombard grave goods (6th-7th century), Milan, Lombardy
Cortina d'Ampezzo
Plutei of Theodota, mid 8th century, Civic Museums of Pavia.
The Piave River
The Frankish Merovingian King Chlothar II in combat with the Lombards
The Venetian Lagoon at sunset
King Liutprand (712-744) "was a zealous Catholic, generous and a great founder of monasteries"
Relief map of Veneto
Lombard Duchy of Benevento in the eighth century
The Adige in Verona
Italy around the turn of the millennium, showing the Lombard states in the south on the eve of the arrival of the Normans.
The Tetrarchs were the four co-rulers who governed the Roman Empire as long as Diocletian's reform lasted. Here they are portrayed embracing, in a posture of harmony, in a porphyry sculpture dating from the 4th century, produced in Anatolia, located today on a corner of St Mark's Basilica in Venice.
The West-Germanic languages around the sixth century CE
The Horses of Saint Mark, brought as loot from Constantinople in 1204.
The runic inscription from the Pforzen buckle may be the earliest written example of Lombardic language
An 18th-century view of Venice by Canaletto.
Lombard warrior, bronze statue, 8th century, Pavia Civic Museums.
The 13th-century Castel Brando in Cison di Valmarino, Treviso.
The Rule of Saint Benedict in Beneventan (i.e. Lombard) script
Veneto's provinces.
Church of Santa Sofia, Benevento
St Mark's Basilica, the seat of the Patriarch of Venice.
Lombard shield boss<BR>northern Italy, 7th century, Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Punta San Vigilio on the Lake Garda
Lombard S-shaped fibula
Kiss of Judas by Giotto, in Padua.
A glass drinking horn from Castel Trosino
Giorgione's The Tempest.
Lombard Goldblattkreuz
The Prato della Valle in Padua, a work of Italian Renaissance architecture.
Lombard fibulae
Villa Cornaro.
Altar of Ratchis
Antonio Canova's Psyche Revived by Love's Kiss.
8th-century Lombard sculpture depicting female martyrs, based on a Byzantine model. Tempietto Longobardo, Cividale del Friuli
The Church of Santa Maria della Salute in Venice
Crypt of Sant'Eusebio, Pavia.
A Golden bottle of Prosecco
Asiago cheese and crackers
A slice of tiramisù
Antonio Salieri
Antonio Vivaldi
Teatro La Fenice
The Arena of Verona
Teatro Salieri
Villa Barbaro
The Villa Capra "La Rotonda"
Villa Badoer
Villa Malcontenta
Villa Pisani (Bagnolo)
The mount Antelao
Lastoi de Formin (Cadore)
The start of Strada delle 52 Gallerie
A trait that shows the structure of the Calà del Sasso

Oderzo (Opitergium; Oderso) is a comune with a population of 20,003 in the province of Treviso, Veneto, northern Italy.

- Oderzo

It would be held by the Byzantines, even after much of northern Italy was conquered by the Lombard in 568, until its destruction by the Lombard king Grimoald in 667/8.

- Oderzo

Este, Padua, Oderzo, Adria, Vicenza, Verona, and Altino became centres of Venetic culture.

- Veneto

In 643 AD the Lombards conquered the Byzantine base at Oderzo and took possession of practically all of Veneto (and Friuli) except for Venice and Grado.

- Veneto

He extended his dominions, conquering Liguria in 643 and the remaining part of the Byzantine territories of inner Veneto, including the Roman city of Opitergium (Oderzo).

- Lombards

0 related topics with Alpha

Overall