The Campo di Verano cemetery is a famous cemetery in Rome that was founded in the early 19th century. The Cemetery is currently divided into sections: the Jewish cemetery, the Catholic cemetery and the monument to the victims of the first world war. Graves at Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York A cemetery or graveyard is a place (usually an enclosed area of land) in which dead bodies are buried. ... Location within Italy The Roman Colosseum Rome (Italian and Latin: Roma) is the capital city of Italy and of its Latium region. ... Alternative meaning: Nineteenth Century (periodical) (18th century — 19th century — 20th century — more centuries) As a means of recording the passage of time, the 19th century was that century which lasted from 1801-1900 in the sense of the Gregorian calendar. ... The word Jew ( Hebrew: יהודי) is used in a wide number of ways, but generally refers to a follower of the Jewish faith, a child of a Jewish mother, or someone of Jewish descent with a connection to Jewish culture or ethnicity and often a combination of these attributes. ... Ypres, 1917, in the vicinity of the Battle of Passchendaele. ...
Sources:
Slavic and East European Library (http://www.library.uiuc.edu/spx/class/Biography/Russianbio/russnecr.htm)
The Age (http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/12/01/1070127348775.html?from=storyrhs&oneclick=true)
Info Roma (http://www.activitaly.it/infobase/index.php?lang=en&mode=showinfo&type=monument&id=186)
Cemetery of St. Thecla, discovered by Armellini in 1870, named from some unknown Roman Thecla, and certainly anterior to Constantine; an epitaph of Aurelia Agape has an early Christian savour and is cut on the back of a pagan epitaph of the time of Claudius Gothicus (268-70).
Cemetery of St. Castulus, a martyr under Diocletian, and according to the Acts of St. Sebastian the husband of Irene, the pious matron to whose house was brought the body of the soldier-martyr.
The cemetery of Thraso, a rich and aged martyr in the persecution of Diocletian, was discovered in 1578 by Bosio.
CAMPO (una palabra común a muchas idiomas de la R.F. Alemana, cf.
di Medole; this, aided by a heavy cross fire from his artillery and part of Niel's, he carried without great loss, Niel meantime attacking Casa Nuova and Robecco.
But the Austrians had not yet developed their full strength, and the initial successes of the French, won against isolated brigades and battalions, were a mere prelude to the real struggle.