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Euregionsweek For a strong EU cohesion policy beyond 2020 City of Aarhus Abruzzo region Region of Achterhoek Akershus county council Alentejo Alpeuregio (Tyrol, South Tyrol, Trentino) Autonomous Region of Aosta Valley Aragón City of Arnhem Arnhem Nijmegen city region Principality of Asturias Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes Baden-Württemberg Balearic islands Province of Barcelona Basque Country City of Berlin City of Bielsko-Biala City of Birmingham Bratislava self-governing region Brittany Brussels capital region City of Budapest Burgenland Capital region Berlin-Brandenburg Capital region of Denmark Carinthia region Castile and Leon Catalonia Region of Central Macedonia Centre-Val de Loire region Centro region of Portugal Collectivity of Corsica Region of Crete Donegal county East of England Emilia-Romagna region City of Esbjerg Extremadura Friuli Venezia Giulia autonomous region Municipality of Fyli City of Gothenburg Greater London City of Groningen Municipality of Guimarães Region of Hannover Helsinki-Uusimaa region Highlands and Islands of Scotland Hordaland county Ile-de-France region Region of Jämtland Härjedalen Kainuu City of Koprivnica Koprivnica-Krizevci county City of Kosice City municipality of Kranj Krapina Zagorje county Kujawsko-Pomorskie region La Rioja Lapland Lazio region City of Łódź Lodzkie region Lombardy region Lower Austria Lower Saxony Lubelskie Metropolitan area of Lyon City of Malmö Malopolska region Marche region Municipality of Maribor Mazovia region Medjimurje county Middle Black Sea region Mid-Norway Metropolitan city of Milan Region of Murcia City of Nagykanizsa Navarra Metropolitan area of Nice Côte d’Azur Nordland region Normandy Region of Norrbotten North Denmark region, Aalborg North Norway (Nordland, Troms, Finnmark) North region of Portugal North-East Romania Northern Ireland Northern Netherlands Osijek Baranja county Oslo region Podkarpackie region Podlaskie Podravje region Pomorskie region Pomurska region City of Prague Primorje-Gorski kotar county Reggio Emilia Republic of Srpska City of Riga City of Saragossa Region of Sardinia Federal State of Saxony-Anhalt Silesia Skåne region Sligo county Slovenske Konjice South Bohemia South Norway Southern England Stockholm region Stuttgart region Suleymanpasa municipality City of Tallinn Thuringia Timis county Umbria Region of Utrecht City of Vaasa Region of Valencia Varaždin county Vas county Veneto region City of Vienna Vilnius county Autonomous province of Vojvodina Vysočina region Region of Västerbotten Region of Västra Götaland Wales Warmia-Mazury Weser-Ems West Norway Wielkopolska region Zala county City of Zagreb www.regions-and-cities.europa.eu #EURegionsWeek QG-04-18-342-EN-N.
Recommended publications
  • Destination Region of Murcia
    PRESS Destination Region of Murcia Region of Murcia The Region of Murcia is located in south-east Spain on what is known as the Mediterranean Arc. Set between two seas –the Mediterranean and the Mar Menor– as a region, it has succeeded in combining its extensive cultural heritage with innovation and avant-garde artistic tendencies. Its most important cities are Murcia, the capital, with more than 440,000 inhabitants, Cartagena with more than 214,000 and Lorca with more than 90,000. The Region of Murcia has a population of around one and a half million and covers an area of 11,300km2. Although it is not a very large region, it offers 252km of coast and an astonishing variety of different landscapes considering its size. Diverse and accessible, it only takes a few hours to travel the length and breadth of the region. Mountains, beaches and cities dot the landscape and visitors will find history at every turn. Another of the Region of Murcia’s main attractions is its particularly good weather, with average temperatures in excess of 19ºC and 315 days of sun a year. All these factors offer visitors the opportunity to choose between a wide range of alternatives when organising their stay in the Region of Murcia. It is a destination full of contrasts, where everything is close at hand and easily accessible. Although the driving force behind the Region of Murcia’s economy has traditionally been agriculture, the Regional Government has made a firm commitment to converting the tourist sector into one of the pillars of the region’s economy.
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  • Friuli Friuli
    182 WESTERN EUROPE Vitale, a tribute to the Emperor Justinian and WHERE: 46 miles/74 km east of Bologna. held by many to be the crowning achievement of VISITOR INFO: www.ravennamosaici.it. WHERE Byzantine art in the world. TO STAY: Albergo Cappello offers contempo- Among Ravenna’s other monuments is the rary style in a frescoed, 14th-century palazzo. simple tomb of Dante Alighieri. The early Tel 39/0544-219813; www.albergocappello.it. Renaissance thinker and author of the Divine Cost: from $185 (off-peak), from $260 (peak). Comedy was banished from his hometown of BEST TIME: Jun–Jul for Ravenna Festival of Florence and died in Ravenna in 1321. opera and classical music. Crossroads of the North F RIULI Friuli–Venezia Giulia, Italy ucked away into Italy’s northeast corner, just south of Austria and snug against the border of Slovenia, Friuli is where Italians escape on Tgastronomic holidays. From the Adriatic coast and the regional capital of Trieste northward to the Julian Alps, Friuli is a east of Udine, the medieval village of Cividale landscape rich with mountain meadows, roll- del Friuli is the hub of the wine trade in the ing hillsides, and fertile plains. It is a small Colli Orientali growing district. Locanda al region with a big reputation for sweet pro- Castello offers 16 atmospheric rooms in a sciutto hams from the village of San Daniele, vine-covered brick castle, originally a Jesuit robust artisanal cheeses, and what many con- monastery. Its dining room is noted for the sider Italy’s best white wines from the Friulano local recipes made famous in the U.S.
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  • Language Policy and Linguistic Reality in Former Yugoslavia and Its Successor States
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Tsukuba Repository Language Policy and Linguistic Reality in Former Yugoslavia and its Successor States 著者 POZGAJ HADZ Vesna journal or Inter Faculty publication title volume 5 page range 49-91 year 2014 URL http://doi.org/10.15068/00143222 Language Policy and Linguistic Reality in Former Yugoslavia and its Successor States Vesna POŽGAJ HADŽI Department of Slavistics Faculty of Arts University of Ljubljana Abstract Turbulent social and political circumstances in the Middle South Slavic language area caused the disintegration of Yugoslavia and the formation of new countries in the 1990s, and this of course was reflected in the demise of the prestigious Serbo-Croatian language and the emergence of new standard languages based on the Štokavian dialect (Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian and Montenegrin). The Yugoslav language policy advocated a polycentric model of linguistic unity that strived for equal representation of the languages of the peoples (Serbo-Croatian, Macedonian and Slovenian), ethnicities (ethnic minorities) and ethnic groups, as well as both scripts (Latin and Cyrillic). Serbo-Croatian, spoken by 73% of people in Yugoslavia, was divided into the eastern and the western variety and two standard language expressions: Bosnian and Montenegrin. One linguistic system had sociolinguistic subsystems or varieties which functioned and developed in different socio-political, historical, religious and other circumstances. With the disintegration of Yugoslavia, the aforementioned sociolinguistic subsystems became standard languages (one linguistic system brought forth four political languages). We will describe the linguistic circumstances of the newly formed countries after 1991 in Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro.
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  • Wine List Bolero Winery
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  • The Production of Lexical Tone in Croatian
    The production of lexical tone in Croatian Inauguraldissertation zur Erlangung des Grades eines Doktors der Philosophie im Fachbereich Sprach- und Kulturwissenschaften der Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität zu Frankfurt am Main vorgelegt von Jevgenij Zintchenko Jurlina aus Kiew 2018 (Einreichungsjahr) 2019 (Erscheinungsjahr) 1. Gutacher: Prof. Dr. Henning Reetz 2. Gutachter: Prof. Dr. Sven Grawunder Tag der mündlichen Prüfung: 01.11.2018 ABSTRACT Jevgenij Zintchenko Jurlina: The production of lexical tone in Croatian (Under the direction of Prof. Dr. Henning Reetz and Prof. Dr. Sven Grawunder) This dissertation is an investigation of pitch accent, or lexical tone, in standard Croatian. The first chapter presents an in-depth overview of the history of the Croatian language, its relationship to Serbo-Croatian, its dialect groups and pronunciation variants, and general phonology. The second chapter explains the difference between various types of prosodic prominence and describes systems of pitch accent in various languages from different parts of the world: Yucatec Maya, Lithuanian and Limburgian. Following is a detailed account of the history of tone in Serbo-Croatian and Croatian, the specifics of its tonal system, intonational phonology and finally, a review of the most prominent phonetic investigations of tone in that language. The focal point of this dissertation is a production experiment, in which ten native speakers of Croatian from the region of Slavonia were recorded. The material recorded included a diverse selection of monosyllabic, bisyllabic, trisyllabic and quadrisyllabic words, containing all four accents of standard Croatian: short falling, long falling, short rising and long rising. Each target word was spoken in initial, medial and final positions of natural Croatian sentences.
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  • Croatia) in the Period 1960–2012: an Ecological Study
    International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health Article Mortality Characteristics of Two Populations in the Northern Mediterranean (Croatia) in the Period 1960–2012: An Ecological Study Robert Doriˇci´c 1,*,† , Tanja Cori´c´ 1,2 , Morana Tomljenovi´c 1, Danijela Lakošeljac 3,4, Amir Muzur 1,4 and Branko Kolari´c 1,2,† 1 Faculty of Medicine, University of Rijeka, Rijeka 51000, Croatia; [email protected] (T.C.);´ [email protected] (M.T.); [email protected] (A.M.); [email protected] (B.K.) 2 Andrija Štampar Teaching Institute of Public Health, Zagreb 10000, Croatia 3 Teaching Institute of Public Health of Primorje-Gorski Kotar County, Rijeka 51000, Croatia; [email protected] 4 Faculty of Health Studies, University of Rijeka, Rijeka 51000, Croatia * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +385-051-554-927 † These authors contributed equally to this work. Received: 4 October 2018; Accepted: 16 November 2018; Published: 20 November 2018 Abstract: In the second half of the 20th century, the town of Bakar (Primorje-Gorski Kotar County, Croatia), where a coking plant was operational 1978–1994, experienced intensive industrialisation. The town of Mali Lošinj (Primorje-Gorski Kotar County, Croatia) in this period based its economy on non-industrial sectors. The study goal was comparing mortality characteristics of these populations in the northern Mediterranean for 1960–2012. An ecological study design was used. Data were analysed for 1960–2012 for the deceased with recorded place of residence in the study area. Data on the deceased for 1960–1993 were taken from death reports, for 1994–2012 from digital archives of the Teaching Institute of Public Health, Primorje-Gorski Kotar County.
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  • Andalucía Flamenca: Music, Regionalism and Identity in Southern Spain
    Andalucía flamenca: Music, Regionalism and Identity in Southern Spain A thesis submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnomusicology by Matthew Machin-Autenrieth © Matthew Machin-Autenrieth 2013 Tables of Contents Table of Contents i List of Plates iv List of Examples iv List of Figures v Conventions vi Acknowledgments viii Abstract x Introduction 1 PART ONE Chapter One: An Overview of Flamenco 6 The Identities of Flamenco 9 The Materials of Flamenco 12 The Geographies of Flamenco 19 The Scholars of Flamenco 25 Chapter Two: Music, Regionalism and Political Geography 36 Political Geography and Music 37 Region, Regionalisation and Regionalism 43 Regionalism and Music 51 The Theoretical Framework 61 Conclusions 68 Chapter Three: Methodology 70 Virtual Ethnography: In Theory 70 Virtual Ethnography: In Practice 79 Field Research in Granada 86 Conclusions 97 Chapter Four: Regionalism, Nationalism and Ethnicity in the History of Flamenco 98 Flamenco and the Emergence of Andalucismo (1800s–1900s) 99 Flamenco and the Nation: Commercialisation, Salvation and Antiflamenquismo 113 Flamenco and Political Andalucismo (1900–1936) 117 Flamenco during the Franco Regime (1939–75) 122 Flamenco since the Transition to Democracy (1975 onwards) 127 Conclusions 131 i Chapter Five: Flamenco for Andalusia, Flamenco for Humanity 133 Flamenco for Andalusia: The Statute of Autonomy 134 Flamenco for Humanity: Intangible Cultural Heritage 141 The Regionalisation of Flamenco in Andalusia 152 Conclusions 169 PART
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  • Fishmpablue Act 1.4 Policy Survey Spain
    Fishing Governance in MPAs: Potentialities for Blue Economy Country Policy Survey: Spain WITH THE FINACIAL SUPPORT OF: FISHING GOVERNANCE IN MPAS: POTENTIALITIES FOR BLUE ECONOMY Country Policy survey SPAIN 2 Main Author(s): Maria del Mar Otero (IUCN Center for Mediterranean Cooperation) With contributions from: La Consejera Técnica de las Reservas Marinas, Dirección General de Recursos Pesqueros y Acuicultura, Secretaría General de Pesca del Ministerio de Agricultura, Alimentación y Medio Ambiente; El Servicio de Pesca y Acuicultura de la Consejería de Agricultura, Agua y Medio Ambiente de la Región de Murcia; la Consejería de Agricultura, Medio Ambiente y Territorio de las Islas Baleares; consultant Diego Kersting. Project partners: Federparchi, ECOMERS laboratory (Nice-Sophia Antipolis University, France), WWF Mediterranean Programme Advisory members: MedPAN secretary, GFCM, MedWet, RAC/SPA, ISPRA, Marine Stewardship Council, MedArtNet Association, Catalonian Region Fisheries Administration and Croatian State Institute for Nature Protection. This work was part of the “Fishing governance in MPAs: potentialities for Blue Economy (FishMPABlue) project”. 1M-MED14-06. Financial assistance: European Territorial Cooperation Programme “MED” 2007-2013 and MAVA Citation: Otero, M., 2015. FISHING GOVERNANCE IN MPAS: POTENTIALITIES FOR BLUE ECONOMY (FISHMPABLUE project). WP2 Technical component - Act. 1.4 Country Policy survey, SPAIN. 24pp 3 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .............................................................................................................
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  • Days of Counties
    ZANIMLJIVOSTI Zagreb, 30 April 2016 Days of Counties The importance of statistics is unquestionable when it comes to policy planning and decision making, while statistical data expressed at lower territorial levels are very significant since they provide decision makers with a better insight and analysis of the situation in strictly defined area, which help in making more precise plans. This further contributes to better realisation of planned activities in the future. Having in mind that as much as nine counties celebrate their day, we released a series of data by counties that cover almost all statistical areas at the web site of the Croatian Bureau of Statistics within Statistics in Line this month. In the text below you can find analysis of some of the most intriguing statistical indicators by counties. Natural increase positive in only three counties During 2014, there was a total of 39 566 live births in the Republic of Croatia, most of which in the City of Zagreb, 8 452 (21.4%), while the County of Split-Dalmatia held the second place with 4 312 (10.9%) of live births. Moreover, while the number of live births in the City of Zagreb increased by 11.4% compared to the number of live births ten years ago, in 2005 to be specific, in the County of Split-Dalmatia that number was by 13.2% lower. A negative trend was recorded in most counties, except in the already mentioned City of Zagreb as well as in the County of Dubrovnik-Neretva with an increase of 2.7%, in the County of Istria with an increase of 2.3% and in the County of Primorje-Gorski kotar with an increase of 0.1% in the number of live births recorded in 2014, as compared to 2005.
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  • Archaeological Area and the Patriarchal Basilica of Aquileia
    centre, linking central Europe with the Mediterranean. Among the goods that it traded through its great river WORLD HERITAGE LIST port were wine, oil, furs, iron, and slaves. It was also the southern terminus of the amber route, dating from Aquileia (Italy) prehistory, and this prized product from the Baltic was worked by Aquileian craftsmen for sale throughout the Empire. High-quality glassware became an important No 825 manufacture following the establishment of a workshop there in the 1st century AD by the celebrated Phoenician craftsman Ennion. By 90 BC it had been elevated to the status of municipium and its citizens were accorded full rights of Roman citizenship. Its wealth resulted in the town Identification being endowed with many magnificent public buildings, and the private residences of its rich Nomination The Archaeological Area and the merchants were opulently decorated. It is estimated that Patriarchal Basilica of Aquileia its population had reached over 200,000 by the end of the 1st century BC. During the 4th century Imperial Location Commune of Aquileia, Province of residences were built in Aquileia, and it was the seat of Udine, Friuli-Venezia Giulia Re- an Imperial mint between 284 and 425 AD. Of especial gion importance was the construction in the second decade of the 4th century of a basilica by Bishop Theodorus, State Party Italy following the sanctioning of public worship by the Edict of Milan in 313. Date 1 July 1996 All this was to come to a violent end in 452, when Aquileia was sacked by the Huns led by Attila.
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  • Info Tourist – Murcia Region
    INFO TOURIST – MURCIA REGION Location Privileged Surroundings Located at the South-East corner of the Iberian Peninsula, between the regions of, Andalusia, Castile- La Mancha and Valencia, the region of Murcia occupies an area of 11,317 km2 (2.2% of the total surface area of Spain), bordering the province of Albacete in the North, the province of Alicante in the East, the provinces of Granada, Albacete and Almería in the West, and the Mediterranean in the South-East. In terms of surface area the region of Murcia is the ninth largest of the Spanish autonomous communities. The Murcia region lies at the centre of the Spanish Mediterranean coastal arch, between the longitudes 37º 23' - 38º 45'N and the latitudes 0º 39' - 2º 20'W taking as reference the Greenwich Meridian. Climate Murcia enjoys a yearly average of 2,800 hours of sunshine The region of Murcia has the typical Mediterranean semi-arid subtropical climate: namely an average annual temperature of 18ºC, with hot summers (registering absolute maximum temperatures of 40ºC) and mild winters (an average temperature of 11ºC in the winter months of December and January). The number of days per year with clear skies is 120- 150, with approximately 2,800 sun-hours per annum. In general rain is scarce throughout the region (approx. 300-350 mm/year), falling mainly in the spring (April) and autumn (October), leaving the summer an eminently dry season. The region of Murcia is characterised by certain climatic differences which may lead to variation in the above-mentioned figures. These variations depend on the orientation and exposure to the dominant winds, the distance from the sea and the configuration of relief.
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  • New Virus Restrictions Come in Force in Two Spanish Regions 16 August 2020
    New virus restrictions come in force in two Spanish regions 16 August 2020 expected to start implementing the new measures in the coming days. The Basque Region, which neighbours La Rioja, plans to go a step further and will on Monday declare and "health emergency" which will allow it to impose greater restrictions on the size of public gatherings and establish selective confinement in areas where there is a high risk of transmission of the disease. Nearly 29,000 people have died so far from COVID-19 in Spain, which declared a state of Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain emergency between March 14 and June 21 that allowed the central government to impose restrictions nationwide. New restrictions to stop the spread of the new With the state of emergency subsequently lifted, coronavirus, including the closure of discos and a autonomy has been handed back to the regional partial ban on smoking outdoors, went into effect authorities. Sunday in two Spanish regions. The health ministry has had to negotiate with them The small, northern wine-growing region of La to impose the new measures on a nationwide Rioja and the southeastern region of Murcia are basis. the first Spanish regions to implement a raft of new measures which Spain's Health Minister Salvador Spain has a population of 47 million and its Illa unveiled Friday to be enforced nationwide as infection rate of 110 cases per 100,000 inhabitants the country battles a surge in the disease. is higher than in other European countries. The measures include the closure of all discos, © 2020 AFP night clubs and dancing halls, while restaurants and bars are required to close by 1:00 am, with no new guests allowed in from midnight.
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