Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/1117_Verona_earthquake> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 34 of
34
with 100 items per page.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake abstract "A powerful earthquake on 3 January 1117 struck northern Italy and Germany, rated a VII on the Mercalli intensity scale. The epicentre of the first shock was near Verona, the city which suffered the most damage. The outer wall of the amphitheatre was partially felled, and the standing portion was damaged in a later earthquake of 1183. Many other churches, monasteries, and ancient monuments were destroyed or seriously damaged, eliminating much of Verona's early medieval architecture and providing space for a massive Romanesque rebuilding. After the first shock of 3 January, seismic activity persisted for months, striking on 12 January, 4 June, 1 July, 1 October, and 30 December.The earthquake was not only felt in Verona but across northern Italy, from Cividale to Pavia, south to Pisa and north to Switzerland. Outside of Verona the most damaged areas were Milan, Bergamo, Brescia, Venice, Treviso, Modena, Parma, and Cremona. The main churches of Padua all suffered major damages. News of the earthquake reached Montecassino and Reims. The Milanese chronicler Landolfo Iuniore reported that the church synods needed to be carried out in the open air, due to the destruction. In Germany, damage was also extensive. The Michaelskirche in Bamberg, the abbey at Brauweiler, and buildings in Rottenburg am Neckar, Constance, Meersburg, and Fénis were all reported damaged.Recent studies, however, suggest that it was not a major, single event on 3 January, but instead a series of powerful shocks in the areas of Verona (West Veneto) and Cremona (Lower Lombardy), which happened in a few days or even in a few hours. Other earthquakes may have hit as far south as Pisa (North-West Tuscany) and as north as Augsburg (South-West Bavaria), as distinct events, in the same days.".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake thumbnail Bullseye1.png?width=300.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake wikiPageID "20320381".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake wikiPageRevisionID "590152195".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake date "1117-01-03".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake hasPhotoCollection 1117_Verona_earthquake.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake magnitude "VII Mw".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake title "1117".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake subject Category:1117_in_Europe.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake subject Category:1117_in_Germany.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake subject Category:1117_in_Italy.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake subject Category:12th-century_earthquakes.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake subject Category:12th_century_in_Germany.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake subject Category:Earthquakes_in_Germany.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake subject Category:Earthquakes_in_Italy.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake subject Category:History_of_Verona.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake point "45.5 11.0".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake type SpatialThing.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake comment "A powerful earthquake on 3 January 1117 struck northern Italy and Germany, rated a VII on the Mercalli intensity scale. The epicentre of the first shock was near Verona, the city which suffered the most damage. The outer wall of the amphitheatre was partially felled, and the standing portion was damaged in a later earthquake of 1183.".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake label "1117 Verona earthquake".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake label "Erdbeben von Verona 1117".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake label "Terremoto de Verona de 1117".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake label "Terremoto di Verona del 1117".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake sameAs Erdbeben_von_Verona_1117.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake sameAs Terremoto_de_Verona_de_1117.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake sameAs Terremoto_di_Verona_del_1117.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake sameAs m.04_1633.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake sameAs Q260775.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake sameAs Q260775.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake lat "45.5".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake long "11.0".
- 1117_Verona_earthquake wasDerivedFrom 1117_Verona_earthquake?oldid=590152195.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake depiction Bullseye1.png.
- 1117_Verona_earthquake isPrimaryTopicOf 1117_Verona_earthquake.