EEPE
Poster 2009 |
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22nd
Residential Summer Course in Epidemiology
Florence,
Italy, from 22 June to 10 July 2009,
the main course
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Design
and statistical analysis of genetic epidemiology studies
15 June to 19 June 2009,
one
week course

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Tuscany,
the flowered heart of Italy is known as the golden land, renowned
for its art, history and evocative landscape, famous for its cypress
rows, olive trees, vineyards, hills in the infinity and walled
medieval villages. Tuscany is a region where the past and the
present merge together and coexist in perfect harmony.
Towards the 8th Century B.C. traces of a mysterious and extraordinary
population started to appear all over Italy : the Etruscans (the
people of the sea), Etruria got its name from them. Under the
Romans the name was transformed into Tuscia, then changed again
into Tuscania and finally into Toscana.
They created roads, reclaimed swamps and built great cities such
as Volterra, Chiusi, Cortona, Arezzo, Fiesole (close to Florence),
Vulci, Vetulonia, Veio, Volsini, Terracina and Tarquinia.
The exceptional archaeological findings, scattered over an extremely
vast territory and found in tombs of all kinds and dimensions
in the extraordinary and almost incredible necropolises or "the
cities of the dead", testify to the degree of civilization
that this population reached.
The Etruscan civilisation and language had a great influence on
the conquering Romans, with time, the Etruscan ruling class came
to be absorbed into Roman civilisation. Lucca, Pisa, Siena, Florence
and Pistoia were all founded by the Romans.
The period of the "Free Communes" began during the 12th
Century. The first democracies and the first Art and Trade Unions
rendered Tuscany a sole model of cultural, social and economic
independence.
After the Middle Ages a new era was beginning, and in it were
sown the seeds of the Italian nation. Florence, dominating all,
was writing the history for the whole Tuscan region. Freed from
clerical tyranny and feudal dominion, Florence and Tuscany became
a crucible of ideas and inventions ; the rigid structures of the
past had gone, the new Italian language was born, and cultural
transformations were achieved in a way not possible at any other
place on the world at that time.
In the 14th Century, thanks firstly to Dante and to Giotto and
to numerous great artists during the 15th Century, Tuscany and
especially Florence, gave a decisive contribution to the birth
of the Italian Renaissance.
Under the patronage of the Medici an extraordinary blossoming
of intellect and culture developed in Florence, the epicentre
of the Renaissance across the 15th and 16th centuries.
Famous personalities influenced that time : Brunelleschi, Donatello,
Alberti, Ghiberti, Masaccio, Paolo Uccello, Botticelli, Piero
della Francesca, Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo.
The great art centres of Florence, Pisa and Siena and the medieval
towns such as San Gimignano and Pienza bear timeless witness to
a thousand years of history, culture and art. Tuscany has splendid
endless museums, full of ancient Etruscan and Roman ruins, medieval
castles, fortresses, watch-towers and town walls appear everywhere,
Romanesque and Gothic cathedrals, Renaissance palaces, historical
buildings, streets, that will fascinate you.
Tuscany offers natural landscapes of immense variety, from the
green hills of Chianti to the beaches on the Tyrrhenian coast
with the seaside resorts of Forte dei Marmi, Viareggio, Piombino,
Orbetello, Elba, and from the spectacular rocky heights of the
Apennines and the Apuan Alps to the spas of Montecatini, Chianciano,
Bagni di Lucca and Saturnia.
“Whoever
wants to be happy, let him be so : about tomorrow there is no
knowing.”
Lorenzo
il Magnifico
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postmaster@eepe.org
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