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Cavallo (moneta)1
Cavallo may refer to: People * Daniela Cavallo (born 1975), German business executive * Diana Cavallo (1931–2017), American writer * Domingo Cavallo (born 1946), Argentine economist and politician * Émile-Gustave Cavallo-Péduzzi (1851–1917), French painter * Jimmy Cavallo (1927–2019), American musician * Josh Cavallo (born 1999), Australian association football player * Mimmo Cavallo (born 1951), Italian musician * Ricardo Cavallo (born 1951), Argentine political activist * Rob Cavallo (born 1963), American music producer * Tiberius Cavallo (1749–1809), Anglo-Italian physicist * Victor Cavallo (1947–2000), Italian actor Other * Cavallo (coin), an Italian Renaissance coin * Cavallo (island), an island near Corsica * Cavallo, Ohio, a community in the United States * Cavallo di ritorno * Monte Cavallo See also * Cavalli * Leoncavallo Ruggero (or Ruggiero) Leoncavallo ( , , ; 23 April 18579 August 1919) was an Italian opera composer and librettist. Although he ...
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Daniela Cavallo
Daniela Cavallo (born 3 April 1975) is a German business executive who has been chairwoman of the General (''Gesamtbetriebsrat'') and Group Works Council (''Konzernbetriebsrat'') of the Volkswagen Group since May 2021. Career Cavallo was born to Italian parents. Her father came to Wolfsburg with the first wave of guest workers and worked at the Wolfsburg Volkswagen Plant. According to the financial news website Business Insider, her Italian origin is important to her. She feels like at home in both countries, but she is really at home in Wolfsburg. After graduating from high school in 1994, she completed an apprenticeship as an office clerk at Volkswagen and qualified as a business administrator. She was also involved in youth and trainee representation. In 2002, Cavallo was elected to the workers council of the then Volkswagen subsidiary Auto 5000. After the birth of her children, she interrupted her work between 2004 and 2008 as the first works council member at Volkswagen for ...
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Tiberius Cavallo
Tiberius Cavallo (also Tiberio) (30 March 1749, Naples, Italy21 December 1809, London, England) was an Italian physicist and natural philosopher. His interests included electricity, the development of scientific instruments, the nature of "gas, airs", and Hot air ballooning, ballooning. He became both a Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences in Naples, and a Fellow of the Royal Society of London in 1779. Between 1780 and 1792, he presented the Royal Society's Bakerian Lecture thirteen times in succession. Life Tiberius Cavallo was born on 30 March 1749 at Naples, Italy Naples (; it, Napoli ; nap, Napule ), from grc, Νεάπολις, Neápolis, lit=new city. is the regional capital of Campania and the third-largest city of Italy, after Rome and Milan, with a population of 909,048 within the city's adminis ... where his father was a physician. In 1771 he moved to England. Cavallo made several ingenious improvements in scientific instruments. He is often cited as the ...
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Monte Cavallo
Monte Cavallo is a ''comune'' (municipality) in the Province of Macerata in the Italian region Marche, located about southwest of Ancona and about southwest of Macerata. Monte Cavallo borders the following municipalities: Pieve Torina, Serravalle di Chienti, Visso Visso is a ''comune'' (municipality) in the Province of Macerata in the Italian region Marche, located about southwest of Ancona and about southwest of Macerata. It houses the seat of Monti Sibillini National Park. Main sights * San Giacomo c .... Demographic evolution Colors= id:lightgrey value:gray(0.9) id:darkgrey value:gray(0.8) id:sfondo value:rgb(1,1,1) id:barra value:rgb(0.6,0.7,0.8) ImageSize = width:455 height:303 PlotArea = left:50 bottom:50 top:30 right:30 DateFormat = x.y Period = from:0 till:2000 TimeAxis = orientation:vertical AlignBars = justify ScaleMajor = gridcolor:darkgrey increment:1000 start:0 ScaleMinor = gridcolor:lightgrey increment:200 start:0 BackgroundColors = ...
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Cavallo Di Ritorno
Black Hand ( it, Mano Nera) was a type of Italian extortion racket. Originally developed in the eighteenth century, Black Hand extortion came to the United States in the later nineteenth century with immigrants. Black Hand was a method of extortion practiced by gangsters of the Camorra and the Mafia. American newspapers in the first half of the twentieth century sometimes made reference to an organized "Black Hand Society", a criminal enterprise composed of Italians, mainly Sicilian immigrants. However, many Sicilians disputed its existence and objected to the associated negative ethnic stereotype, but this was not the only viewpoint among Italian-Americans. ''Il Telegrafo: The Evening Telegraph'', a newspaper for the Italian American community in New York City, printed an editorial on March 13, 1909 in response to Joseph Petrosino's assassination, which read in part, "The assassination of Petrosino is an evil day for the Italians of America, and none of us can any longer deny ...
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Cavallo, Ohio
Cavallo is an unincorporated community in Coshocton County, in the U.S. state of Ohio. History Cavallo was laid out in 1836 when the Walhonding Canal The Walhonding Canal was a canal in Coshocton County, Ohio that was used as a feeder canal for the Ohio and Erie Canal. A small canal, at only long, it was wholly contained within Coshocton County, following the Mohican River from Cavallo south ... was extended to that point. References Unincorporated communities in Coshocton County, Ohio Unincorporated communities in Ohio {{CoshoctonCountyOH-geo-stub ...
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Cavallo (island)
Cavallo ( co, Isula di Cavaddu; Bonifacian dialect: ''Isula Cavaddu'') is a small island in the Mediterranean Sea located between Corsica and Sardinia. Cavallo is the southernmost inhabited territory of metropolitan France and part of the commune of Bonifacio, Corsica. Geography Cavallo is the only inhabited island of the Lavezzi archipelago, 2.3 km from the Corsican coast, close to the Strait of Bonifacio. It is about 13 km from Sardinia. The island is French territory, though it belonged to Italy in the past. Cavallo Island is about 120 hectares in area and its highest point is 32 metres above sea level. It has a small port. History Cavallo has a long history, beginning when Ancient Rome sent prisoners there to cut granite for monuments. The island was abandoned during Augustus’ empire, and remained uninhabited until a shepherd settled there with his flock in 1800. The deep sea surrounding the island hid dangerous obstacles for navigators, earning the islan ...
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Cavallo (coin)
{{Unreferenced, date=May 2019, bot=noref (GreenC bot) 220px, Cavallo of Ferdinand I of Naples. The cavallo was a copper coin of southern Italy in the Renaissance. It was minted for the first time by King Ferdinand I of Naples in 1472. It gained its name from the figure of a horse on the reverse. The name later was used for coins of the same values but with different types such as that minted by Charles VIII of France at Naples in 1494. As its value decreased, the cavallo was abolished in 1498 and replaced with the doppio cavallo ("Double Cavallo"), also known as sestino, by Frederick I of Naples. The cavallo was mint again shortly under Philip IV of Spain (the Kingdom of Naples at the time was ruled by Spain) in 1626. Multiples (2, 3, 4, 6 and 9 ''cavalli'') were minted until Ferdinand IV. The last coin of three ''cavalli'' was minted in 1804, being replaced by the tornese The tornesel, tornesol, or was a silver coin of Europe in the Late Middle Ages and the early modern ...
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Victor Cavallo
Victor Cavallo (birth name Vittorio Vitolo, 8 May 1947 in Rome – 21 January 2000 in Rome) was an Italian actor and underground writer. He started his acting career on stage in 1974, in cinema worked for directors such as Bernardo Bertolucci and Francesca Archibugi. He died of Hepatitis C. Selected filmography * ''Tragedy of a Ridiculous Man'' (1981) * ''W la foca'' (1982) * ''Lontano da dove'' (1983) * '' Io con te non ci sto più'' (1983) * ''La piovra'', (1986, TV series, 2 episodes, "Alvaro Marilli") * ''Grandi magazzini'' (1986) * ''Naso di cane'' (1986, TV) * ''The Invisible Ones'' (1988) * ''Burro'' (1989) * ''Towards Evening'' (1990) * ''Piedipiatti'' (1991) * ''The Great Pumpkin'' (1993) * '' Amami'' (1993) * '' OcchioPinocchio'' (1994) * ''Who Killed Pasolini?'' (1995) * ''Porzûs'' (1997) * ''Shooting the Moon'' (1998) * '' The Ballad of the Windshield Washers'' (1998) * ''Excellent Cadavers ''Excellent Cadavers'' is a 1995 non-fiction book by American author A ...
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Rob Cavallo
Robert Siers Cavallo (born March 21, 1963) is an American record producer, musician, and record industry executive. He is among the biggest-selling producers in history, and has produced or had creative involvement in albums that have sold over 130 million units worldwide. Primarily known for his production work with Green Day, he has also worked with Linkin Park, My Chemical Romance, Eric Clapton, Beth Hart, the Goo Goo Dolls, the Dave Matthews Band, Kid Rock, Jawbreaker, Alanis Morissette, Black Sabbath, Phil Collins, Paramore, Sixpence None the Richer, Lil Peep, Shinedown, and Meat Loaf. He is also a multiple Grammy Award winner. Cavallo plays multiple instruments and has professional credits for his bass, keyboard, organ, piano, guitar and percussion work. Early life Cavallo was born in Washington, D.C. and moved to Los Angeles, California with his family at age 10. His interest in music began at age 11 after listening to his father's The Beatles collection. He graduat ...
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Diana Cavallo
Diana Cavallo (1931-2017) was an American novelist, educator, playwright, and performer. Biography Early life and education Cavallo was born in Philadelphia in 1931, the daughter of Genuino and Josephine (Petraca) Cavallo. She grew up in an Italian neighborhood of South Philadelphia, where she attended public schools. Her grandparents, who lived with the family, spoke the Abruzzese dialect; Cavallo learned Italian from them, and later based two characters in her first novel on them. As a teenager, she moved with her family to Upper Darby, Pennsylvania. She attended the University of Pennsylvania and spent time in Florence, Italy, as a Fulbright scholar. She was a member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society. Career After graduation, Cavallo worked for a year at the Philadelphia State Hospital as a psychiatric social worker; this experience provided the background for her first novel, ''A Bridge of Leaves'' (1961). Written in New Hampshire on a MacDowell Colony fellowship, th ...
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Ricardo Cavallo
Ricardo Miguel Cavallo is a retired Argentine naval lieutenant commander. Under the name Miguel Angel Cavallo, he served as an officer of the National Reorganization Process (''El Proceso''), which ruled Argentina from 1976 to 1983. On the basis of his activities in secret G-322 operations, he was later charged with kidnapping, torture, and/or murder, of hundreds of political dissidents. He left the country after retiring from the Navy. After living for decades in Mexico, Cavallo was arrested, extradited to Spain in 2003, and indicted there under the principle of universal jurisdiction, on charges of genocide and terrorism. This was the first time that a person had been extradited from one country to another, for human rights crimes committed in a third one. After changes in Argentina, and renewal of prosecution of his case there, Cavallo was extradited in early 2008 to his homeland, tried and convicted there, in 2011, of numerous crimes, and sentenced to life in prison. Backgrou ...
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Mimmo Cavallo
Cosimo Cavallo (born 1 January 1951), best known as Mimmo Cavallo, is an Italian singer-songwriter and composer. Life and career Born in Lizzano, Apulia, Cavallo spent his childhood in Turin, where his family had moved.- Ernesto Bassignano. "Cavallo, Mimmo". Gino Castaldo (edited by). ''Dizionario della canzone italiana''. Curcio Editore, 1990. At 17 years old he moved back in Apulia, where he started performing as a singer, and shortly later he moved to Rome, where he began his professional career. In 1980, Cavallo released his first record, the concept album ''Siamo meridionali'', which received large critical acclaim. Active as a songwriter for other artists, his collaborations include work Mia Martini, Zucchero Fornaciari, Ornella Vanoni, Gianni Morandi, Loredana Bertè and Fiorella Mannoia. He composed "Ma che storia è questa", the theme song of the RAI television program ''La storia d'Italia a fumetti'' by Enzo Biagi Enzo Biagi (; 9 August 1920 – 6 November 2007 ...
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