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| | Giuseppe Garibaldi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Nonetheless, Garibaldi believed he had the secret support of his government. |  | | Many of the volunteers were taken prisoner, including Garibaldi, who had been wounded. |  | | Though by then Garibaldi's volunteers numbered some 25,000, they could not oppose the Sicilians. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giuseppe_Garibaldi
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| | Garibaldi - MSN Encarta |
 | | Garibaldi was condemned to death, but he escaped to South America, where he lived for 12 years. |  | | In 1834 Garibaldi was ordered to seize a warship, but the plot was discovered by police. |  | | Giuseppe Garibaldi (1807-1882), Italian nationalist revolutionary and leader in the struggle for Italian unification and independence. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/RefArticle.aspx?refid=761570083
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| | Garibaldi - freemason |
 | | Garibaldi then attended the masonic lodges of New York in 1850 and London in 1853-54, where he met several supporters of democratic internationalism, whose minds were open to making socialist thoughts their own and give Freemasonry a strong anti-papal stand. |  | | When Garibaldi died, Freemasonry was, out of the political and social Italian forces, the one, that more than any other, took it upon itself to keep his memory alive and nourish the myth. |  | | Actually, Garibaldi, as has already been said, did not believe that national political events should be separate from Freemasonry, at least while Rome remained under the dominion of the Popes. |
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http://freemasonry.bcy.ca/biography/garibaldi_g/garibaldi.html
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| | HarpWeek: Cartoon of the Day |
 | | Garibaldi's invasion of Sicily sparked a popular revolution against the oppressive government of the island, whose people looked upon him as a liberator. |  | | Two years later, Garibaldi unsuccessfully petitioned for the release of political prisoners held by the Bourbon king of Naples. |  | | Garibaldi fought bravely but in vain against French troops, who restored the Pope's authority over the Papal States. |
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http://www.harpweek.com/09Cartoon/RelatedCartoon.asp?Month=July&Date=7
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| | Giuseppe Garibaldi |
 | | Once established at Palermo, Garibaldi organized an army to liberate Naples and march upon Rome, a plan opposed by the emissaries of Cavour, who desired the immediate annexation of Sicily to the Italian kingdom. |  | | Their presence put an end to the plan for the invasion of the papal states, and Garibaldi unwillingly issued a decree for the plebiscite which was to sanction the incorporation of the Two Sicilies in the Italian realm. |  | | Cavour, however, obliged the expedition to sail for Palermo. |
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http://www.nndb.com/people/150/000089880
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| | Untitled Document |
 | | The dress is that of the heroic volunteers who landed at Marsala, and have, in the incredibly short space of three months, liberated the Two Sicilies from the terrible tyranny of the Bourbon King of Naples. |  | | Some reports state that before the marriage was consummated such damning evidence was placed in Garibaldi's hands that he immediately quitted her. |  | | It would be tedious to describe at length each of the many operations in which he was engaged, and we will simply say that he was the ablest chief Uruguay ever possessed, and the most formidable foe Rosas ever encountered. |
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http://members.aol.com/ralbrizio/1860/11_17_60-722.html
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| | The Latin Americanist |
 | | Garibaldi's ship is not just a ship, but "the Itaparica of seven guns." And in the wake of a defeat at sea, we see the heroes in their time of trial. |  | | He signaled a second time, then a dead silence came over the square." Passages such as these elevate history to myth for a contemporary world bereft of heroes; yet, they are tempered by the humanizing details of people's history. |  | | Illiterate, she left a few dictated notes and very little other written testimony to her experience. |
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http://www.cas.ucf.edu/politicalscience/secolas/TLA/issues/ws2002/review_valerio.php
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| | RobRaynhamPage |
 | | Garibaldi was an Italian general and had been a prime mover in the unification of Italy in 1861 - before then it had been for centuries a series of Nation States (Lombardy, Tuscany, Piedmont etc). |  | | Unification brought King Emmanuel II to the throne of a united Italy and Garibaldi achieved fame because of his role. |  | | The previous year there had been a triumphant visit to the UK by Giuseppe Garibaldi which had captured the public imagination. |
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http://u-reds.com/Fans/RobRaynhamPage.asp
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| | Giuseppe Garibaldi |
 | | In Gough Whitlam's recent My Italian Notebook, he quotes from the autobiography of Guiseppe Garibaldi, the Italian revolutionary who established the modern Italian state. |  | | Giuseppe Garibaldi finds retreat at Three Hummock island |  | | Giuseppe Garibalide, quoted in Gough Whitlam My Italian Notebook, pp. |
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http://www.kitezh.com/haven/garibaldi.htm
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| | Yes... or no? MetaFilter |
 | | The Papacy would clearly have denounced the North (indeed, the pope was the only world leader to recognize the Confederacy). |  | | This thread has been archived and is closed to new comments |  | | Garibaldi said he would if Lincoln officially declared that the aim of the war was to end slavery. |
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http://www.metafilter.com/mefi/27612
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| | Anna Maria Ribiero Da Silva, A |
 | | In 1834, Giuseppe Garibaldi, who had imbibed the political theory of Giuseppe Mazzini and of the French Socialist theorist, Saint-Simon, participated in an unsuccessful attempt at revolution in Piedmont, in whose navy he then served. |  | | Garibaldi was grief stricken, but he had to continue his retreat to save the remnant of his force. |  | | Garibaldi rowed ashore and said one sentence to Anna: "Angela, tu sarai inia" -- "Angel, you will be for me." She got into his rowboat and never turned back, adopting his life of revolution and adventure as well as his name. |
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http://www.mmdtkw.org/VAnita.html
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| | Holt, Rinehart and Winston |
 | | Discuss how personal biases can shape history and what historical figures might not be considered heroes if the outcome of their struggle had ended differently (i.e., if Italy had not been unified, and had remained kingdoms and states). |  | | Giuseppe Garibaldi was a born leader and he was passionate about creating a unified Italy. |  | | Who were Garibaldi's mentors in his rise as a key figure in Italian history? |
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http://go.hrw.com/hrw.nd/arbiter/pRedirect?project=hrwonline&siteId=383&pageId=1797
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| | Garibaldi, Giuseppe on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Giuseppe Mazzini's "geopolitics of liberty" and Italian foreign policy toward "Slavic Europe". |  | | Garibaldi was elected to the Italian parliament in 1874, but his political career was undistinguished. |  | | After meeting the king at Teano, near Naples, he relinquished his conquests to Sardinia and retired to Caprera. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/section/garibald_europeancampaigns.asp
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| | July |
 | | Garibaldi in turn described Mazzini as “a man of theory, not of practice, who is always speaking of the people though he does not know who the people are.” (Both descriptions from Denis Mack Smith, Garibaldi: A Great Life in Brief, 1956, pp. |  | | ) Garibaldi professed to favor republican government, although he became convinced that given the low level of education and the political apathy of the Italian people, it was justifiable for a an all-powerful leader to force them to become free. |  | | Garibaldi and Mazzini (whose statue stands in Central Park) are celebrated as the men responsible in the 1850s-1870s for unifying Italy from eight separate states ruled by monarchs and the pope into the state that we know today. |
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http://www.forgottendelights.com/salute/2004JulySalute.htm
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| | The Anthony P. Campanella Collection of Giuseppe Garibaldi - Island 1 |
 | | This sword is believed to have been presented to Garibaldi by the people of Montevideo on the occasion of his departure for Italy in June, 1848. |  | | In 1834 Garibaldi, who had absorbed political influences from Giuseppe Mazzini and from the French Socialist theorist Saint-Simon, participated in an unsuccessful attempt at revolution in Piedmont, in whose navy he then served. |  | | She was to be Garibaldi's companion (the two were bigamously married in 1842) until her death in 1849 during their flight from Austrian and Papal troops, subsequent to the collapse of the Roman republic. |
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http://www.sc.edu/library/spcoll/hist/garib/garib1.html
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| | Giuseppe Garibaldi |
 | | He viewed Freemasonry as a political organization and was frustrated by his inability to use it as such. |  | | Born in Nice, Garibaldi was a sea captain for the Piedmont navy, admiral of the Uruguay navy and commander of Italian Legion in Uriguay, As a Piedmontese general he lead volunteers against the Austrians forces in Italy. |  | | Garibaldi never joined a lodge in Italy and took no direct interest in the Craft. |
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http://freemasonry.bcy.ca/biography/garibaldi_g/garibaldi_g.html
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| | Famous Italians - Giuseppe Garibaldi |
 | | After having gathered volunteers in Marsala and delivered speeches (in this town the Heroe pronounced the famous sentence: "Rome or Death") he left again towards Salemi where he designated himself Dictator, in the king Vittorio Emanuele's name. |  | | Although Garibaldi had an exiguous number of volunteers at his disposal in comparison with the Bourbon forces, his tactical intelligence and his courage made him to conquer all Sicily, to cross the Straits of Messina and to go on towards Naples. |  | | Garibaldi's life continued with politics and the work of reunification of italy. |
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http://www.italian-american.com/garib-it.htm
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| | Meucci |
 | | Out with the foreigners!), which Garibaldi had brought from South America and left with his friend Meucci when he left America for Italy, in January 1854. |  | | In 1861, victim of dishonest speculators, he lost his house and all his money. |  | | When Garibaldi was also exiled from Italy, he reached New York in 1850, two months after Meucci, who hosted him, together with other Italian exiles, to whom he gave work in his candle factory in Clifton. |
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http://chem.ch.huji.ac.il/~eugeniik/history/meucci.html
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| | Life and Times of Giuseppe Garibaldi |
 | | Pope Pius IX was feeling more and more secure with the French garrison securing the City and Garibaldi a prisoner on the island of Caprera. |  | | Garibaldi was offered a ticker tape parade up the "canyon of heroes" in New York City. |  | | Garibaldi lives as a sailor in the Mediterranean and Black Sea. |
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http://www.reformation.org/garibaldi.html
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| | Portrait of Giuseppe Garibaldi (Getty Museum) |
 | | He believed in racial equality and the abolition of capital punishment, and led numerous revolutionary campaigns against the repressive French monarchy in the kingdom that included Naples and Sicily. |  | | This portrait was made in the midst of his 1860 conquest of Sicily, a decisive event that furthered Garibaldi's efforts to unify Italy under the leadership of King Victor Emmanuel. |  | | An engraving made after Le Gray's contemplative portrait helped publicize Garibaldi's efforts. |
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http://www.getty.edu/art/gettyguide/artObjectDetails?artobj=68544
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| | Garibaldi, Giuseppe (1807-1882) |
 | | The election of Giovanni Mastai-Ferretti as Pope Pius IX in 1846 led many to believe he was the liberal pope prophesied by Gioberti, who would provide the leadership for the unification of Italy. |  | | The formation of his force of volunteers, his mastery of the techniques of guerilla warfare, his opposition to Brazilian and Argentinean imperialism, and his victories in the battles of Cerro and Sant'Antonio in 1846 not only assured the freedom of Uruguay but made him and his followers heroes in Italy and Europe. |  | | Garibaldi, Giuseppe (1807-1882) The foremost military figure and popular hero of the age of Italian unification known as the Risorgimento with Cavour and Mazzini he is deemed one of the makers of Modern Italy. |
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http://www.ohiou.edu/~Chastain/dh/gari.htm
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| | Garibaldi |
 | | Like Stephens, he endured several periods of political exile from Italy (even after heroic contributions toward a measure of unity for Italy) and relied heavily, and daringly, on popular sympathies. |  | | Garibaldi Giuseppe Garibaldi (1807-1882), a revolutionary leader (notably in Uruguay and Italy) famous for his quasi-successful efforts to establish a unified, independent Italy. |  | | Unlike Stephens, who was regarded as a good organizer but not a man of action, Garibaldi was an excellent and courageous military leader. |
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http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/rickard/Hypermedia/HTML/Garibaldi.html
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| | Sicilian Culture - The People: Giuseppe Garibaldi, Italian Patriot |
 | | After a further campaign against the Austrians in 1859 and with the support of Cavour and his Redshirts, Garibaldi embarked on his now legendary ''Expedition of a Thousand". |  | | Sicilian Culture - The People: Giuseppe Garibaldi, Italian Patriot |  | | In 1848-49 he fought against the Austrians and from 1853 worked for the unification of Italy under Vittorio Emanuel II, King of Sardinia. |
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http://www.sicilianculture.com/people/garibaldi.htm
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| | Comando Supremo: Giuseppe Garibaldi Class Cruiser |
 | | These ships had excellent history of service, which also saw an Atlantic cruise in 1944. |  | | This website is a manifestation of work supported by amateur historians, history buffs and those interested in Italian World War Two history. |  | | The good quality of these ships is evident by its permanence in service, “Garibaldi” was decommissioned in 1976. |
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http://www.comandosupremo.com/Garibaldi.html
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| | Pietro Garibaldi at IDEAS |
 | | Julian Berengaut & Pietro Garibaldi & Dennis Jones & Françoise Le Gall & L. Effie Psalida & Jerald, 1998. |  | | This is information that was supplied by Pietro Garibaldi in registering through RePEc. |  | | Dipartimento di Scienze Economiche e Finanziarie "Giuseppe Prato" (Department of Economics and Finance) |
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http://ideas.repec.org/e/pga26.html
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| | The Anthony P. Campanella Collection of Giuseppe Garibaldi |
 | | Giuseppe Garibaldi devoted his life to the cause of Italian unity. |  | | There can be no doubt that the March, whose progress was eagerly followed in a United States ideologically opposed to European dynastic "tyranny," was viewed in this country as a powerful vindication of the right of the individual to political self-determination. |  | | Campanella is the author and editor of numerous publications relating to Garibaldi. |
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http://www.sc.edu/library/spcoll/hist/garib/garib.html
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| | Giuseppe Garibaldi + Nathaniel Hawthorne |
 | | ** Garibaldi is said to have made the following statement about his religious beliefs: |  | | Garibaldi made his profession of disbelief ten years later, when victory was established and there would be no repercussions from such frankness. |  | | After Pope Pius IX refused his services Pius was as strong an opponent of Italian unity as Garibaldi was an exponent he took on the Austrians and French. |
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http://www.ronaldbrucemeyer.com/rants/0704almanac.htm
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| | Giuseppe Garibaldi Speech - Encouraging His Soldiers |
 | | Giuseppe Garibaldi (1807-1882) was an Italian patriot and military leader who helped free the Italians from foreign rule and unify the country. |  | | A year later, as a result of his daring military leadership and the political leadership of fellow patriots, Giuseppe Mazzini and Camillo Cavour, the independent kingdom of Italy was finally proclaimed. |  | | The speech below is an eloquent appeal he made to his soldiers in 1860. |
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http://www.historyplace.com/speeches/garibaldi.htm
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| | Italian aircraft carrier Giuseppe Garibaldi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | She is based in Taranto and is the flagship of the fleet; she is named after the Italian general Giuseppe Garibaldi. |  | | This page was last modified 23:39, 23 April 2006. |  | | Giuseppe Garibaldi (C 551) is the first aircraft carrier in the history of the Marina Militare. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_aircraft_carrier_Giuseppe_Garibaldi
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| | Garibaldi-Meucci Mesuem |
 | | Meucci offered him the hospitality of his home, where Garibaldi worked with Meucci in his candle factory and enjoyed hunting, fishing and sailing with his friend until he was able to resume his trade as a sea captain. |  | | Meucci also extended refuge and sanctuary to the famous Giuseppe Garibaldi, who had been forced to flee his homeland while fighting for the unification of Italy. |  | | Garibaldi arrived in New York City, in poor health and grieving the loss of his young wife, Anita, who had died in the terrible retreat from Rome. |
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http://www.nysosia.org/museum.html
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| | Giuseppe Garibaldi |
 | | Giuseppe Garibaldi: Bibliography - Bibliography See his autobiography (tr. |  | | Giuseppe Garibaldi: European Campaigns - European Campaigns When revolution swept over Europe in 1848, Garibaldi found a new theater of... |  | | 1969); G. Giuseppe Garibaldi: In South America - In South America Garibaldi was born at Nice and as a youth entered the Sardinian navy. |
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http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/people/A0820223.html
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| | Guissepe Mazzini |
 | | On April 30, 1848, Carlo Cattaneo, Giuseppe Ferrari, and other republican leaders of the Milanese revolt proposed to overturn their pro-Piedmontese provisional government and request French assistance against Austria. |  | | GIUSEPPE MAZZINI, (1805-1872) Italian nationalist and patriot, who, together with Giuseppe Garibaldi, Camillo Benso di Cavour, and Victor Emmanuel II, is considered one of the "patron saints" of the Italian |  | | Mazzini opposed them, urging support for the efforts of the Italian monarch and army, rather than appealing to foreign troops. |
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http://www.ohiou.edu/~Chastain/ip/mazzini.htm
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| | Naval Technology - Garibaldi - Aircraft Carrier |
 | | Garibaldi's propulsion system is a combined gas turbine and gas turbine (COGAG) arrangement. |  | | Home > Industry Projects > Aircraft Carriers and Amphibious Ships > Garibaldi |  | | MM Garibaldi is classed as a CVS - Aircraft Carrier ASW. |
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http://www.naval-technology.com/projects/garibaldi
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| | Italy |
 | | She also has two 250 persons launches for amphibious assaults. |  | | In November 2001 MM "Giuseppe Garibaldi" was sent to the Arabian Sea as part of the Itallian Navy forces for operation Enduring Freedom. |  | | Beside ASW she can operate as flag ship. |
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http://members.aol.com/mircogr/italy.html
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| | U.S. Senate: Art & History Home > Sculptures > Giuseppe Garibaldi |
 | | After Giuseppe Garibaldi’s death in 1882, a group of Washington, D.C., residents of Italian descent formed the Society for a Monument to Garibaldi. |  | | He asked on behalf of the society that it be accepted “as a link in the chain of sympathy that all free men feel for the champions of liberty and popular government.” The work also was presented as an expression of Italian achievement in sculpture. |  | | In a letter to the president of the Senate dated December 14, 1887, Dr. Tullio de Suzzara-Verdi offered the Garibaldi bust, executed in Italian marble, to the United States. |
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http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/art/artifact/Sculpture_21_00007.htm
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| | Alibris: Giuseppe Garibaldi |
 | | In this engrossing first-person narrative, Garibaldi charts his extraordinary adventures, from his early seafaring exploits and his flight to South America, to his... |  | | by Giuseppe Garibaldi, Stephen Parkin (Translator), Tim Parks (Foreword by) |  | | The life of Giuseppe Garibaldi--distinguished by superhuman courage, personal tragedy, and tireless struggle in the name of freedom--has remained a source of fascination for generations. |
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http://www.alibris.com/search/books/author/Giuseppe_Garibaldi
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| | Giuseppe Garibaldi |
 | | Garibaldi is an Italian aircraft carrier commissioned in 1985. |  | | The Garibaldi was once the world's smallest aircraft carrier. |  | | Although is the light aircraft carrier, but its embarkation airplane ability and instead dives, the counter- ship, the anti-aircraft operational capacity is all stronger. |
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http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/europe/garibaldi.htm
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| | World Aircraft Carriers List: Italy |
 | | Operational: Served mostly as a training ship post-1985, when her fleet flagship role was taken over by Garibaldi. |  | | In addition to the AAW & ASW roles, this ship served as fleet flagship until replaced by Garibaldi. |  | | Modifications: Modernized 1981-84 with 4 Otomat SSM and 3 twin 40 mm AA added, SM-1ER replaced Terrier. |
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http://www.hazegray.org/navhist/carriers/italy.htm
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| | Find in a Library: Autobiography of Giuseppe Garibaldi. |
 | | Find in a Library: Autobiography of Giuseppe Garibaldi. |  | | To find this item in a library, enter a postal code, state, province, or country in the field above. |  | | WorldCat is provided by OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. on behalf of its member libraries. |
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http://www.worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/ow/fb9775847fcb5483.html
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