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See also: town, episcopal see, and the seat of a sub-prefecture of the province of See also: Perugia, See also: Italy, situated among the Apennines, but only 426 ft. above See also: sea-level, in the valley of the Nera (anc
.
Nar), from which the town took its distinguishing epithet, 5 M. below its junction with the Velino, and 70 M
.
N. by E. of See also: Rome by See also: rail
.
Pop
.
(1906) 20,230 (town), 33,256 (commune)
.
It has important iron and See also: steel See also: works and iron foundries, at which See also: armour-plates, guns and projectiles are made for the See also: Italian See also: navy, also steel castings, machinery and rails, a royal arms factory, and See also: lignite See also: mining
.
See also: Terni lies on the See also: main railway See also: line from Rome to See also: Foligno and See also: Ancona, and is the junction for See also: Rieti and See also: Sulmona
.
Its most interesting buildings are the See also: cathedral (17th century, with remains of the earlier 13th century See also: facade), the See also: church of S
.
See also: Francesco (partly dating from the 13th century, with some frescoes of the 14th), and other old churches
.
Its antiquities include traces of the city walls of rectangular blocks of travertine, remains of an amphitheatre of the See also: time of Tiberius, a See also: temple, theatre and See also: baths (?), and numerous inscriptions
.
Remains have also been found of a pre-See also: Roman See also: necropolis
.
The excavations and the See also: objects found are described by A
.
Pasqui and L . Lanni in Notizie degli scavi, 1907, 595 seq . Five See also: miles to the See also: east are the falls of the Velino (Caseate delle Marmore)
.
Alike in See also: volume and in beauty these take a very high place among See also: European waterfalls; the cataract has a See also: total descent of about 65o ft., in three leaps of 65, 330 and 190 ft. respectively
.
They owe their origin to M'
.
Curius See also: Dentatus, who in 272 B.C. first opened an artificial channel by which the greater See also: part of the Lacus Velinus in the valley below Reate was drained
.
They supply the See also: motive power for the factories of the town
.
Terni is the See also: ancient Interamna (inter amnes, " between the See also: rivers, " i.e. the Nar and one of its branches), originally belonging to See also: Umbria, and founded, according to a See also: local tradition preserved in an inscription, in the See also: year 672 B.C
.
It is first mentioned in See also: history as being, along with Spoletium, See also: Praeneste and Florentia, portioned out among his soldiers by Sulla
.
Its inhabitants had frequent litigations and disputes with their neighbours at Reate in connexion with the regulation of the Velinus, the See also: waters of which are so strongly impregnated with carbonate of lime that by their deposits they tend to See also: block up their own channel
.
The first interference with its natural course was that of M'
.
Curius Dentatus already referred to
.
In 54 B.C. the See also: people of Reate appealed to See also: Cicero to plead their cause in an arbitration which had been appointed by the Roman senate to See also: settle disputes about the See also: river, and in connexion with this he made a See also: personal inspection of Lake Velinus and its outlets
.
In the time of Tiberius there was a project for regulating the river and its outlets from the lake, against which the citizens of Interamna and Reate energetically and successfully protested (Tac
.
See also: Ann. i
.
79)
.
Similar questions arose as the river formed fresh deposits during the See also: middle ages and during the 15th and 16th centuries
.
A branch of the Via See also: Flaminia passed from Narnia to Forum Flaminii, and is given instead of the See also: direct line in the Antonine and Jerusalem itineraries
.
A road led from here to the Via See also: Salaria at Reate
.
Interamna is also mentioned in Cicero's time as being the place where See also: Clodius wished to prove that he was on the See also: night when he was caught in Caesar's See also: house at the celebration of the See also: rites of the See also: Bona Dea
.
The Emperor Tacitus and his See also: brother Florianus were probably natives of Interamna, which also has been claimed as the birthplace of Tacitus the historian, but with less reason
.
During most of the middle ages and up till 186o Terni was subject to the popes
.
It was the scene of the defeat of the Neapolitans by the French on the 27th of See also: November 1i98
.
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