Nuoro
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Comune di Nuoro
Coat of arms of Comune di Nuoro
Municipal coat of arms

Location of {{{name}}} in Italy
Country Flag of Italy Italy
Region Sardinia
Province Nuoro (NU)
Elevation 554 m (1,818 ft)
Area 192.27 km² (74.2 sq mi)
Population (as of December 31, 2004)
 - Total 36,672
 - Density 191/km² (495/sq mi)
Time zone CET, UTC+1
Coordinates 40°19′N 09°20′E / 40.317, 9.333
Gentilic Nuoresi
Dialing code 0784
Postal code 08100
Frazioni Lollove
Patron Santa Maria della Neve
 - Day August 5
Website: www.comune.nuoro.it
View of Piazza Satta designed by Nivola


Nuoro (Nùgoro, which probably means "home"1, in the ancient Nuoro's dialect), is a town and province in central Sardinia, Italy, located at the slopes of Mount Ortobene. Nuoro is the administrative center of one Europe's less-densely populated areas .

Overlying the central mountains in a panoramic position, Nuoro is one typical Sardinian town.[1]

It is the hometown of Grazia Deledda, who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1926. The province has been the home of scientists in many disciplinescitation needed and artists such as the sculptor Francesco Ciusa Romagna.

Another prominent author from Nuoro Salvatore Satta(Nuoro 1902, Rome 1975), noted for his publications on jurisprudence and civil proceedings as well as his posthumous romance Il Giorno del Giudizio ("The Day of Judgment") (translated in english by Patrick Creagh) edited in 1977 and translated in more than 90 languages. The Salvatore Satta's Nuoro even thought it was a very small town, it was divided in three parts. The peasant part is named "Sèuna", "Santu Predu" ("Saint Peter") is the shepherd settlement and the Via Majore (Main street) the burgeous side of the town.


The area of the Province of Nuoro is known for its concentration of centenarians and supercentenarians, including Antonio Todde, the world's oldest living man from March 5, 2001 to January 3, 2002.



A Street of Nuoro

Early Settlements

The eldest settlements, nearby the actual city, are located near the Tanca Manna's Nuraghe with about 800 huts. The ruins, dated among the 20th century BC, belong to the Neolithic Age. This is one of the eldest settlement in Sardinia.

List of Nuoro-related people

References

  1. ^ "Pitzinnu de Nugoro eris" ("The child of Nuoro yesterday") edited by Tina Falchi Marras and the students of the second grade of the middle school N. 3 of Nuoro, printed on March 27th 1980 by Tipolito Arti Grafiche AR.P.E.F. of Armando Paola, Nuoro. pag. 179: "NUGORO da una rad. nugor -- fuoco dimora" ("NUGORO from a root nugor -- home fireplace")



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