Ponale Road 3 art print available! Hang this Lake of Garda collectors' print in your school, home or office.
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Ponale Road 3 - Lake of Garda,Italy art print
The watermark on this image does not appear on the print.
The image above is partially-restored for catalog display.
Each order is individually fully-restored. Print ID: 775

The collection
Exploitz.com is pleased to offer this gallery-style travel print of Italy. The original pictures were taken in the early 20th-century as a collection of travel sights and landmarks for postcards. The photos were made in black and white and then colored with lithographic stones utilizing a special Swiss process still shrouded in secrecy.

"Ponale Road 3" will be individually inspected and put through a rigorous digital restoration process developed exclusively by Exploitz.com for these fine art reproductions. Digital Restoration may include color correction/enhancement, balancing, alignment, dust and scratch removal, fixing torn and faded areas and streaks.

Exploitz.com is working hard to bring you new Italy and Lake of Garda pictures, photos and posters and other images from around the world.

Italy facts:
Italy is largely homogeneous linguistically and religiously but is diverse culturally, economically, and politically. Italy has the fifth-highest population density in Europe--about 200 persons per square kilometer (490 per sq. mi.). Minority groups are small, the largest being the German-speaking people of Bolzano Province and the Slovenes around Trieste. Other groups comprise small communities of Albanian, Greek, Ladino, and French origin. Immigration has increased in recent years, however, while the Italian population is declining overall due to low birth rates. Although Roman Catholicism is the majority religion--85% of native-born citizens are nominally Catholic--all religious faiths are provided equal freedom before the law by the constitution.

Greeks settled in the southern tip of the Italian Peninsula in the eighth and seventh centuries B.C.; Etruscans, Romans, and others inhabited the central and northern mainland. The peninsula subsequently was unified under the Roman Republic. The neighboring islands also came under Roman control by the third century B.C.; by the first century A.D., the Roman Empire effectively dominated the Mediterranean world. After the collapse of the Roman Empire in the West in the fifth century A.D., the peninsula and islands were subjected to a series of invasions, and political unity was lost. Italy became an oft-changing succession of small states, principalities, and kingdoms, which fought among themselves and were subject to ambitions of foreign powers. Popes of Rome ruled central Italy; rivalries between the popes and the Holy Roman Emperors, who claimed Italy as their domain, often made the peninsula a battleground.

The commercial prosperity of northern and central Italian cities, beginning in the 11th century, and the influence of the Renaissance mitigated somewhat the effects of these medieval political rivalries. Although Italy declined after the 16th century, the Renaissance had strengthened the idea of a single Italian nationality. By the early 19th century, a nationalist movement developed and led to the reunification of Italy--except for Rome--in the 1860s. In 1861, Victor Emmanuel II of the House of Savoy was proclaimed King of Italy. Rome was incorporated in 1870. From 1870 until 1922, Italy was a constitutional monarchy with a parliament elected under limited suffrage.

20th-Century History
During World War I, Italy renounced its standing alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary and, in 1915, entered the war on the side of the Allies. Under the postwar settlement, Italy received some former Austrian territory along the northeast frontier. In 1922, Benito Mussolini came to power and, over the next few years, eliminated political parties, curtailed personal liberties, and installed a fascist dictatorship termed the Corporate State. The king, with little or no effective power, remained titular head of state.

Italy allied with Germany and declared war on the United Kingdom and France in 1940. In 1941, Italy--with the other Axis powers, Germany, and Japan--declared war on the United States and the Soviet Union. Following the Allied invasion of Sicily in 1943, the King dismissed Mussolini and appointed Marshal Pietro Badoglio as Premier. The Badoglio government declared war on Germany, which quickly occupied most of the country and freed Mussolini, who led a brief-lived regime in the north. An anti-fascist popular resistance movement grew during the last 2 years of the war, harassing German forces before they were driven out in April 1945. A 1946 plebiscite ended the monarchy, and a constituent assembly was elected to draw up plans for the republic.

Under the 1947 peace treaty, minor adjustments were made in Italy's frontier with France, the eastern border area was transferred to Yugoslavia, and the area around the city of Trieste was designated a free territory. In 1954, the free territory, which had remained under the administration of U.S.-U.K. forces (Zone A, including the city of Trieste) and Yugoslav forces (Zone B), was divided between Italy and Yugoslavia, principally along the zonal boundary. This arrangement was made permanent by the Italian-Yugoslav Treaty of Osimo, ratified in 1977 (currently being discussed by Italy, Slovenia, and Croatia). Under the 1947 peace treaty, Italy also relinquished its overseas territories and certain Mediterranean islands.

The Roman Catholic Church's status in Italy has been determined, since its temporal powers ended in 1870, by a series of accords with the Italian Government. Under the Lateran Pacts of 1929, which were confirmed by the present constitution, the state of Vatican City is recognized by Italy as an independent, sovereign entity. While preserving that recognition, in 1984, Italy and the Vatican updated several provisions of the 1929 accords. Included was the end of Roman Catholicism as Italy's formal state religion.

Italy's Cultural Contributions
Europe's Renaissance period began in Italy during the 14th and 15th centuries. Literary achievements--such as the poetry of Petrarch, Tasso, and Ariosto and the prose of Boccaccio, Machiavelli, and Castiglione--exerted a tremendous and lasting influence on the subsequent development of Western civilization, as did the painting, sculpture, and architecture contributed by giants such as da Vinci, Raphael, Botticelli, Fra Angelico, and Michelangelo.

The musical influence of Italian composers Monteverdi, Palestrina, and Vivaldi proved epochal; in the 19th century, Italian romantic opera flourished under composers Gioacchino Rossini, Giuseppe Verdi, and Giacomo Puccini. Contemporary Italian artists, writers, filmmakers, architects, composers, and designers contribute significantly to Western culture.

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Ponale Road 3, Lake of Garda, Italy

NOTE:
Exploitz.com art prints are currently unavailable for purchase while we make system changes.


 Price: $44.99  $59.99
 (Save!)
NOTE:
Exploitz.com art prints are currently unavailable for purchase while we make system changes.


 Price: $23.99  $29.99
 (Save!)
Collector Print
- 8 1/2 x 11 in. image size (est.)
- Digital Restoration
- Archival quality
- Professional paper
- White border for matte/framing
Basic Print
- 8 1/2 x 11 in. (est.)
- Digital Restoration
- Canon paper
About the Collector Print:
The digitally restored image is printed with archival inks on high quality professional paper. We use papers of top archival rating to minimize deterioration for decades to come. They also offer improved texture and better moisture resistance than conventional papers.

About the Basic Print:
The basic print looks like the Collector print and includes the same digital restoration techniques. However, it does not utilize archival printing techniques.

Shipping:
Your order will be processed within 3-5 business days from when we receive it. Then it will be sent to your address using either U.S. Priority Mail or another expedited form of delivery.

Other Notes:
This is a fine art reproduction of an antique print. The antique print was scanned, digitally restored and reprinted. There is a watermark on the display photo on this page which will not appear on the print. Many of the original photos have a collection photo number in the lower left corner of the photo which is not removed unless requested. Also, the display photo for Ponale Road 3 on this page was partially restored for display but will be individually prepared for your order, so there could be minor differences in tone/cropping. Our digital restoration techniques represent a remarkable improvement on the digitized antique scan but there will likely still be some vintage signs of age.

Ponale Road 3 is in stock and available for purchase. If this isn't the print for you keep in mind we offer thousands of posters, prints and pictures so keep browsing!

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