/ Bari / Places to Visit / Military Memorial of the Fallen Overseas
The Sacrario Militare dei Caduti d'Oltremare or Military Memorial of the Fallen Overseas commemorates the 75,000 Italian soldiers who died abroad in 1940-'45 during World War II.
The Sacrario Militare dei Caduti d'Oltremare or Military Memorial of the Fallen Overseas commemorates the 75,000 Italian soldiers who died abroad in 1940-'45 during World War II. The complex houses the remains of soldiers, along with a museum of war relics, displaying numerous military documents, photographs, uniforms, weapons and personal effects. The surrounding gardens of the Park of Remembrance have old combat vehicles, artillery pieces, and tombstones and statues dedicated to the fallen soldiers.
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Via G. Gentile, 31, 70126 Bari, Italy
Lungomare e Murat is a 15 kilometre long waterfront stretch overlooking the Adriatic Sea, with great views of the harbor and ships out at sea
The Palazzo dell'Acquedotto Pugliese or Palace of the Apulian Aqueduct was designed by Cesare Brunetti, Michele Salvati and Duilio Cambellotti in Pugliese Romanesque style to reflect the theme of hydraulic engineering
Originally built in 1903 with interiors painted by Raffaele Armenise, the Teatro Petruzzelli in Bari is the fourth largest theatre in Italy
The stunning Mincuzzi Palace stands in the heart of Murat in Bari, a commercial Art Nouveau building inspired by the Galeries Lafayette of Paris
Across the road from the old port of Bari, overlooking the Augusto Imperatore waterfront is the busy square of Piazza Ferrarese
Piazza Mercantile is the historical commercial and administrative heart of Bari, laid out in the 14thcentury next to the port
Overshadowed by the adjacent Basilica of Saint Nicholas, the Bari Cathedral is still important as the seat of the Archbishop of Bari-Bitonto
Citta Vecchia or Old Town Bari is the historical heart of the city, occupying the peninsula between the old port and new port
The Pontifical Basilica of Saint Nicholas in Bari is an important pilgrimage site for East European Roman Catholics and Orthodox Christians
The Castello Normanno-Svevo was built in the 13thcentury by Roman Emperor Frederick II of Hohenstaufen over a former Norman castle, which was built over Roman ruins