Plaintive bleat about gastronomy

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I wonder if we could get more information about Tuscan food

I came to this page looking for information on tuscan food and am dissappointed.

I'd suggest you drop this request at the appropriate (though still woefully inadequate) entry: Cuisine of Tuscany. 216.52.69.217 12:49, 5 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Yes i agree with that and also some info on Tuscan people would be nice

General inadequacy of the article: work needed!

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Stripped of its meaningless lists, this is a very inferior article for a major region of Italy.

  • The text smells of Italian, I cleaned it up a bit.
  • It's also quite inadequate: I run my own website, so am not going to spend the hours required to churn out good text, but I hope that my little surgery will spur others to provide detailed and adequate text.
  • I did delete stuff that was not particular to Tuscany (the bit about the agriturismi for example), and did a bit of NPOV, and fixed nonsense (for example: dozens of famous museums; can you name three of them? in fact, there are one or two famous museums, the rest are not "famous".)
  • The lists are covered by the category system, and a simple link to them is sufficient; this has the further benefit of eliminating inactive links. The people list was also full of errors: Bernini for example was born in Naples, and Alberti in Genoa.
  • The "geographical data" are already in the table, and the population figures in the text are older and thus conflict with it.
  • The thumbnail photo was inane, and looks more like a computer simulation than anywhere in Tuscany.
  • I marked the article a stub. Bill 14:29, 6 September 2005 (UTC)Reply
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21 Sep: I deleted the PhotoGlobe link; "georeferenced photos of Tuscany" sounds impressive, but means only that the photos are each accompanied by a small map, probably a copyright violation, and a larger location map (the same for each, localing Tuscany on a large-scale map of part of Europe). The photos are captioned, if not really very informatively; but — there are only 36 of them, and they are by no means a representative selection of Tuscany, being geared toward the same tired tourist haunts: Pisa, Florence, Siena, Chiantishire, and S. Gimignano; of the region's 10 provinces, that's only a few famous places in 3 of them. Bill 21:24, 21 September 2005 (UTC)Reply

Removal of PhotoGlobe Photos

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Just a few remarks on the comment of user Bill, who removed the external reference to PhotoGlobe:

I don't see your arguments for deleting this reference. Of course, these photos are only a few ones - but they are georeferenced, that means that each photo comes with exact GPS-based coordinates of the position where it has been taken. Thus a potential visitor can enter the coordinates into his/her GPS, finding those places easily. Furthermore, PhotoGlobe offers the locations of all photos as a plugin for NASA World Wind, which makes it real fun exploring our world (try it, you will love it: http://www.photoglobe.info/worldwind.html)

Just another comment on your insinuation that the map is probably a copyright violation: The map is free of copyrights (a map of the US army dated from 1942, which has been put into public domain).

Another point is, that the PhotoGlobe project is a non-profit educational project (however, the project is just at its beginning) offering lots of information (not only photos). So I am asking you, why are you keeping one of the other two references ("lodgephoto") - which is simply an advertising of a commmercial business, delivering photos which are too small to be useful?

So I am asking you to put the reference back on the external link list. In the case you don't have it, here's the URL : http://www.photoglobe.info/db_tuscany/

Regards, Hans Lohninger (initiator of the PhotoGlobe project)

Good that that map is in the public domain; might as well so mark it on your site, it will avoid confusion by others. There is so much piracy online, that the natural inference (especially with maps, which almost perforce are not one's own creations) is that uncredited stuff is pirated.... On my own site I mark everything one way or the other, for just that reason.
Ad rem, however: there's just not very much content. My own personal criterion is based on What Wikipedia is not, if indirectly. Like that page says, since Wikipedia is not a list of links, the links that are eventually listed should be few and valuable. If a listing of links would be very, very long if all websites at the same level of informativeness were included, then by my lights the link doesn't belong there. For Tuscany, so travelled by so many people, that means a site has got to be really good to make it into the top five or six. By way of illustration, and assurance that I've got no vendetta against PhotoGlobe or any other site — I have a site of my own on Tuscany, which I wouldn't dream of listing here, although it has 30 pages, with 66 large photos — plus an entire book with 107 engravings, 8 maps and plans, and 4 more photos: it's not only PhotoGlobe but my own site that is not good enough.... (And my site always gives the latitude and longitude of the places in question, too: big deal.) Bill 13:11, 24 September 2005 (UTC)Reply
Oh, and PS: the LodgePhoto site is marginal; it too should probably be tossed out.... Bill
Bill, I looked into your Tuscany site - really nice site, although I am missing some navigational aids (i.e. a table of contents, or an index, and/or a full text search). As far the location data is concerned: it seems to me that you are providing rather coarse coordinates per town, but no coordinates of the individual photo points - which is quite a pity, given the many fantastic photos on your Web site.
If you have GPS-based coordinates of the photos, I would like to invite you to contribute to the PhotoGlobe project. Your photos certainly will be a valuable addition to the project (what we need is high resolution photos, the lat/long values with GPS accuracy, and a title and a caption for each photo; the caption is deliberately restricted to 255 characters, but we can display a link with further information on each photo page (i.e. a link to your site). Details on how to contribute can be found here: http://www.photoglobe.info/contribution.html .... Regards, Hans
PS: I'll take up your suggestion to disclose map sources, however it will take some time until this will be available on the Web site
Oops, I just discovered that there *is* a full text search on your site.... Hans
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I'm not able to contribute to this article (i live in tuscany, but my english is not as fluent as an encyclopedia). Anyway i'd like to suggest an urlof a videocast we are currently running under a CreativeCommons license (http://tuscany.podtravels.tv). The videocast is updated weekly with videos from places slightly off the tourist traffic (most of the time).

Montecatini Val di Cecina

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I have added an article on Montecatini Val di Cecina using material that we researched for ItalianVisits.com. As I stated in the discussion page for the Montecatini Val di Cesina article, the material has been gleaned from a number of sources available on the Internet, including material contained on the Official site for the comune. The material is not as reliable as one would hope, but might serve as a good starting point.

During the next few days I will endeavour to flesh-out the Wikipedia articles on Montecatini Terme and Montecatini Alto, as well as various other Tuscan towns and cities.

I have also re-added the ItalianVisits.com link to the main Tuscany page, believing it to have some merit. I understand the "debate" concerning "travel websites", but we are making a concerted effort to develop information on ItalianVisits.com that goes well beyond the usual "tourist site" approach. I would ask that anyone who might be inclined to remove this external link please look at ItalianVisits as a whole, with special regard for the Umbria and Calabria sections which are more developed, but show the direction we are taking with other Regions including the Tuscany region. Certainly, I would hope the matter of inclusion should be open to discussion. JVian 23:07, 27 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

Removing an article

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The article on Montecatini contained a link to "Montecatini in Val di Cècina". This name is incorrect because it contains the word "in". It is also problematic for anyone who does a search without using the "è" in "Cècina" So, I created a new page "Montecatini Val di Cecina" and edited the Montecatini page to link to it. However, the "Montecatini in Val di Cècina" page still exists in Wikipedia.

How does one remove a page? And, was there a better procedure for doing this? JVian 21:27, 30 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

San Miniato, Pisa Province

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I added an article about the city of San Miniato. The article synthesizes a variety of information about the city that I found on the Internet and therefore is meant to serve as the basis for further work done by more learned people than me.JVian 18:58, 2 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

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I have once again added a link to ItalianVisits.com, which will probably not please some folks. Someone removed it before because, they said, the main article in ItalianVisits was a regurgitation of information from Fodors. We completely re-wrote the article, but, looking only at it is not, in my opinion, a sufficient view of what we are doing. The Tuscany section of our site is growing - there are some 16 articles on towns and cities in the Region and many more will be added, so on a cumulative basis there is a lot of coverage. Also, when we research and write about a place in Tuscany for which there is no article in Wikipedia, we are also adding it to Wikipedia under an open license.

Obviously, there are a ton of websites about Tuscany on the Net. If all of them were to be included in the External Links section, the Tuscany article would be overwhelmed. So, it is agreed, that some considerable attention has to be paid to the "intellectual" comprhensiveness and quality of those that are included, the ultimate purpose being to give Wikipedia users access to plentiful and useful information about the Region. So, for instance, in my opinion, Bill Thayer's Gazetteer of Tuscany should also be included in the External links because it compliments the information in the article. So does IV, at least, that's my, admittedly biased, opinion.

I suppose the matter could and perhaps should be arbitrated. JVian 17:09, 12 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Italianvisits

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So, to be cynical here - you rapidly rehashed the Fodors copy and added your own tagline in an attempt to get the link back in. And you're doing this for Wikipedia users? If your site is non-commercial, why the need for the link? And, if it is commercial, then, as you say, there are hundreds of older, larger and more detailed sites out there. In certain areas your site may merit deep links - there seems to be a lot of truly original Southern Italy detail, for example. Not so for Tuscany.

Well first of all, I don't think anyone who isn't registered, and/or who doesn't sign their work should have the privilege to act as gatekeeper. Secondly, it is impossible to write anything original about Tuscany, at least with regard to any matter that is likely to appear in Wikipedia, or on any site that is endeavouring to give its readers an overview of the Region in a limited space. Granted, a few writers might have the talent to write something about Tuscany in an original, interesting voice, but none of the "external links" that are included here can make any such claim. Thirdly, this attempt to separate the commercial from the non-commercial external links is bound to fail in many, if not most cases. For instance, Castles in Tuscany offers tours, accommodation etc.; Terra di Tuscany has an online shop, and offers a variety of other commercial services. So, what's the criteria that is being used? If there are no fixed criteria, and if the gatekeeping is being done on a strictly subjective basis by one individual, then I think it is time for an aribtration on the matter. Anyone else agree? JVian 21:05, 16 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Montalcino

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I added an article for the Tuscan town of Montalcino. This was a slight revision of an article I added to ItalianVisits on March 18, 2006.JVian 17:00, 28 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Monteriggioni

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I added an article for the Tuscan town of Monteriggioni. This was a slight revision of an article I added to ItalianVisits on Jult 28, 2006.JVian 17:00, 28 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Don't know why my site is removed and by who

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Hello, I am trying to add my weblog http://tuscany-travel.blogspot.com full of useful info on Tuscany to the page on wiki-Tuscany, but someone (editors? Competitors that have other blogs?) keeps removing it. I do not understand why, as I see that the page displays plenty of commercial and doubtfully useful other websites. In particular I have seen www.l o d g e p h o t o.com or www.s p i g a d i g r a n o .it(without the spaces, of course), but also others, that give no info on Tuscany at all and are just adsense receptors... you can leave those there if you think they are useful to visitors, but please also accept (or do not delete) my, more useful, resources! Thanks —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 151.52.127.66 (talk) 11:39, 13 December 2006 (UTC).Reply

Images of Tuscany

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Tuscany is one of the most beautiful places in the world. It's outrageous that there's a bazillion pictures of Afghanistan at that "country's" article but Tuscany has only one image in the entire article. Anyone with images theyre licensed to use ought to put them up here.

NPOV?

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"For its landscapes and its artistic legacy, Tuscany is considered the most beautiful region in Italy". I may even agree but perhaps needs to be supported by something slightly more objective, like number of UNESCO protected sites, or some other widely recognised criterion.

You do not need refernces for trivial statements. Tuscany and Florence are widely regarded as the single most beautiful place in Europe or possibly the whole world. BTW, many features of fictional planet Naboo from the Star Wars movies are clearly referencing Italy and Tuscany especially. 91.83.19.241 (talk) 23:27, 1 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Redirect

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I've found a redirect from Tuscia to Tuscany. Tuscia is provincia di Viterbo, the southern part of the ancient Etruria. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Wento (talkcontribs) 19:25, 28 April 2007 (UTC). Tuscia was as ancient name for tuscany, like etruria. Since the latin name for etrurian people was "tusci". the term tuscia had been used till the official istitution of the region, and also later, as synonim of Tuscany.Reply

Tuscans and Turks are relatives

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http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-sci-etruscans18jun18,1,159086.story?coll=la-news-a_section&ctrack=2&cset=true Shouldn't it be mentioned that nowadays Tuscans and nowadays Turks share the same genes? --134.155.99.41 09:53, 19 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

if you look a Tuscan and a Turks they are completely different..Firts the Turks came from Asia in 1000 C.E. ans second the Etruscans in Tuscany were just the Upper Class --GaiusCrastinus (talk) 15:13, 16 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

...yes, rather like the Irish and the Persians. --Wetman (talk) 00:41, 17 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

I may quote: A study by geneticist Alberto Piazza of the University of Turin presented at the European Society of Human Genetics in Nice, France, linking the Etruscans to Turkey. The team compared DNA sequences with those from men in modern Turkey, northern Italy, the Greek island of Lemnos, the Italian islands of Sicily and Sardinia and the southern Balkans. They found that the genetic sequences of the Tuscan men varied significantly from those of men in surrounding regions in Italy, and were most closely related to those of men from Turkey. http://articles.latimes.com/2007/jun/18/science/sci-etruscans18 --Tubesship (talk) 19:25, 28 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

well... the etruscans are not the nowdays' tuscan people (because of migrations, invasions) moreover the Turks are not the ancient inabithans of Turkey at all; there had been an enormous stirring up of populations.

It is written that the nowadays Turks (modern Turkey) share the same genetic sequences with nowadays Tuscans. Of course this has do to with the past but effects nonetheless the present population of both countries. It is not something that has gone. Therefore, why not mention it in the article? --217.82.132.13 (talk) 18:03, 4 October 2014 (UTC)Reply

Etymology

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Should note that the very name "Tuscany" comes from the Latin "Tuscus" for Etruscan. Fig (talk) 17:18, 24 August 2009 (UTC)Reply

Eh?

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It is important to note that there are no houses to rent in Tuscany. How did this slip by? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 27.106.71.67 (talk) 20:19, 8 September 2011 (UTC)Reply


Not one place to rent....in all of Tuscany?!?! Are you sure? Its like the size of North Dakota. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.210.222.2 (talk) 07:24, 16 December 2011 (UTC)Reply

Recent additions about Chianciano

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I reverted two additions in the article, about a local museum in Chianciano terme and the town itself, considered by the editor resepctively to be among the main Museums and artistic centers of the region. In wikipedia we should not try to give undue weight to the information present in the encyclopedia, also if this comes from articles that we created or enhanced. Now, while the museum of Chianciano is for sure interesting, it cannot be put at the same level with the Uffizi and the Bargello, and the same is valid for Chianciano terme, that for sure is not one of the main artistic centers of the region (but it is one of the most important thermal centers of Italy, and this could be a way to put it in the article). Alex2006 (talk) 12:42, 28 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

Dear Alex, I'm sorry to disagree with you. Chianciano Terme, if you are not familiar with it, is an important centre of Art and ancient buildings of Artistic and historic importance. It is not only important for the Thermal waters. Moreover, The Chianciano Museum of Art is such that it hosts one of the most important Biennales of Art in Italy. Please document yourself. Even the New York Times has written about the Chianciano Biennale of Art. Therefore, it may not be as important as the Uffizi or the Bargello, I agree, but it is unique in the whole of Tuscany. So please think it over and at least let me add a deserved mention to the article. Athenaathena07 (talk)
No problem: bring reliable sources about this museum and the town (NOT a NYT article, since a newspaper like NYT is not a RS about art: newspapers often do only marketing, trying to sell a destination) and then we can discuss about it.
About the biennale d'arte in Chianciano as "one of the most important in Italy": Google hits for Chianciano: 3,400; Google hits for Venezia + Venice: about 300,000. Alex2006 (talk) 12:56, 28 July 2015 (UTC)Reply
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Assessment comment

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The comment(s) below were originally left at Talk:Tuscany/Comments, and are posted here for posterity. Following several discussions in past years, these subpages are now deprecated. The comments may be irrelevant or outdated; if so, please feel free to remove this section.

==WP:Italy== This page covers history well (with links to other articles as necessary), but is lacking in other areas. Sectori 19:53, 14 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Last edited at 19:53, 14 October 2007 (UTC). Substituted at 09:22, 30 April 2016 (UTC)

Contested deletion

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This page should not be speedily deleted because.why would you delete this? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Chrimas1 (talkcontribs) 16:30, 16 February 2019 (UTC)Reply

You may be referring to the template "Infobox region of Italy", which was indeed deleted. See the discussion at User talk:77.183.150.15. David Brooks (talk) 22:01, 17 February 2019 (UTC)Reply

Artistic centers??

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Who on earth thinks that Grosseto is a more important artistic center than Pitigliano, Roselle, or Massa Marittima? Is Grosseto an artistic center at all?

Substantial content was added/changed without sourcing

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I think probably the whole set of changes should be removed, but the editor may be mid-work, so waiting until, perhaps, tomorrow.Shajure (talk) 18:53, 18 May 2021 (UTC)Reply

Looking at the anon user talk page, they are placing their personal knowledge into the articles. Posted an explanation there, and rolled the changes back here.Shajure (talk) 19:34, 19 May 2021 (UTC)Reply

Top tourist destinations in Tuscany

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2015 source... the world changed rather greatly. Probably needs a newer source... and the most recent addition seems likely correct... but not from that source.Shajure (talk) 00:44, 29 December 2021 (UTC)Reply

https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toscana

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Why, despite the two pages being very close in terms of references (the Italian article has 47, while this one has 39), this article is "only" 58,039 bytes long, while the Italian article has 159,035? JackkBrown (talk) 21:19, 28 January 2024 (UTC)Reply