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・ Italy national under-15 football team
・ Italy national under-16 football team
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・ Italy national under-18 football team
・ Italy national under-18 rugby union team
・ Italy national under-19 cricket team
・ Italy national under-19 football team
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・ Italy national under-21 football team
・ Italy of the Centre
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Italy runestones
・ Italy Star
・ Italy under-21 Serie B representative team
・ Italy v West Germany (1970 FIFA World Cup)
・ Italy Valley Methodist Church
・ Italy Women's Cup
・ Italy women's junior national softball team
・ Italy women's national basketball team
・ Italy women's national beach handball team
・ Italy women's national canoe polo team
・ Italy women's national field hockey team
・ Italy women's national floorball team
・ Italy women's national football team
・ Italy women's national goalball team
・ Italy women's national gymnastics team


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Italy runestones : ウィキペディア英語版
Italy runestones

The Italy Runestones are three or four Varangian Runestones from 11th-century Sweden that talk of warriors who died in ''Langbarðaland'' ("Land of the Lombards"), the Old Norse name for Italy. On these rune stones it is southern Italy that is referred to〔(''2. Runriket - Täby Kyrka'' ), an online article at Stockholm County Museum, retrieved July 1, 2007.〕 (Langobardia), but the Rundata project renders it rather anachronistically as Lombardy (see the translations of the individual stones, below).
The rune stones are engraved in Old Norse with the Younger Futhark, and two of them are found in Uppland and one or two in Södermanland.
The memorials are probably raised in memory of members of the Varangian Guard, the elite guard of the Byzantine Emperor, and they probably died while fighting in southern Italy against the local Lombard principalities or the invading Normans.〔 Many of their brothers-in-arms are remembered on the 28 Greece Runestones most of which are found in the same part of Sweden.
The young men who applied for a position in the Varangian guard were not uncouth roughnecks, as in the traditional stereotype, but instead, it appears that they were usually fit and well-raised young warriors who were skilled in weapons.〔Larsson 2002:145.〕 They were the kind of warriors who were welcome as the elite troops of the Byzantine Emperor, and who the rulers of Kievan Rus' requested from Scandinavia when they were under threat.〔
==Interpretations==

Johan Peringskiöld (d. 1720) considered the Fittja stone and the Djulefors stone to refer to the Lombard migration from Sweden, whereas Celsius (1727) interpreted them in a strikingly different manner. He noted that the name ''Longobardia'' was not applied to Italy until after the destruction of the Kingdom of the Lombards in 774. He claimed that the kingdom had been taken over by Varangians from Byzantium in the 11th and 12th centuries, and noted that in Barbarossa's campaign in Italy there were many Scandinavian warriors. The stones would have commemorated Swedish warriors who died in Barbarossa's war.〔Wessén 1940–1943:207.〕 This view was also espoused by Brocman (1762) who considered Holmi to have died in the 12th century for either the Byzantine Emperor or ruler of the Holy Roman Empire.〔Wessén 1940–1943:208.〕
von Friesen (1913) noted that it is not Lombardy in northern Italy that is intended, but ''Langobardia'' in southern Italy, which was ruled by the Byzantine Emperor during the 11th century. The Greeks had to fight several battles against the Normans in southern Italy during the mid-11th century. It is likely that Holmi, who is mentioned on two stones, took part in these battles as a member of the Byzantine Emperor's elite unit, the Varangian Guard, since they use a name based on the Greek name for the region.〔Wessén 1940–43:199.〕

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