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Milan and Miodrag
Other members of this exclusive group include greats such as Paulo Sousa ( Borussia Dortmund and Juventus ), Clarence Seedorf ( Ajax, Real Madrid, and Milan ), Marcel Desailly ( Marseille and Milan ), Frank Rijkaard ( Milan and Ajax ), Samuel Eto ' o ( Real Madrid, Barcelona, and Internazionale ), Didier Deschamps ( Marseille and Juventus ), Owen Hargreaves ( Bayern Munich and Manchester United ), Dejan Savićević ( Red Star and Milan ), Miodrag Belodedic ( Steaua Bucureşti and Red Star ), Vladimir Jugović ( Red Star and Juventus ) and Edwin van der Sar ( Ajax and Manchester United ).

Milan and Popović
Dragutin Dimitrijević, Lieutenant Antonije Antić, Lt. Dragutin Dulić, Lt. Milan Marinković and Lt. Nikodije Popović.
Some of the most important Serbian painters of the 20th century were Paja Jovanović, Milan Konjović, Marko Čelebonović, Petar Lubarda, Uroš Predić, Milo Milunović, Vladimir Veličković, Mića Popović, Sava Šumanović and Milena Pavlović-Barili.
In December 2010 Severina met wealthy Serbian businessman Milan Popović at his birthday celebration, where she was hired to perform.
: Borislav Stanković, Ladislav Demšar, Aleksandar Gec, Srđan Kalember, Vilmos Loczi, Lajos Engler, Aleksandar Blasković, Mirko Marjanović, Đorđe Andrijašević, Milan Bjegojević, Borislav Ćurčić, Dragan Godžić, Borko Jovanović ( Coach: Nebojša Popović )
: Ladislav Demšar, Vilmos Loczi, Aleksandar Blasković, Đorđe Andrijašević, Milan Bjegojević, Borislav Ćurčić, Bogdan Muller, Đorđe Konjović, Milutin Minja, Obren Popović, Joze Zupančić, Ljubomir Katić ( Coach: Aca Nikolić )
Daniel ( Cyrillic: Даниел ) is the stage name of Milan Popović ( Милан Поповић ) ( born October 29, 1955 in Titograd, Montenegro, Yugoslavia ), a Montenegro-born pop singer who made his name in Croatia.
The band also appeared on the various artists album Vreme brutalnih dobronamernika, which featured seventeen bands which recorded the songs on poems of Serbian poet Milan B. Popović.

Milan and 1969
Ajax won the championship in 1966 and 1967, scoring a record breaking 122 goals including 33 from Johan Cruijff, and again in 1968, and reached the European Cup final of 1969 against AC Milan.
* Shortly before midnight on December 15, 1969, the Italian anarchist Giuseppe Pinelli was seen falling to his death from a fourth floor window of the Milan police station.
They also tended to present films taken from Czech literature, including Jaromil Jireš ' adaptation of Milan Kundera's anti-Communist novel The Joke ( Žert 1969 ).
* Milan ( 6 ) – 1969, 1989, 1990, 1994, 2003, 2007
The car was developed by Giotto Bizzarrini from a Ferrari design, and manufactured by the company in Milan ( in a factory owned by the De Nora Electrochemical Group ) from 1964 to 1969.
* 1969 – Begins his Boutique line of clothes and opens the first Valentino shop in Milan.
They lost the Intercontinental title against A. C. Milan ( 1969 ) and Feyenoord ( 1970 ).
He died in Milan in 1969.
The period or the late 1960-1970s came to be known as the Opposti Estremismi, ( from left-wing and right-wing extremists riots ), later renamed anni di piombo (" years of lead ") because of a wave of bombings and shootings — the first victim of this period was Antonio Annarumma, a policeman, killed on November 12, 1969 in Milan during a left-wing demonstration.
Estudiantes lost their Intercontinental Cup finals to A. C. Milan and Feyenoord, respectively, but they did win the less prestigious Copa Interamericana in 1969.
* Lamentationes-abbreviated version of „ Lamantationes Ieremiae prophatae “, Ars Rediviva ( Milan Munclinger ), 1969, LP, Supraphon
From 1960 to 1975, he did pastoral work in the Archdiocese of Milan, serving as a parish priest at Santi Martiri Anauniani in Legnano ( 1960 – 1969 ) and later Sant ' Andrea in Milan ( 1969 – 1975 ).
Born in Trieste, he was nicknamed Ragno Nero (' Black Spider ') and was one of the most celebrated goalkeepers for A. C. Milan, helping them win the 1969 European Cup Final.
His final Italian club was Napoli, whom he joined from Milan in 1969.
* UEFA Champions League: 1969 ( A. C. Milan )
* Milan A. Ontko 1969 – 71
The Piazza Fontana Bombing () was a terrorist attack that occurred on December 12, 1969 at 16: 37, when a bomb exploded at the headquarters of Banca Nazionale dell ' Agricoltura ( National Agrarian Bank ) in Piazza Fontana ( some 200 metres from Duomo ) in Milan, Italy, killing 17 people and wounding 88.
On March 3, 1972, Franco Freda, Giovanni Ventura and Rauti were arrested and charged with planning the terrorist attacks of April 25, 1969 at the Trade Fair and Railway Station in Milan, and the August 8 and August 9, 1969 bombings of several trains, followed by the Piazza Fontana bombing, but were acquitted and no-one was ever successfully prosecuted.
A 2000 parliamentary report published by the center-left Olive Tree coalition claimed that " U. S. intelligence agents were informed in advance about several right-wing terrorist bombings, including the December 1969 Piazza Fontana bombing in Milan and the Piazza della Loggia bombing in Brescia five years later, but did nothing to alert the Italian authorities or to prevent the attacks from taking place.
Gianluigi Lentini ( born March 27, 1969 in Carmagnola ) is a former Italian winger who was once the world's most expensive footballer, when he moved from Torino to AC Milan for £ 13 million in 1992.

Milan and treatise
In 1764 Beccaria published a brief but justly celebrated treatise On Crimes and Punishments, which marked the high point of the Milan Enlightenment.
The Florentine chronicler Giovanni Cavalcanti reported that, in the very year of Valla's treatise, Filippo Maria Visconti, Duke of Milan, made diplomatic overtures toward Cosimo de ' Medici in Florence, proposing an alliance against the Pope.
Martial school and Codex Calixtinus, as well as the material in the treatise Ad organum faciendum ( also known as the " Milan Treatise ") from about the same time.

Milan and which
Praetor Anicius Probus first gave him a place in the council and then in about 372 made him consular prefect or " Governor " of Liguria and Emilia, with headquarters at Milan, which was then ( beside Rome ) the second capital in Italy.
Several religious brotherhoods which have sprung up in and around Milan at various times since the 14th century have been called Ambrosians.
Ambrosians is a term that might be applied either to members of one of the religious brotherhoods which at various times since the 14th century have sprung up in and around Milan or, exceptionally to a 16th century sect of Anabaptists.
However, in 1778 Gluck turned down an offer to compose the inaugural opera for La Scala in Milan ; upon the suggestion of Joseph II and with the approval of Gluck, Salieri was offered the commission, which he gratefully accepted.
On his way north, he stopped at Pavia where he crowned his illegitimate son Ratold, sub-King of Italy, after which he left Ratold in Milan in an attempt to preserve his hold on Italy.
# the Ambrosian, now confined to Milan, where it owes its retention to the attachment of the clergy and people to their traditionary rites, which they derive from St Ambrose.
After Silvanus revolted, he received a letter by Constantius that recalled him to Milan, but which made no reference to the revolt.
The Last Days of Pompeii was inspired by Karl Briullov's painting, The Last Day of Pompeii, which Bulwer-Lytton saw in Milan.
In gratitude, the city of Milan awarded, in 1909, the " commemorative medal of deliverance ", which still adorns the regimental flags of the Second Regiment.
In May 2006 a team of scientists led by Dr. Luigi Naldini and Dr. Brian Brown from the San Raffaele Telethon Institute for Gene Therapy ( HSR-TIGET ) in Milan, Italy reported a breakthrough for gene therapy in which they developed a way to prevent the immune system from rejecting a newly delivered gene.
In the same year 1512, she was the hostess at the Congress of Mantua, which was held to settle questions concerning Florence and Milan.
Isabella had met the French king in Milan in 1500 on a successful diplomatic mission which she had undertaken to protect Mantua from French invasion.
The league hosts three of the world's most famous clubs as Juventus, Milan and Internazionale, all founding members of the G-14, a group which represented the largest and most prestigious European football clubs ; Serie A was the only league to produce three founding members.
The earliest surviving Greek manuscript that contains the Testimonium is the 11th century Ambrosianus 370 ( F 128 ), preserved in the Biblioteca Ambrosiana in Milan, which includes almost all of the second half of the Antiquities.
In the 16th century Sixtus V bisected Bramante's Cortile del Belvedere with a cross-wing to house the Apostolic Library in suitable magnificence. The 16th and 17th centuries saw other privately endowed libraries assembled in Rome: the Vallicelliana, formed from the books of Saint Filippo Neri, with other distinguished libraries such as that of Cesare Baronio, the Biblioteca Angelica founded by the Augustinian Angelo Rocca, which was the only truly public library in Counter-Reformation Rome ; the Biblioteca Alessandrina with which Pope Alexander VII endowed the University of Rome ; the Biblioteca Casanatense of the Cardinal Girolamo Casanate ; and finally the Biblioteca Corsiniana founded by the bibliophile Clement XII Corsini and his nephew Cardinal Neri Corsini, still housed in Palazzo Corsini in via della Lungara. The Republic of Venice patronized the foundation of the Biblioteca Marciana, based on the library of Cardinal Basilios Bessarion. In Milan Cardinal Federico Borromeo founded the Biblioteca Ambrosiana.
The Lombardy region in Italy, which includes the cities of Brescia, Bergamo, Milan and the old capital Pavia, is a reminder of the presence of the Lombards.
The third important work of this period is the Virgin of the Rocks which was commissioned in Milan for the Confraternity of the Immaculate Conception.
These notebooks — originally loose papers of different types and sizes, distributed by friends after his death — have found their way into major collections such as the Royal Library at Windsor Castle, the Louvre, the Biblioteca Nacional de España, the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Biblioteca Ambrosiana in Milan which holds the twelve-volume Codex Atlanticus, and British Library in London which has put a selection from its notebook BL Arundel MS 263 online.
A Latin text was found in Milan in the 19th century by Antonio Ceriani who called it the Assumption of Moses, even though it does not refer to an assumption of Moses or contain portions of the Assumption which are cited by ancient authors, and it is apparently actually the Testimony.
The most valuable result of her labours was the Instituzioni analitiche ad uso della gioventù italiana, a work of great merit, which was published at Milan in 1748 and " was regarded as the best introduction extant to the works of Euler.
His Trattato dell ' arte della pittura, scoltura et architettura ( Milan, 1584 ) is in part a guide to contemporary concepts of decorum, which the Renaissance inherited in part from Antiquity but Mannerism elaborated upon.
This style, which had been in use since 1554, was replaced when Philip inherited the Spanish Crown in 1556 with " Philip and Mary, by the Grace of God King and Queen of England, Spain, France, both the Sicilies, Jerusalem and Ireland, Defenders of the Faith, Archdukes of Austria, Dukes of Burgundy, Milan and Brabant, Counts of Habsburg, Flanders and Tyrol ".
As emperor, he issued the Edict of Milan ( 313 ), which granted religious freedom to Christians in all parts of the Roman Empire.

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