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Sal

Sal may refer to:

Personal name

  • Sal (name), a list of people and fictional characters with the given name or nickname
  • Places

  • Sal, Cape Verde, an island
  • Sal, Cape Verde (municipality), encompassing the entire island
  • Sal, Iran, a village in East Azerbaijan Province
  • Sal River (India), Goa
  • Sal River (Russia)
  • Sal Glacier, Queen Maud Land, Antarctica
  • Cay Sal, a small island between Florida, Cuba and the Bahamas
  • SAL or S.A.L.

  • El Salvador International Airport, IATA code
  • Surface Air Lifted, postal classification
  • Seaboard Air Line Railroad reporting mark
  • Saharan Air Layer
  • Sociedade de Aviação Ligeira, an air taxi operator based in Luanda, Angola
  • The South Atlantic League, a minor US baseball league
  • Swedish American Line, former passenger line
  • Saskatchewan Accelerator Laboratory
  • The Chapman code for Shropshire, England in genealogy
  • Structural Adjustment Loans to developing countries by international financial institutions
  • Sterility assurance level in microbiology
  • Salò

    Salò (Italian: [saˈlɔ]) is a town and comune in the Province of Brescia in the region of Lombardy (northern Italy) on the banks of Lake Garda, on which it has the longest promenade. The city was the seat of government of the Italian Social Republic from 1943 to 1945, with the ISR often being called the "Republic of Salò" (Repubblica di Salò in Italian).

    History

    Roman period

    Although legend has it that Salò has Etruscan origins, recorded history starts with the founding by ancient Romans of the colony of Pagus Salodium. There are numerous ruins of the Roman settlement, as shown by the Lugone necropolis (in via Sant’Jago) and the findings (vase-flasks and funeral steles) in the Civic Archaeological Museum located at the Loggia della Magnifica Patria.

    Middle Ages

    During the high Middle Ages, the city shared the same fate as that of Lombardy.

    The origins of the municipality of Salò are barely known: its autonomy from Brescia can be dated towards the end of the 13th century or the beginning of the next one, and the most ancient statues conserved by the city authorities are dated 1397.

    Salé

    Salé (Arabic: سلا Sala, Berber ⵙⵍⴰ Sla) is a city in north-western Morocco, on the right bank of the Bou Regreg river, opposite the national capital Rabat, for which it serves as a commuter town. Founded in about 1030 by Arabic-speaking Berbers, the Banu Ifran, it later became a haven for pirates as an independent republic before being incorporated into Alaouite Morocco.

    The city's name is sometimes transliterated as Salli or Sallee. The National Route 6 connects it to Fez and Meknes in the east and the N1 to Kénitra in the north-east. Its population is approximately 900,000.

    History

    The Phoenicians established a settlement called Sala, later the site of a Roman colony, Sala Colonia, on the south side of the Bou Regreg estuary. It is sometimes confused with Salé, on the opposite north bank. Salé was founded in about 1030 by Arabic-speaking Berbers who apparently cultivated the legend that the name was derived from that of Salah, son of Ham, son of Noah.

    The Banu Ifran Berber dynasty began construction of a mosque about the time the city was founded. The present-day Great Mosque of Salé was built during the 12th-century reign of the Almohad sultan Abu Yaqub Yusuf, although not completed until 1196. During the 17th century, Rabat was known as New Salé, or Salé la neuve (in French), as it expanded beyond the ancient city walls to include the Chellah, which had become a fortified royal necropolis under the rule of Abu Yaqub Yusuf's son, Abu Yusuf Yaqub al-Mansur.

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