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San Biagio, Saludecio

19th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in ItalyChurches completed in 1804Churches in the province of RiminiEmilia-Romagna Roman Catholic church stubsNeoclassical architecture in Emilia-Romagna
Neoclassical church buildings in Italy
Santuario e Museo del Beato Amato
Santuario e Museo del Beato Amato

San Biagio is a Neoclassical Roman Catholic parish church in Saludecio, province of Rimini, region of Emilia-Romagna, Italy. A new church was designed by the architect Giuseppe Achilli, and reconstruction occurred in 1804. The layout is in the shape of a Greek Cross. The interior heavily decorated with stucco, has works by Antonio Trentanove, Guido Cagnacci, Claudio Ridolfi, and il Centino. Since 1930, the church now houses the incorruptible body of Saint Amato Ronconi (born 1225); he was declared blessed by Pope Pius VI in 1776. He was recently canonized by Pope Francis in 2014.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article San Biagio, Saludecio (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

San Biagio, Saludecio
Piazza Beato Amato Ronconi,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.872777777778 ° E 12.668444444444 °
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Address

Piazza Beato Amato Ronconi
47835
Emilia-Romagna, Italy
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Santuario e Museo del Beato Amato
Santuario e Museo del Beato Amato
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Cocoricò (nightclub)
Cocoricò (nightclub)

Cocoricò is a nightclub in Riccione, Province of Rimini, Italy. Open since 1989, it has become one of Italy's largest dance venues. In 2015, the venue was voted 16th on the list of "Top 100 Clubs" by the readers of DJ Mag. The nightclub has a capacity of 2,500 people.In the late 2010s, various disputes with the tax authorities and judicial vicissitudes have led to a crisis in the management company. On June 4, 2019, the court declared inadmissible the request for a settlement with creditors filed by the management of Piramide (owned by Fabrizio De Meis). With the second sentence of 11 June, the bankruptcy court rejects the composition with creditors, sanctioning the bankruptcy of the company and the closure of the disco.Following the new purchase of the place by Enrico Galli and Antonella Bonicalzi it was announced that the disco would reopen its doors on April 26, 2020, with the name of Cocco. The change of name was necessary because the Cocoricò, Titilla and Memorabilia trademarks had been seized by the Rimini court and put up for judicial auction. In the end, due to the new regulations for the prevention of COVID-19, the reopening was postponed until a later date. On July 10 the news appears that the brands were purchased by an entrepreneur who wanted to remain anonymous, but then a video appeared on the official social networks of the club which made one suppose that the new owners of the Piramide company had bought them back. The videos suggest that the disco will keep its original name: Cocoricò. In fact, the video reads: Now I can tell You My name: Cocoricò.The club re-opened as Cocoricò in November 2022 with three rooms: Piramide (techno/tech-house), T Room (hard techno) and Titilla (house)