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Florence, Milan, Venice, and Genoa Florence, Milan, Venice, and Genoa
Milan, Genoa, Venice, and Florence were the four major trade cities. They allowed importing and exporting, which brought in money.
No. Venice and Genoa are two different cities in Italy.
Milan, Genoa, Florence, and Venice
Rome. Florence and Venice especially grew rich from trade, and as did Genoa to a lesser extent. Rome, though important through most of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, was not a trade city.
Rome Venice Genoa Florence Milan
Milan, Genoa, Venice, and Florence
During Renaissance Italy several major cities were city states controlling individual areas.
The city most often cited as the birthplace of the Renaissance is Florence.
The most popular are the tourist destinations such as Rome, Venice, Milan, Florence, Turin, if you could call it a city also the island of Capri. It is dependent on what you are seeking and perhaps the questions requires more refinement.
The main cities of Italy are (in order of the size of the urban agglomeration): Milan, Rome, Naples, Turin, Palermo, Florence, Catania, Genoa, Bologna, Bari, Venice and Verona.
Italy, Europe. Genoa is North West & Venice North East.