they were escaping from advancing Turkish warriors
No, he did not.
The Etruscans never left Italy, their power was merely deteriorated in the face of the Romans. Their descendants are in Italy.
No
Move to Italy in the night
Yes. Richard Roe in his landmark book, "The Shakespeare Guide to Italy: Retracing the Bard's Unknown Travels" (2011) spent some 20 years in Italy following the trail left in the works of Shakespeare, and he was able to demonstrate unequivocally that whoever wrote the works of Shakepseare travelled extensively in Italy. Some traditional scholars have been left flatfooted by his discoveries, since some want to pretend that the writer of Shakespeare never left England.
Marco Polo left Italy to explore the vast world. His first adventure was at 17 when he traveled to China.
They left because southern Italy was consumed by economic disaster's, natural disasters, and high taxes/low wages.
By invading North Africa, Rome forced Hannibal to pull out of Italy so he could defend Carthage.
He invaded North Africa, threatening Carthage. Hannibal had to return from Italy threatening Rome to defend Carthage.
A pile of doodoo A pile of doodoo
Italy, Sicily, alps, Appanene mountains
Lasciare l'Italia is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to leave Italy".Specifically, the present infinitive lasciare is "to leave". The feminine singular definite article la* means "the". The feminine noun Italia translates as "Italy".The pronunciation will be "la-SHA-rey lee-TA-lya" in Italian.*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a word which begins with a vowel.