The province named for this city contains a museum about what was once Europe’s largest sulfur mine in the Marecchia (“mah-RECK-yah”) Valley. This city’s piadineria restaurants use Cyrillic menus, as its thousand-plus hotels serve many Russians. The film Amarcord evokes this city’s Borgo San Giuliano across the Tiberius Bridge from the Castel Sismondo, whose museum honors native son Federico Fellini. Daily buses link this city to nearby San Marino. At this city, Frederick II granted Kulm to Prussia’s Teutonic State in a 1226 Golden Bull. Leon Battista Alberti built the Tempio cathedral for this city’s ruling House of Malatesta. A lustful daughter of Guido da Polenta who died in this city with her lover inhabits the wind-filled second circle of Dante’s Inferno. For 10 points, what resort on the Adriatic’s Riviera Romagnola (“roman-YO-lah”) was the adopted home of Paolo’s lover Francesca? ■END■
ANSWER: Rimini [accept Francesca da Rimini; accept Golden Bull of Rimini; accept Province of Rimini or Provincia di Rimini] (The first line refers to the Museo Sulphur in Perticara. A piadina is a flatbread sandwich.)
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