Forlì is a town in Italy, of 117,000 inhabitants, the capital of the province of Forlì-Cesena in Emilia-Romagna.
It is the bishopric of the diocese of Forlì-Bertinoro.
It has been, since the beginning of the Kingdom of Italy, the capital of the province of Forlì; after the detachment of the district
of Rimini, which became an autonomous province in 1992, the remaining territory took the new name of the province of Forlì-Cesena.
The city, founded according to tradition in 188 BC, celebrated its 22 centuries in 2012-2013.
Forlì is located in the Po Valley (44 ° 13′21 ″ N 12 ° 02′27 ″ E), in Romagna, 5 km from the first hills of the Tuscan-Romagna Preappennino
and about 26 km from the Adriatic coast. The periphery is bathed by the Montone river which, near the Vecchiazzano district, receives the waters
of the Rabbi river, and then laps the urban walls at Porta Schiavonia, and by the Ronco river which crosses the homonymous suburb of the city.