• Roland Routier
  • Roland Routier

Renault Roaming

Italy -- Croatia - ?
All in my little Red Renault Trafic
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  • Dogs

    2019年3月29日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

    Dogs abound: most of them strays. Bob fell for one, then two and now three. But a couple of others turn up regularly for a feed.
    Italy is renowned for its abandoned dogs and it is easy to be condescending about the people who appear to condone it. But hereabouts people do not have the money to pay a vet to register, inoculate, sterilize or even euthenise animals, particularly those not belonging to them. Most people with dogs claim that the dogs were strays who just turned up on the doorstep, so what could they do? I am told that Italian legislation forbids the killing of dogs which is why there are few if any dog pounds around. Imagine if Battersea Dogs Home was compelled to keep every dog that appeared for as long as it lived: it would soon be compelled to refuse animals, who would then be left to roam around! Some one should do something!
    So, the most senior dog is Big Dog, a rather wasted black and white mongrel with we suspect a physically unpleasant past judging by the way he walks. His claim to fame is to be a flea and tick magnet: his presence alone keeps the other dogs relatively free of them.
    The annual, Summer tick investation is starting and I am not sorry to be leaving. There are two waves of ticks as the little beasts start with four legs, slow done or something, and then grow another 2 later in the year when swarms can be found scurrying around. So far they have not been carrying any diseases, but with Africa so close it is only a matter of time.
    Next is a shaggy, retriever like, mongrel named Hollywood, who moons around like a film star whose time has passed. Most of the time he lies around but gets up to follow when one of us goes to the far side of the plot; then exhausted by the activity, he lies down for a snooze.
    Of course, Lula is my favourite. She gave birth to 6 little pups underneath the wooden floor of the bell tent when I was sleeping in it. I woke during the night hearing plaintive mewings, thinking that a cat was stuck underneath, for nobody realised she was about to whelp.
    Ants also are beginning to appear. They have been farming aphids through the Winter and now expect them to start working. This means collecting as much sap as possible from the almond trees for the sweet delight of their masters. Unfortunately, the trees don't much like being bled dry - who does? - and then refuse to produce many nuts. The local remedy, as there are no commercial, insecticide rich nut farms around, is the miraculous Savon de Marseille. Its quite simple really. A strong mix of this pure soap and water is sprayed all over the tree. It drys on the bugs who can no longer move and drop off. Thats all.
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  • Up and down

    2019年4月1日, イタリア ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

    On the way to the ferry I detoured up to the gay resort of Taormina.
    It took many litres of diesel to reach the top, and once there I turned around an went straight down for there was nothing to see except another hillside town. Very pretty to walk around and no doubt good restaurants but it is so isolated - even from the coast - that I cannot imagine staying there.もっと詳しく

  • No portrait of the artist

    2019年4月1日, イタリア ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    A couple of km before catching the ferry from Messina back to the mainland, I detoured a couple of hundred metres to visit the house of a local celebrity.
    Giovanni Cammarata was born on 29 Sept 1914 and died there in 2002.
    He learned the techniques of working cement as a child, working as a groom in a cement factory.
    He opened a small workshop making cement products after WWII and was granted land on which to build his business. A few years later the land was taken away from him by the State and given to his rival Mr.Rodriguez. I can only guess at the shenanigans going on, but obviously they never became BFF.
    Several years later, GC became an artist; producing a large number of works. Rather than sell them, he clung to them believing that they should become Messina's after his life.
    Unfortunately, the locals thought he was a crank and after his death, levelled his house / shed / workshop to make way for a supermarket carpark (in concrete.)
    His artistic ability has become recognised since 1990. Two restored works are exhibited at the Modern Art Gallery in Messina, and aothers are in the Basile Arts High School. The remains of his dwelling - part of the front wall - are all that remain.
    Even though his fame, if one is premitted to call it that, has spread, the locals still seem unconvinced.
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  • Flying fish

    2019年4月3日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 10 °C

    This time the crossing only cost me 56 Euros for the 30 minute ride. The boat was not even half full, so I could sail virtually immediately and set off for Latronico, for it was here in 1982 that a fossil was found at an altitude of 980m ASL.
    It looks like a swordfish but has been classified as an istioforide (genus Makaira) which lived in the miocenico sea 10 to 30 million years ago. Its abut 235cm long and 95 high and the skeleton can just about be made out - after seeing a drawing of it! The detail photo shows a flipper.
    And no, I didn't draw an outline on the relic, I copied the print on an information panel.
    This species of fish was common in the tropical Atlantic and more rarely in the Med. If I said Ernest Hemingway "The old Man and the Sea" you can guess what we call these fighting fish nowadays.
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  • Here be dragons

    2019年4月3日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 10 °C

    I went to Sant'Arcangelo after reading Carlo Levi's book "Christ stopped at Eboli."
    In it he recounts how dragons used to live in the area, proved by a set of dragon horns held in a local church.
    Nobody in the nearly deserted town knew anything about it though and there were no references to 'Game of Thrones", so as all the churches were locked up tight, I had to leave taking the story on faith alone.
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  • Exile

    2019年4月3日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

    The fascists banished various non-believers, including some business rivals, to this part of Italy Basilicata. Amongst them was the writer Carlo Levi, imprisoned here between 1935 and ’36.
    It is hard to comprehend the unmitigated poverty of the peasant life he found. At one point the region was was an extremely prosperous trading centre on the Mediterranean circuit, but this all changed when the Spanish and Lombards arrived. They taxed everyone so harshly that many of the prosperous left, leaving the poor behind with nothing to do but rely on the produce of the land. Living at 850m with their fields on the plain almost vertically below, meant that they could spend 4hours a day commuting and at the end of it the clay soil was not very fertile: absentee governments which forced the larger estates to grow wheat soon found that the yield was insufficient to pay taxes. Only olives grow. The peasants endured even through the endemic malaria which was only eradicated during the 1980's. Child mortality was 50% and survivors were afflicted by the disease and malnourishment so they had little to live for. But they endured enough to give CL the title of his book, "Christ stopped at Eboli", which was a popular refrain to explain their semi-pagan, unpromising lives.
    Since he had a medical degree, CL was not allowed to read and paint as he would have liked, but was coerced into treating whatever he could with what little pharmaceuticals were around. For this as much as for publicising their plight, he earned their eternal gratitude and the enmity of those 'middle classes' (priests, doctors, government officials,) who feasted on the misery of the poor.
    Now, perhaps thanks to the literati who make the pilgrimage, the town is being restored and tarted up. The car allows residents to escape and the small streets all have an Ape 50 parked in them.
    As you leave the village you pass the “Fossa del Carabiniere” (policeman’s grave) because once some bandits threw a drunk Carabiniere down the steep slope.
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  • Ghost town

    2019年4月3日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

    Alianello is half way up to Aliano and was abandoned in 1980 after an earthquake (6.9 Richter). The inhabitants moved 1km up the road and built a new town but the buildings still stand.
    Apparently Charles Dickens visited but I cannot discover if he wrote anything about it. Carlo Levi passed through on his way up the mountain but he too did not have much to say about it. I passed through it and also have nothing to say about it.
    Whilst I was nosing around I met a chap born in 1951 who did have quite a lot to say, but mainly about the civil administration and how they reburied Carlo Levi in a fancier tomb in Aliano when they realised what a drawcard it would be for the town. He mentioned that it used to be spelt Gagliano, something which had confused me since there is another town of that name a hundred km away, but CL had pointed out that etymologically it should be Aliano, so that is how it appears now. He was most enthusiastic about the enormous debt they owe the writer.
    Another interesting thing he said was that the Sauro river which converges with the Agri in the wide valley underneath used to be navigable and the people were able to take a ferry down to a larger town for work. That ended when the river was dammed. I tried to put dates to this, but could not understand his dialect: on the face of it the river must have begun to dry up long before the construction work to tally with what others have written.
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  • Badlands

    2019年4月3日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

    This part of Lucania is known as the badlands.
    “The endless expanse of dry clay, without a sign of human life, waving under the sun as far as eyes could see, far away, far away, they could melt in the white sky”. [Carlo Levi]
    Basically clay with pockets of sand, the rain carves gullies which are then baked in the firece sun and crack, eventually channelling further rainfall and forming these steep eroded hills, resembling a moonscape.
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  • The town that dare not speak its name

    2019年4月3日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

    Who could resist visiting a town known as the “town of misfortune”; Chillu Paese, (That Town,) in the local dialect as saying its name is believed to bring bad luck.
    The curse on Colobraro is as old as the place itself; but it wasn’t until the 20th century that the evil was fully awakened, thanks to a lawyer and a witch. The lawyer was proud never to have lost a case. In the middle of one case he rashly proclaimed that if he told a lie to the court the rooms chandelier would come crashing down. Of course, it did, but he still won claiming the opposing side had resorted to witchcraft as they had no better arguments.
    The townspeople and those from neighbouring villages began to believe that some of That Town’s women were actually witches who practiced dark magic. In the 1950s, people especially feared La Cattre, a wrinkled elderly woman many claimed was a sorceress. Anthropologists then began visiting the town to investigate its mysteries, but according to local lore they, too, soon fell victim to freak accidents and illnesses.
    Another legend concerns the remains of the Norman fortress of which only a few stone walls survive. It is inhabited by a mischevous sprite, being the soul of an unbabtised child. Wearing a red cloak with a hood it plays tricks on the unwary but will grant any wish if you can catch hold of its hood.
    This particular tale is very old and is often fused with the mythology of the brigands for which the region is famous. In this version, the brigands, who were welcomed and sustained by the ordinary folk as a gesture of defiance to uncaring authority, buried enormous quantities of plunder around the countryside. And forgot where it was hid. The sprite know though and if you catch one by the hood it will lead you to the treasure. However, you must not let go of its hood or it will run away and laugh at you, revealing nothing.
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  • Quantum of Solace

    2019年4月4日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

    Craco, founded in the 8th century sits on a cliff 400 meters off of the ground.
    Once it was important, confirmed by a Norman Tower from 1040, a convent from 1630, the ruins of St Nicholas’ church and bloated Angevin tax registers.
    After surviving the black plague, brigands and rapacious absentee landlords for more than 1,400 years, a landslide finally forced residents from Craco in 1991.
    10 Euros will get you a guided walk through the centre but having walked through one abandoned village already I couldn't see the point of another stroll through the streets. Numerous signs made it clear that this was a special tourist site, where every photo belongs to the administration and unauthorised shots like all of mine forbidden by the mayor.
    The Quantum of Solace, (partly filmed here,) is that it has become a popular film set. Several scenes from "Christ Stopped at Eboli" (directed by Francesco Rosi) were actually shot here in 1979. Other films include "King David" with Richard Gere, "Ninfa Plebea" by Lina Werthmuller, and the last scene of The Passion by Mel Gibson.
    The columns of a destroyed temple will surely engage fervent speculation by archaeologists in a few hundred years. Who were the Gods worshipped here, where only traces of 20thC transport can be found?
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  • Sin

    2019年4月4日, イタリア ⋅ 🌬 15 °C

    As I crossed the Murgia Plateau , curiosity wouldn't allow me to pass pass the Crypt of Original Sin, maybe because it is situated in a winery. In a ravine, below ground level, there is a thousand years old cave occupied on and off since the Paleolithic and Neolithic eras.
    Around the 9th century it became the home of monks who had come over to southern Italy from Eastern Europe and Asia Minor. They created a chapel and covered the interior with frescoes.
    For most of the last millennium, the cave and its art have existed in obscurity. One 19th century historian drew pictures of it, but by the 1960s it was mostly used as a shelter for sheepherders.
    In 1963, a group of students exploring the area heard rumours of the Crypt and its wall art, and found it and then struggled with Matera’s reputation as the “shame of Italy” to get it recognised. Archaeologists only started to examine it in 1981, and in 1993, UNESCO declared it a World Heritage Site, ensuring that the cave would be restored and preserved.
    By 2005, the crypt was opened to visitors but photography was and still is forbidden. The knowledgable archaeologist guiding the tour explained that we could download as many good quality images as we liked from their website.
    If you care to see them look here:

    http://criptadelpeccatooriginale.it/index.php?l…

    He also drew our attention to an unusual feature of the pictures. There are 5 sites in the world where Adam and Eve are depicted standing next to a figtree, (hence the figleaves,) suggesting that the forbidden fruit was not an apple as is commonly thought but a fig. This one is the earliest.
    In contrast to statements in the text, he also believed that he could detect the hands of three different artists. He thought that this would be consistent with the way medievil ateliers had one master designer and apprentices to colour in the details.
    Luckily grapes and their product are not forbidden: imbibing too much may be a sin though.
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  • Matera

    2019年4月5日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

    The old town of Matera is a major tourist destination being a UNESCO World Heritage site. The tourist season seems to have started here already, for I found hordes of schoolchildren bused in to learn something and clogging up the narrow streets.
    Unlike Craco for example, the town is a busy and growing collection of apartment blocks surrounding the Disney town with some unease generated by the coaches and throngs visiting the ancient sites.
    For ancient they are. People have been living here since the Neolithic era.
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  • Town rocks

    2019年4月5日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

    Although famous for its cave homes, most of the post-medievil townsfolk preferred to build normal stone houses. These they blended with the rocks to make numerous photo-opportunities. Most of the churches are dug into the rock though and contain frescoes in various states of decay but all with the same story.

    I always thought the Mediterranean pseudo-steppe was a derivative of the Tarantala and popular at dance parties. Now I find that it is the type of vegitation covering the park from which I took various shots. It seems that soil, fire and goats have so trimmed the original bush over millenia that only hardy, grasses and shrubs survive.
    One advantage of a desolate landscape is that it is one remaining safe haven for the endangered Grilled Falcon, (in Italian falco grillaio, Latin Falco naumanni) and the rare capovacchio which I think is a Merlin in English, (Falco columbarius,) the smallest raptor in Europe. Alas, to small and fast for my lense.
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  • In Matera

    2019年4月5日, イタリア ⋅ 🌫 12 °C

    In explicable.

    The town laundromat is fairly obvious, but the pig / elephant?

    Some of Salvador Dali's most iconic paintings were reimagined in sculptural form: “The Space Elephant”, displayed here at almost 3 meters high in bronze echoes the 1946 oil on canvas painting “The Temptation of St. Anthony”. Elephants, according to Dalí, represent strength and the future, especially if they are weighed down by obelisks, which are a symbol of power and domination.
    The deliberately fragile spindly legs cannot support the weight of the obelisk. Surreal?
    Thanks Nandalie for pointing this out!
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  • Sassi di Matera

    2019年4月5日, イタリア ⋅ 🌫 12 °C

    Matera is flanked by the hillside Sassi, a peasant neighbourhood of cave houses.
    They are considered (by tour guides at least,) to be the longest-occupied cave dwellings in the Earth’s history,continuously inhabited since at least 7,000 BCE. A 150,000-year-old hominid skeleton was found in one cave, along with Neolithic tools. The Ancient Romans, Greeks, Byzantines, and many others left their marks. The settlement has been around as long as Fertile Crescent cities like Aleppo and Jerusalem, and so has been used as the set for films like The Passion of the Christ and Ben-Hur.
    Carlo Levis's sister passed through Matera on her way to visit him. This is what she told her brother:
    "I didn't know this part of the country, to be sure," she answered, "but I did somehow picture it in my mind. Only Matera . . . Well, it was beyond anything I could possibly have imagined. I got there at about eleven in the morning. I had read in the guidebook that it was a picturesque town, quite worth a visit, that it had a museum of ancient art and some curious cave dwellings. But when I came out of the railway station, a modern and rather sumptuous affair, and looked around me, I couldn't for the life of me see the town; it simply wasn't there. I was on a sort of deserted plateau, surrounded by bare, low hills of a grayish earth covered with stones. In the middle of this desert there rose here and there eight or ten big marble buildings built in the style made fashionable in Rome by Piacentini, with massive doors, ornate architraves, solemn Latin inscriptions, and pillars gleaming in the sun. Some of them were unfinished and seemed to be quite empty, monstrosities entirely out of keeping with the desolate landscape around them. A jerry-built housing project, for the benefit, no doubt, of government employees, which had already fallen into a state of filth and disrepair, filled up the empty space around the buildings and shut off my view on one side. The whole thing looked like an ambitious bit of city planning, begun in haste and interrupted by the plague, or else like a stage set, in execrable taste, for a tragedy by d'Annunzio. These enormous twentieth-century imperial palaces housed the prefecture, the police station, the post office, the town hall, the barracks of the carabinieri, the Fascist Party headquarters, the Fascist Scouts, the Corporations, and so on. But where was the town? Matera was nowhere to be seen,
    " ... ... I wanted to buy you a stethoscope as I had forgotten to bring one from Turin and I knew that you needed one for your medical practice. Since there were no dealers in medical instruments I decided to look for one in a pharmacy. Among the government buildings and the cheap new houses I found two pharmacies, the only ones, I was told, in the town. Neither had what I was looking for and what's more their proprietors disclaimed all knowledge of what it might be. 'A stethoscope? What's that?' After I had explained that it was a simple instrument for listening to the heart, made like an ear trumpet, usually out of wood, they told me that I might find such a thing in Bari, but that here in Matera no one had ever heard of it.
    "By now it was noon and I repaired to the restaurant that was pointed out to me as the best in town. There, all at one table with a soiled cloth on it and napkin rings that showed they came there every day, sat the assistant chief of police with several of his subordinates, looking bored to tears. You know that I'm not hard to please, but I swear that when I got up to leave I was just as hungry as when I came.
    "I set out at last to find the town. A little beyond the station I found a street with a row of houses on one side and on the other a deep gully. In the gully lay Matera. From where I was, higher up, it could hardly be seen because the drop was so sheer. All I could distinguish as I looked down were alleys and terraces, which concealed the houses from view. Straight across from me there was a barren hill of an ugly gray color, without a single tree or sign of cultivation upon it, nothing but sun-baked earth and stones. At the bottom of the gully a sickly, swampy stream, the Bradano, trickled among the rocks. The hill and the stream had a gloomy, evil appearance that caught at my heart. The gully had a strange shape: it was formed by two half-funnels, side by side, separated by a narrow spur and meeting at the bottom, where I could see a white church, Santa Maria de Idris, which looked half-sunk in the ground. The two funnels, I learned, were called Sasso Caveoso and Sasso Barisano. They were like a schoolboy's idea of Dante's Inferno. And, like Dante, I too began to go down from circle to circle, by a sort of mule path leading to the bottom. The narrow path wound its way down and around, passing over the roofs of the houses, if houses they could be called. They were caves, dug into the hardened clay walls of the gully, each with its own facade, some of which were quite handsome, with eighteenth-century ornamentation. These false fronts, because of the slope of the gully, were flat against its side at the bottom, but at the top they protruded, and the alleys in the narrow space between them and the hillside did double service: they were a roadway for those who came out of their houses from above and a roof for those who lived beneath. The houses were open on account of the heat, and as I went by I could see into the caves, whose only light came in through the front doors.
    "Some of them had no entrance but a trapdoor and ladder. In these dark holes with walls cut out of the earth I saw a few pieces of miserable furniture, beds, and some ragged clothes hanging up to dry. On the floor lays dogs, sheep, goats, and pigs. Most families have just one cave to live in and there they sleep all together; men, women, children, and animals. This is how twenty thousand people live.
    "Of children I saw an infinite number. They appeared from everywhere, in the dust and heat, amid the flies, stark naked or clothed in rags; I have never in all my life seen such a picture of poverty. My profession has brought me in daily contact with dozens of poor, sick, ill-kempt children, but I never even dreamed of seeing a sight like this. I saw children sitting on the doorsteps, in the dirt, while the sun beat down on them, with their eyes half-closed and their eyelids red and swollen; flies crawled across the lids, but the children stayed quite still, without raising a hand to brush them away. Yes, flies crawled across their eyelids, and they seemed not even to feel them. They had trachoma. I knew that it existed in the South, but to see it against this background of poverty and dirt was something else again. I saw other children with the wizened faces of old men, their bodies reduced by starvation almost to skeletons, their heads crawling with lice and covered with scabs. Most of them had enormous, dilated stomachs and faces yellow and worn with malaria.
    "The women, when they saw me look in the doors, asked me to come in, and in the dark, smelly caves where they lived I saw children lying on the floor under torn blankets, with their teeth chattering from fever. Others, reduced to skin and bones by dysentery, could hardly drag themselves about. I saw children with waxen faces who seemed to me to have something worse than malaria, perhaps some tropical disease such as Kaia Azar, or black fever. The thin women, with dirty, undernourished babies hanging at their flaccid breasts, spoke to me mildly and with despair. I felt, under the blinding sun, as If I were in a city stricken by the plague. I went on down toward the church at the bottom of the gully; a constantly swelling crowd of children followed a few steps behind me. They were shouting something, but I could not understand their incomprehensible dialect. I kept on going; still they followed and called after me. I thought they must want pennies, and I stopped for a minute. Only then did I make out the words they were all shouting together: Signorina, give me some quinine! I gave them what coins I had with me to buy candy, but that was not what they wanted; they kept on asking, with sorrowful insistence, for quinine. Meanwhile we had reached Santa Maria de Idris, a handsome baroque church. When I lifted nay eyes to see the way I had come, I at last saw the whole of Matera, in the form of a slanting wall. From here it seemed almost like a real town. The facades of the caves were like a row of white houses; the holes of the doorways stared at me like black eyes. The town is indeed a beautiful one, picturesque and striking. I reached the museum with its Greek vases, statuettes, and coins found in the vicinity. While I was looking at them the children still stood out in the sun, waiting for me to bring them quinine."
    Soon after her visit, and embarassed Italian government evicted the tenants, who were mostly Albanian refugees, and sealed the entrances with locked metal doors that remain to this day.
    Fortunately, the plan to dynamite the hillside was abandoned when the extent and age of previous inhabitants was understood.
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  • Bijou micro-home with valley views

    2019年4月5日, イタリア ⋅ 🌧 12 °C

    A typical cave home consisted of one main room, with a small kitchen annex. At the back an alcove for general storage and animals, providing winter heating, was hewn into the wall.
    The larger animal if they had one shared a corner of the main room, here at the foot of the matrimonial bed. Beside the bed is the dunny.
    When this particular home was vacated in 1952, 11 people lived in it, the number of people you can see in the photo. Most were small, sickly children and there was only one window about 2 square feet in area. I don't want to imagine the odour: especially as the walls and floor tended to dampness.
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  • Metaponto

    2019年4月6日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

    Metaponto was a rich and flourishing outpost of Magna Grecia, strategically between the mouths of the Bradano and the Basento rivers. It was founded in the 7th century BCE and it is the town in which Pythagoras was born.
    It also doesn't exist anymore except as a groundplan.
    So instead I visited the museum which had many interesting relics of life in that era.
    I liked the drawings of girls' hairstyles many of which can still be seen today. Checkout the dreadlocks!
    Hard to photograph exhibits behind glass but the 5th C jewelry was exquisite.
    I appreciated the way a mannequin was dressed in a recreation of 7th C style, wearing amulets of spiral bronze copied from those on display from ancient tombs.
    And the jesters on the vase!
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  • Tavole Palatine

    2019年4月6日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

    “Then is Metaponto, which is at a distance of 140 stadia from the port of Heraclea (25,9 km). It is said that this city was founded by Greeks, native from Pylos, who, under Nestor, returned from Troy with their ships. It is believed that they were the first to cultivate this land, and for this reason they dedicated in the temple of Apollo in Delphi their entire crop of wheat, shining like gold" [Strabo 58-25 BCE]
    The Achaean origin of the city is demonstrated through a local rite, called 'atoning sacrifice,' offered by the inhabitants of Metaponto in honour of old Neleides. The city was razed to the ground by the Samnites. Antiochus claimed that the site was abandoned and it was later colonized by some Achaeans, sent there by their compatriots of Sybaris."[Antiochus 423 BCE]

    The remains of the 6th-century Temple of Hera a couple of km from Metaponto; 15 Doric columns and a few bits of pavement.
    They're known as the Palatine Tables since knights, or paladins, are said to have gathered here before heading to the Crusades. Who said it I could not ask since I had the place to myself.
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  • Taranto

    2019年4月7日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

    Last stop before the next job: Taranto.
    Not a long stop though as it is pretty uninteresting. Arriving from the West I traversed several kms of oil and container terminals before arriving at the old city. I found a small island covered in old apartment blocks and separated by 6ft alleys just wide enough for an Ape 50.
    Rather pompously Taranto calls itself the "The City of Two Seas", as it divides what are known as Mar Grande and Mar Piccolo. In other words the Med is on one side and a small lagoon on the other.
    There is a castle of course; the Aragonese Castle, also known as Castel Sant'Angelo. It is a military barracks with guided tours for the few who haven't seen enough of them.
    The Mussolini inspired town hall is one of the ugliest and ill-proportioned buildings I've seen. Just in case one misses the connection, the main door is flanked by two "fasces" as carried before the legions of Rome. They used to be bundles of rods symbolising the legal authority of Rome, and so it is ironic to find it here as the Etruscans invented it in the first place !
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  • See food and skip

    2019年4月7日, イタリア ⋅ 🌧 16 °C

    Taranto is famous for its seafood. After seeing through the plastic bags the mussel beds in the lagoon, and smelling the lagoon, I decided not to sample the local fare.

    People releasing plastic bags (balloons) into the air outside the ocal church.

    Rowing club in action.
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  • Taranto Archaeological Museum

    2019年4月13日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 11 °C

    Taranto museum is a regarded as one of the best in Italy. No caseloads of shards here: many of the exhibits look as if they had been made yesterday.

    The 2m tall statue of Zeus has spent the past 2500 years buried in a cave and was only discovered recently. He's polished up nicely.

    The 3 inch fetish is 20,000 years old as is the face which formed part of a pot.
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  • Upside down - again

    2019年4月13日, イタリア ⋅ ⛅ 13 °C

    Is this Nandalie 2600 years ago?

    All the images of everyday life merge the past into the present. We could travel back in time and fit in with their way of life with very little adjustment.

  • Friends, R,C, lend me your ears

    2019年4月13日, イタリア ⋅ 🌧 14 °C

    Maybe these earrings are my favourite piece. They are only half the size of a thumb which indicates very fine workmanship.
    Most earrings required pierced ears but the dolphins are clip-on - for a little girl?
    This area was famous for its goldsmiths but the angels are ceramic.
    And the rock crystal could be sold in one of those touchy feely New Age shops without a second glance.
    もっと詳しく

  • Baubles

    2019年4月13日, イタリア ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

    The work on this gold tiara deserves 3 photos; the last through a magnifying glass. How the crafftsman made it without means of magnification is beyond me. The band is not even 2cm thick.
    More contemporary is thegold and garnet necklace from the 2nd C.
    Glass lizards about 6 inches long.
    もっと詳しく