Vino Con Vista Italy Travel Guides and Events

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Showing posts with label Shrove Tuesday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shrove Tuesday. Show all posts

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Events and Festivals in Italy (Winter Season)

English: Piazza Navona, Rome Français : La pla...Image via WikipediaEvents and Festivals in Italy (Winter Season)
By Kristie Haller


WINTER
There are fairs, markets, and religious events up and down the country at this time of year. Neapolitan Christmas cribs are famous and nearly every church has one. The Christmas holiday itself is low key; more is made of other religious events such as the liquefaction of San Gennaro's blood in Naples and the Carnevale in Venice.

Monday, November 28, 2011

I Love Touring Italy - Sardinia Carnevale Season

Coat of arms of Tempio PausaniaImage via Wikipedia
The island of Sardinia to the west of the Italian mainland (it's southwest of Rome) is among the most traditional regions of Italy and in fact of all Europe. So it's no surprise that this lovely region boasts a wide variety of spectacular Carnevales. Let's look at a few of them remembering that "once a year, you're allowed to go crazy" or as they said in Latin semel in anno licet insanire.


Friday, February 18, 2011

I Love Italian Travel - Umbria Carnevale Season

Spoleto: Albornozian Castle and Ponte delle TorriImage via Wikipedia
The city of Sant'Eraclio, Umbria is situated approximately some 25 miles (40 kilometers) southeast of the regional capital, Perugia. Its Carnevale was originated back in 1542 by the Olivetani friars of Mormonzone, who lived in a nearby convent that has long been abandoned. These forward-looking friars felt that the local populace deserved their own merry-making on the streets to balance the local gentry's exclusive palace parties. Good for them! Originally Sant'Eraclio Carnevale meant parades of oxen-drawn carts festooned with branches and flowers, and the people dancing and singing to the music of flutes and trumpets played by men and women in the traveling carts. But during the Seventeenth Century the Church decried this Carnevale as sinful and banned it. I have the impression that the local gentry's exclusive palace parties were not banned. Approximately a century later Carnevale was allowed to resume, but in this region only in Sant'Eraclio. Carnivale continued here without interruption until the Second World War.