Tuscany – Lucca Summer Festival

lucca-summer-festival

In Tuscany several  open-air concerts are waiting for you!

Each summer in Lucca,  in July , the main square being Piazza Napoleone.
This event has attracted big names for such a small, albeit perfectly formed, names as David Bowie, Alanis Morrisette, James Brown, Van Morrison and others…
Piazza Napoleone – Concerts 2009:
July 05. 2009 – Dave Matthews Band
July 08.2009 – Anastacia
July 10.2009 – Biagio Antonacci
July 11.2009 – Lanny Kravitz
July 15.2009 – Enzo Avitabile ( free concert)
July 16.2009 – James Taylor
July 18.2009 – Burt Bacharach
July 23.2009 – Summer giovani (free concert)
July 24.2009 – Morrison/Macdonald
July 25.2009 – Moby
July 26.2009 – John Fogerty

For reservations and more informations visit the official web-site:
LUCCA SUMMER FESTIVAL

Buy tickets on: TICKET ONE
Where to sleep: VILLA AL BOSCHIGLIACASALE SODINIPALAZZO TUCCI

Tuscany, Matilde of Canossa

Matilde di Canossa

Matilde of Canossa,Countess of Tuscany, also called “the Church -builder”, was the most influential woman of her time(1046-1115), and probably of any time. She was the sole survivor of a powerful Longobard family.

At the age of 8 she inherited from her father Maurquis Bonifacio 3 vast amounts of Lombardy and Emilia. Her mother was Beatricie of Lorraine ,daughter  of Frideryk II Duke uof  Upper Lorraine and granddaughter of Herman 2 of Swabia.

Matilde  may have been born in  Mantua ,but since her father had castle and country home at  Vivinaja (now Montecarlo ),this is also considered a likely birthplace for Her. Her fathers home at Vivinaja  was a gathering place for the popes and emperors, in this period when Lucca was the Tuscan capital. Matilde had a aristocratic education; she spoke German, Latin and French. She learned to ride horses and use weapons.

Matildes first  marriage was to a pious man with the uninspiring name of Godfrey the Hunchback, who allegedly died  in the Crusades. Later (in 1090 ,when she was 54), she got married for political motives to a younger man, Welf Guelfo of Bavaria.

It is uncertain whether Matildes one child from her first marriage, Beatricie, survived past childhood. Matilde may have been the last for her line. However, Michelangelo claimed to be her Descendent…..This is hearsay. Matildes most potent legancy was spirityal and political.
Matilde wanted to become a nun to celebrate the mass.

This latter is a radical idea even today! According to legend Pope Gregory told her to build 100 churches and then he would consider her request. (For the of her story ,see Andy*rindls  book A Compation to Lucca.) Instead he gave her authority over all of Tuscany.

She become a military heroine,deeply loyal to the Pope during the Guelply-Ghibelline conflict, when the Holy Roman Emperor wanted to assume spiritual  us  well as earthly authority. He  ally in Lucca was Bishop Anselmo. Togheter they gave enormous wealth to the Roman church.

They tried to push back the churchs enemies, but Bishop Anselmo was forced to retreat to canossa ,near near Reggioin Emilia. In Lucca she commissioned the spectacular Ponte della Maddalena, now more  commonalty known as the Devils  Bridge, acros the Serchio. Anselmo become to Canossa a Benedictine monk  and come  to Canossa as Matilde s spiritual advisor.

He died in 1086 ,ten years after one of historys key events, an event whith sealed Matildes name in history.

In 1077,excommunicated Holy Roman Emperor Henry 4 was advancing agains Pope Gregory,who then staying at matildes castle. But Henry had sufferen huge losses. At the  bottom of the hill leading up to the castle, henry knelt in the snow as a barefoot penintent and begged for-giveness, recognizing Papal authority.

Since  then, the expression “going  to Canossa” has come  to mean eating humble pie. Pirandellos play  Enrico 4, inspired by this historical moment, empha-sizes Henrys madnes, re-interpreting the story in a modern context, with Matilde in the role of Henrys wife.

Dantes Paradiso, on the other hand,finds Matilde singing, gathering flowers and moving like a dancer in the lower circle of Paradise. She helps him undergo the penitential cleansing required after loss of innocence by having him taste  the rivers Lethe and Eunoe (meaning “good memory”in Greek) which flow in opposite direcions from the  Earthly Paradise and represent forgetting and remembering.

After this phase  of death and regeneration ,he can then meet his final Guide and Patron, Beatricie.

Dante leaves behind all the bleak characters from his pass, immortalized and entrapped in Inferno  and  Purgatorio.

Dantes vision of Matilde might  have  influenced Shakespeare in Hamlet. OPhelia  tries to lead Hamlet out of his  madness  with her  innocence and love ,but he remains  fixated on avenging  his fathers ghost. Hamlets words recall historical Matildes wish: “Get thee to a nunnery” — though he adds “why wouldest  thou be a breeder of sinners.?” Later  Queen Gertrude rapport’s Ophelia, enveloped in Hamlets madness, dies as a young virgin. Matilde, one of Italys most powerful and evocative woman lives on the legend and literature. She died  at the age of 69 years, after a long and  fascinating  life.

Tuscan Bakery for Sale in Vorno

Woooow! Are you thinking to change your life style? Great idea for you!
Successful long running bakery situated in Vorno (Ok… Lucca, Tuscany). Currently trading 5 1/2 days a week, the business hours could be extended to increase turnover. The business retails a delicious selection of bakery products: bread, rolls, cakes & buns and is known for its famous pies & pastries. The business sells wholesale products to families, schools, clubs and the local shire council and with only limited competition in the area. This presents as an excellent opportunity for a new owner to change his life style and to take this business to the next level enjoying this little village called Vorno. So think about and let me know…and be in touch!

Tuscany, Ugolino – a Gruesome Tale

In Lucca it’s a common joke that the mountains between Lucca and pisa keep the people from having to see each other. A tunnel now leads to the Pisa side but the ideological separation is still felt by football fans, graffiti artists and ordinary citizens. In Lucca e read Dante’s story about Count Ugolino della Gherardesca as the potrait of a power-hungry Pisan at his worst. Dante froze Ugolino within the deepest circle of Inferno because he betrayed his homeland and his political party.
In Italy, where peope identify with their hometown very strongly, this story’s theme is not at all archaic.
According to popular legend, Ugolino cannibalized his children.
Archbishop Ruggieri locked the father and sons in the Torre della Muda ( forever after known as Famine Tower ), leaving them to starve to death.
Part of the tower still stands on the northen side of Piazza dei Cavalieri. This is one of Pisa’s most beautiful piazzas and site of Pisa University’s Scuola Normale, where the brightest students are admitted to study.
A corner of the original tower is within Palazzo dell’ Orologio and a plaque on the wall refers to Ugolino. However, scientific literalism demolished the legend in 2002.
A Pisan paleoanthropologist excavated Ugolino’s body and examined some DNA from his ribs which showed he had not eaten meat ( let alone human flesh ) before dying. However, ” truth ” should never get in the way of a good story from history…
Ugolino belonged to an important Ghibelline family. The Ghibellines supported Papal authority, unlike the Guelph city-states Florence and Genoa which favored more local control.
Ugolino was both Podestà ( supreme civil authority ) and Ghibelline leader. During Pisa’s battles with Genoa and other Guelph states, Ugolino aligned with Giovanni Visconti, a Guelph.
The alliance was discovered, Ugolino imprisoned and Visconti exiled.
With the help of Florence and Lucca, however, Ugolino escaped and become a Guelph, again betraying the Ghibellines! In 1284, he returned as head of a Pisan fleet. He again betrayed his countrymen when they were at war with Genoa, feigning surrender and causing their defeat.
When Ugolino returned to power, he gave away Pisan castles to Lucca and Florence as a political expedient. Ghibelline fortunes improved, and Ugolino, then a Guelph, allied with the Ghibelline Archbishop Ruggieri degli Ubaldini. Ugolino exiled his Guelph grandson in 1288 and consolidated his relationship with Ruggieri. Soon Ruggieri betrayed Ugolino by inciting the public against him and then ordering the imprisonment of Ugolino, his two sons and two grandsons.
Finally the Archbishop threw away the key and left him and his children to starve to death.
In Canto XXXIII, Dante has Ugolino gnawing on the Archbishop’s head for all eternity. ” You are to know I was Count Ugolino, and this one here, Archbidshop Ruggieri; and now I’ll tell you why I am his neighbor.” For Dante, the concept of neighbor becomes an unholy alliance in the depth of Inferno!
With ambiguous words, Dante ha Ugolino say, ” After they were dead, I called them for two days; then fasting had more force than grief.”
This line may be interpreted in two ways: either Ugolino devoured his offspring’s corpses after being driven mad with hunger, or starvation killed him before he died of grief.
The more ghastly interpretation is more popular and Ugolino was sometimes known as the ” Cannibal Count “. The corpses were buried in Pisa at in the Church of San Francesco.
For Dante, however, eating one’s children may have served an anagogical ( religiously – significant ) purpose.
All the happenings in the Inferno are reverse-images of happenings in Paradiso. The Eucharist ( celebration of the Mass ) thus becomes a horrific reverse Eucharist in the Ugolino scene.
Soon we will visit also Dante’s Paradiso to present a more positive character – Matilde the Church-Builder, Contessa of Tuscany, famous in Lucca for having built the Ponte della Maddalena ( also know as the Devil’s Bridge ) during the Middle Ages.