Archive for November, 2007



20
Nov

Got Milk?

La Lupa, the She-Wolf of Rome

We interrupt our Text & the City week to bring you an exciting announcement:

In a press conference held on the Palatine Hill today, Francesco Rutelli, Minister of Culture, has announced the discovery of the Lupercal, the cave in which Romulus and Remus were suckled by the She-Wolf after she rescued them from the banks of the Tiber River.

Long known to be near the House of Augustus on the Palatine, the Lupercal was discovered while archaeologists were drilling to survey the foundations of the first Emperor’s home. Irene Iacopi, a superintendent of archaeology, said they were surprised to discover the site:

We knew from ancient reports that the Lupercal shouldn’t be far from the Emperor’s palace, but we didn’t expect to find it. It was a lucky surprise.

We didn’t enter the cave but took some photos with a probe. They show a richly decorated vault encrusted with mosaics and seashells, too rich to be part of a home.

The discovery of the site is a major find that may shed light on the story of Rome’s foundation. According to legend, the city was founded by twins, Romulus and Remus, who were the sons of the war god, Mars, and of Rhea Silvia, a princess descended from the Trojan warrior Aeneas. As newborns, the babies were abandoned in a basket on the banks of the Tiber River, where they were discovered by the She-Wolf who took them to her cave and suckled them alongside her own pups. Eventually Romulus and Remus were found by Faustulus, a shepherd, who raised them to adulthood.

Lupercal in Rome

As young men, Romulus and Remus decided to found a city on the site where their lives had been miraculously saved by the She-Wolf, but in the process they quarreled about which of them would lead the new city. They looked to the gods to settle the dispute, and the immortals designated Romulus as city founder. He undertook the rituals necessary to create a city on April 21st, 753 BC, and on the same day killed his brother Remus for violating the new city’s sacred boundary.

Whether or not the Romulus and Remus story is a true one is a hotly debated issue. In recent years, archaeologist Andrea Carandini has claimed to find evidence that supports this fantastic story, though the debate remains open and many scholars still believe that Romulus and Remus were legendary characters.

Whether or not Romulus and Remus ever existed, and whether or not their lives were saved by a She-Wolf, the ancient Romans found them important enough to commemorate their by maintaining monuments that honored their place in the city’s earliest history.

Ancient tourists following the “Romulean Trail” could visit the Ficus Ruminalis, a fig tree growing alongside the Tiber and marked the place where Romulus and Remus were abandoned. Climbing up the nearby Palatine Hill, they could pay homage to their city founder with a visit to the Hut of Romulus, the thatch and straw hut in which the first citizen was said to have lived. Last but not least, those interested in Rome’s earliest history could visit the Lupercal, the richly decorated cave in which it was believed that the babies lived with La Lupa before being discovered by the shepherd Faustulus.

It is that cave which archaeologists believe they have discovered in a never before excavated area between the Temple of Apollo Palatinus and the Church of Sant’Anastasia on the Palatine. The newly-discovered Lupercal appears to comprise a natural grotto enlarged by construction to give it the form of a nymphaeum measuring some 9 meters tall and some 7.5 meters in diameter. Photos (see above and below) taken by means of a probe sent into the chamber show that the ceiling vault is elaborately decorated with colored marbles and features a large which eagle at its center.

Lupercal in Rome

20
Nov

Text & the City: In the English Ghetto

John Keasts & the Keats-Shelley House in Rome

Today we continue our week-long Text & the City series with a visit to the Keats-Shelley House:

In the era of the Grand Tour, the now-swanky neighborhood around the Spanish Steps was known as the English Ghetto, for it was there that English-speaking travelers and expatriates made their homes. Among those resident in the area were a large number of literary greats whose presence in the city is now attested by marble plaques hanging on the sides of buildings that say things like, “Here the Poet Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote his play The Cenci.

In residence in Rome at the same time as the illustrious Percy Shelley was the poet John Keats, whose tenure in Eternal City proved to be a very short one. Suffering from consumption, Keats and his friend Joseph Severn traveled from England to Rome in search of a dry and warm climate in the latter part of 1820. By the time they arrived in the Eterna, Keats’ illness was quite advanced and the young poet was scarcely able to enjoy the Romantic pleasures of Rome.

The sickly Keats and his friend Severn set up housekeeping in a majestically-placed but modest pensione. They had a bedroom that looked out at the Spanish Steps and a living room that faced Piazza di Spagna. As there were not kitchen facilities, meals were brought in by local restaurants.

Keats died in that pensione Rome in February of 1821 - he was neither wealthy nor well-known at the time. And though his possessions and furniture were burned after his death in 1821 (Roman law required this following death by a disease like tuberculosis), the building that housed Keats’ rooms was purchased by the Keats-Shelley Memorial Association and restored in the early twentieth century (click here to read how that series of events came about). It now houses a museum and one of the finest libraries of Romantic literature in the world.

Now many thousands of literature lovers and curious tourists make pilgrimages to the Keats-Shelley House each year. On view in the museum is an extensive collection of paintings, objects, and manuscripts celebrating the lives of Keats, Shelley and Byron, as well as locks of Milton and Elizabeth Barrett’s hair, a manuscript and poem by Oscar Wilde, and splendidly bound first editions and letters by Wordsworth, Robert Browning, Joseph Severn, Charles and Mary Cowden-Clarke.

You can learn more about the Keats-Shelley House by visiting their website, where you can take a virtual tour. Or, if you’re headed to Rome and want to do as the poets by immersing yourself in the literary scene, consider renting the first-floor apartment available in the Keats-Shelley House. It’s available for short-term rentals ranging in length form 3 nights to 6 months, is suitable for one person or a couple, and has an outside terrace. Further information available at info@keats-shelley-house.org

19
Nov

Text & the City: Writing Rome - The Romance of Ruins

John Keats, Henry James, Lord Byron

Fall has arrived and there’s no better time to be in Rome! The crisp air and the golden light of Rome of this season have inspired many writers to wax eloquently upon the beauty of the Eternal City. Visiting Rome in the nineteenth century, the American writer Henry James extolled the extraordinary quality of Rome’s atmosphere in Italian Days:

The aesthetic is so intense that you feel you should live on the taste of it, should extract the nutritive essence of the atmosphere. For positively it’s such an atmosphere! The weather is perfect, the sky as blue as the most exploded tradition fames it, the whole air glowing and throbbing with lovely color….

Of course, Henry James is just one of many American and British writers who found their muse in Rome. For centuries, writers and travelers have been coming to the Eternal City to admire its layers of history, to revel in the romance of its ruins, and to soothe their souls as they traverse the layers of time.

Here at e-Cool, we’re a bit bookish, and so we’ve decided to indulge our passion by pursuing a Text & the Eternal City theme over the course of the next week. We’ll be focusing our posts on writers and their literary achievements, and we hope that you’ll find these posts (and the books they introduce) a way to enjoy Rome even if you’re not here at the moment. We’ll aim to discuss literature inspired by the Eterna, past and present, and to pay homage to sites associated with Rome’s literary heritage.

Today, we begin in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a period in which English-speaking tourists flooded Rome as part of the Grand Tour phenomena. Among the city’s visitors were writers like Lord Byron. Percy Bysshe Shelley, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry James, Mark Twain, Edith Wharton, Oscar Wilde, who sought to convey the experience of the Eternal City in travel journals, poetry, and fiction.

The British Romantic Poet, Lord Byron, started a fad in the early nineteenth century when he described a nocturnal foray into the Colosseum. In his poem, Manfred, Byron penned a celebrated description of the Roman arena as seen under a brightly-lit moon. From this point on, nighttime visits to the Colosseum became de rigeur for nineteenth-century travelers, many of whom had committed Byron’s lines to memory:

When I was wandering, - upon such a night
I stood within the Coliseum’s wall,
Midst the chief relics of almighty Rome!
The trees which grew along the broken arches
Waved dark in the blue midnight, and the stars
Shone through the rents of ruin; from afar
The watchdog bay’d beyond the Tiber; and
More near from out the Caesars’ palace came
The owl’s long cry…
Ivy usurps the laurel’s place of growth;-
But the gladiators’ bloody Circus stands,
A noble wreck in ruinous perfection!

Byron’s praise for the Colosseum became part of the myth of Rome. The experience of visiting the arena at night was repeatedly incorporated into Rome’s literary tradition. Most famous of late night visitors to the Colosseum is probably Daisy Miller, a character penned by Henry James in his story of the same name. A spunky and impetuous American girl who refused to conform to European social conventions or to listen to practical advice, Daisy risked all to experience the romance and mystique of the Colosseum at night. Her midnight rendezvous with the colossal ruin cost her life, for in the arena she contracted Roman Fever. She died shortly thereafter and James laid his fictional character to rest in Rome’s idyllic Protestant Cemetery.

18
Nov

Fat David

Ad for the German Olympic Committee

In keeping with our recent focus on all things Florentine (see this week’s Photo Saturday entry), we offer you Fat David, an image from an advertising campaign created for the German Olympic Sport Committee.

Once ultra-buff, David has become beefy from too many years of standing in one place. Abraham Lincoln, too, has suffered the same fate after so many years sitting in that oh-so-classical pose.

The message? “If you don’t move, you get fat.”

Advertising Agency: Scholz & Friends, Hamburg, Germany
Creative Director: Gunnar Löser
Art Director: Stefan Schömbs
Copywriter: Robert Herter
Illustrator: Torsten Lass
Other additional credits: Leonie Ballach

17
Nov

Photo Saturday: Homeland Security

Lion & the David

This week’s Photo Friday becomes a Photo Saturday. This week’s submission by photographer Susan Sanders was delayed - yet inspired - by a short trip to Florence. Thus, today we get an unusual glimpse of that city’s Renaissance security force, an indispensable factor in the success of the Florentine Republic.

The force comprises David, the teen hero of Biblical fame, who has been winning the hearts and minds of Florentine visitors and residents alike for centuries, as well as a 16th-century lion which originally adorned the Villa Medici in Rome, but moved to Florence in an unusual relocation program, when he accepted a new position (with immunity) as sentry to the Loggia dei Lanzi in 1787.

To see more photos by Susan, visit her photo blog: Rome With A View.

13
Nov

All I Want For Christmas…Is My Own Colosseum

Playmobil's Romans

Anyone who’s over four years old and isn’t getting Playmobil’s Roman Arena (see top left photo) for Christmas is going to want to throw Santa Claus to the lions. Having taken Germany by storm in 2006, the Playmobil Romans are invading American shores just in time for the 2007 holidays.

The most fantastic of the Roman toys available is the extra-large Colosseum set (top, left). With a diameter of about three feet, the assembly-needed (but it’s easy) plastic arena comes with several tiers of seating, animal holding pens, trap doors, and its own marble statues! Gladiator figures are included and can be decked out in a variety of arms and armor (and you can buy extra gladiators if you want to throw an especially impressive set of games). There are fierce wild animals and cages in which to keep them, a two-horsed chariot, and a stately emperor and empress whose job it is to preside over the festivities.

Playmobil's Romans

Of course, any aficionado of ancient Roman culture knows that gladiatorial games were often thrown to celebrate such occasions as the winning of a war. Thus, kids are also going to be clamoring for other toys in the Playmobil Roman series so that they can stage their own ancient battle and practice the all-important skills needed to build an empire and rule the world.

Kids will be eager to take full charge of battle strategy from the Commander’s Tent (top right photo), sending a Warrior’s Ship (above, left) out to patrol the seas and ordering the troops to siege the enemy with a firing catapult (above, right).

Playmobil's Romans

A legion of Roman warriors - bearing a standard that reads SPQR - will aid in the efforts (above, left), while a battle tower (below, left) will certainly make it easier to march against fierce enemy troops.

And, to round out a day of ancient fun, it’s likely that every young Romanist will demand a four-horse chariot (above, right), for that’s the vehicle in which victorious Roman generals rode during the elaborate triumphal processions staged to celebrate their military successes, before donning civilian togs and heading to a seaside villa for a bit of honeyed wine.

Pla

11
Nov

Campari Tales

Campari Tales
American actress Eva Mendes is the star of Campari’s 2008 calendar, Campari Tales, a limited-distribution publication in which traditional fairy tales become glamorous adult stories. 

In shooting the photos for the calendar, photographer Marino Parisotto sought to recreate myth and redefine fairytales so that their fragile female protagonists are transformed into figures of strength and power represented by Mendes.

The fairytales represented are Little Red Riding Hood, Thumbelina, The Little Mermaid, Snow White, Puss in Boots, Cinderella, Aladdin, Alice in Wonderland, Beauty & The Beast, Pinocchio, The Little Match Girl, and Sleeping Beauty.

Campari Tales

“The Campari Calendar has been a truly unique experience,” said Eva Mendes. “I had never posed for a calendar before and I was thrilled that Campari has given me the opportunity to interpret these wonderful stories… who wouldn’t want to live a fairytale even if for a short while?”.

The 2008 edition will have a limited print run of 9,999 copies which will be distributed internationally.

Campari Tales

10
Nov

Thick & Crusty

The Colosseum made out of pizza dough

Via Daily Mail:

Prudence Emma Staite is an experimental food artist whose new exhibit at the Museum of London features some of Rome’s most famous people and places made out of pizza dough!

Using enough dough dough to make 500 pizzas (that’s about a third of a ton if you’re wondering), she’s crafted thick-crust models of the Colosseum, the Spanish Steps, and Pope Benedict XVI.

Her exhibit will be on display until November 13.

Pope Benedict XVI made out of pizza dough

09
Nov

Photo Friday: Pantheon Peace

Pantheon Peace.  A photo by Susan Sanders in Rome.

As this Photo Friday rolls around, the world news seems as dismal as ever and we find ourselves wishing for a day or two of peace.  In keeping with that spirit, Susan Sanders offers us a hopeful photo that she calls “Pantheon Peace.”  The photo depicts a young woman standing in the perfect circle of light created by the oculus in the dome of Rome’s Pantheon.  Seemingly inspired by the ethereal illumination, she flashes the peace symbol.

For more of Susan’s stunning Rome photos, visit her Rome With A View photo blog.

08
Nov

Roberto Cavalli for H&M

Roberto Cavalli for H&M

Starting today, Italian design icon Roberto Cavalli invites H&M customers all over the world to his very own exclusive fashion world. Cavalli has created ladies’ and men’s collection for glamorous everyday or party. The collection, with 20 men’s and 25 ladies’ pieces including underwear and matching accessories, is all about Roberto Cavalli’s expressive and sensual signature style.

The Roberto Cavalli at H&M collection will be available in around 200 selected H&M stores worldwide. A selection of the collection will also be available at www.hm.com in the Nordic countries, Germany, Austria and the Netherlands.

Leopard and zebra is a significant theme in the women’s collection, and features on dresses, tops, coats and lingerie. A tailored jacket is teamed with slim slacks or shorts. A leather jacket is decorated with fringes and laces and a fake-fur jacket has eyelets and studs. An elegant trench coat has piping and metallic studs. A heavily embellished jacket adds instant glamour to tight fitting or wide leg jeans. A leopard-print or black corset top look dazzling on bare skin for evening or over a T-shirt for day, and there are several blouses with animal prints, ruffles and bows. Knitwear consists of a leopard-print or black oversized cardigan and a tank mini dress with ruffles. For evening or cocktail wear: a sequined mini dress, a chiffon baby doll dress in zebra stripe or leopard print, a long metallic pleated halter dress and a long animal print dress.

Lingerie includes leopard-prints and black lace and the accessories such as bone and pearl pendants, a golden cuff bracelet and a ring, a belt and a wallet as well as gold sandals and Mary Jane shoes in a leopard print.

Menswear by Roberto Cavalli at H&M is sharply tailored and masculine. There’s a brown and a black leather jacket, a midnight blue blazer teamed with slim fit trousers or jeans in blue or black, a waistcoat, an elegant black tuxedo, a perfect trench coat and a shawl-collared cardigan. Shirts are black or white and T-shirts are long- or short sleeved with silk front or side panels. Underwear includes both jersey and woven Y-fronts and boxer shorts. Accessories include a scarf, a slim tie, a classic belt, a weekend bag, a wallet and shoes and boots. There is also an extensive range of jewelery including a bracelet, cufflinks, necklaces, a pin and a key holder.

Best of all, the collection comes at a price that’s easy on the pocketbook.  The stunning leopard dress shown above goes for a mere 149 euro.