Archive for December, 2007



07
Dec

Photo Friday: The Golden Light of Rome

The Cloaca Maxima.  Photograph by Susan Sanders

We take a break from our month-long series of posts on the Roman Holidays to enjoy the golden light of Rome. Each fall, when days grow shorter and the temperatures start to dip, Rome’s light changes drastically as the harsh flat light of summer gives way to golden luminescence.

Rome is famous for that soft golden light and the photograph above makes it easy to see why. Taken earlier this week on a late afternoon, the photo by Susan Sanders showcases depicts the Tiber River, the Ponte Palatino, and the huge arched vault that frames the gaping mouth of the city’s oldest drain, the Cloaca Maxima.

For enjoy more of Susan’s photographs of Rome, visit her Rome With a View blog.

06
Dec

Roman Holidays: Piazza Navona’s Christmas Fair Revisited

Presepe Figures at the Christmas Fair in Rome's Piazza Navona

Today we offer readers a few more views of the wonderful presepe figures available at the annual Christmas fair at Piazza Navona. Though here at the Eternally Cool compound we’re partial to the Roman soliders (see above) and those delightful sheep that are accompanying them through the countryside (also above), this year we’ve gone all-Italian in our acquisitions and have plundered the presepe-selling stalls in search of pasta-easters and wine merchants to add to our ever-growing collection.

Presepe Figures at the Christmas Fair in Rome's Piazza Navona

That said, it was hard to pass up the line-up of swooning kings and devoted Virgins (see above) - though, really, how many kings can one add to a nativity scene. And, the passionate bagpipe players and pirouetting shepherds clad in form-fitting fur pants were also calling our names (see below), though we’ve managed to resist their pleas for a new home thus far.

Presepe Figures at the Christmas Fair in Rome's Piazza Navona

05
Dec

Cell Phone Saints

Cell Phone Saints

The Vatican is none too happy about a new initiative to provide virtual holy cards of Italy’s most beloved saints via cell phones, dismissing the project as tacky and sacrilegious.

Francesco Italia and Barbara Labate, founders of a Milanese company called MacKay & Sisters, came up with the idea of providing images of saints and thematic prayers to subscribers willing to pay 3 euro for the convenience of keeping their patron protectors in their pockets. They liken the digital images to the paper holy cards that millions of Italians carry in their wallets, purses, cars, and luggage.

“We found a need and filled it,” said Barbara Labate. “We are merely catching up with the times. I think this will appeal to young people as well as grandmothers.”

The company started the service with 15 saints on offer and Labate said the hallowed catalogue will grow despite Vatican complaints.

“This is in really bad taste,” Bishop Lucio Soravito De Franceschi, a member of the Italian bishops conference committee for doctrinal matters, told the Turin newspaper La Stampa. “It is a distortion of sacred things … selling ‘santini‘ for cell phones is horrifying,” he said.

But Labate, who is Sicilian and recalls how her mother gave her a “santino” to put in her luggage when she traveled, rejected the criticism.

“We are simply offering a service to the faithful. We are doing this with the maximum respect, dignity and professionalism for believers,” she said.

So, how to get your digital saint? Send an sms that says “SANTO” to 482224. You’ll be charged three euro and inreturn you’ll receive an image of your chosen saint and a thematic prayer related to your chosen protector, whether Padre Pio, the Virgin Mary, Saint Michael the Archangel, Pope John Paul II, or Jesus himself.

For further information, visit the Santi Protettori website.

Cell Phone Saints

05
Dec

Roman Holidays: The Christmas Fair in Piazza Navona

Presepe Figures at the Christmas Fair in Rome's Piazza Navona

A few days ago we blogged about the Italian presepe tradition, mentioning the fact that such nativity scenes are rarely limited to the standard cast of characters, ie Jesus, Mary, and Joseph with the shepherds, wisemen, and angels. Instead, creators of Italian presepe strive to create scenes that include the entire community, from wood-choppers to dancers, from wine-drinkers to watermelon-vendors, from butchers to bakers, and from pizza-makers to pretzel-sellers.

Presepe Figures at the Christmas Fair in Rome's Piazza Navona

We also mentioned that there’s a vast array of such figurines for sale at the annual Christmas Fair in Piazza Navona (which will run through 6 January) and so today we bring you some holiday-spirit-inducing images of these adorable figurines who always seem so caught up in the wonderful business of everyday life in Italy.

Presepe Figures at the Christmas Fair in Rome's Piazza Navona

04
Dec

Roman Holidays: Be-Witched or Befana?

Befana at the Piazza Navona Christmas Market, Rome

Rome’s annual Christmas Fair - held in Piazza Navona - is just beginning.  The majestic baroque fountains of the piazza are filled with stalls selling presepe figures (many straight from presepe headquarters in Naples), Christmas candy, ornaments, toys, puppets, and more.  Flying about amidst the brightly lit stalls are thousands of Befane or witch-like women riding and holding brooms.  What are these witchy women doing amongst all the angels, sheep, and twinkling stars?  They’re there because Italian tradition says that Christmas gifts don’t come from Santa, but that they’re delivered by a witch-like housewife named La Befana.

The legend says that on the evening that Jesus was born, the Wisemen paid a visit to Befana’s house on their journey to see the newborn child. They asked La Befana to join them in their quest, but she refused their offer, claiming that her household chores were just too pressing and couldn’t be ignored.

Later, the same evening, a shepherd stopped by her cottage and likewise invited her to join him in going to see the child. Again she refused.

When night fell, La Befana was amazed to see a great light in the sky. She realized that she’d made a terrible error in not joining the wisemen and the shepherd, and so she gathered up some toys that had belonged to her own child, who, sadly, had died. She rushed out of the house to find the wisemen and the shepherd - in a such a hurry that she took her broom with her!

Thus far, her efforts have been fruitless. Poor Befana hasn’t managed to find the wisemen, the shepherd, or Baby Jesus, but each year she continues her search, giving gifts to the children she encounters along the way – toys for the good and coal, carbone, for the bad.

Befana at the Piazza Navona Christmas Market, Rome

02
Dec

Roman Holidays: No Room at the Inn

Alessi's Nativity Scene

The most common Christmas decoration in Italy is the presepe or the nativity scene. These often elaborate scenes are found in private homes, in every church, and in piazzas throughout the boot-shaped peninsula.

Some believe that the tradition of creating Nativity scenes originated with St. Francis of Assisi in 1223, when he constructed a nativity scene out of straw in a cave in Greccio in central Italy and used the scene as the site of his Christmas Eve mass.

Carving figurines for Italian nativity scenes started in the 13th century and it’s an art that’s still popular, especially in Naples, where presepe aren’t limited to the usual cast of characters, but include such everyday figures as pizza-makers, watermelon-sellers, fish mongers, blacksmiths, and even Roman soldiers.

We’ll certainly be talking about more of these scenes over the course of the next month (and paying a visit to Rome’s Christmas Fair in Piazza Navona which is full of vendors selling a vast variety of presepe figures), but for today we turn to a newly-released contemporary version of the Italian presepe.

Designed by Giacon Massimo for Alessi (and available for purchase in the new A-shop) the presepe contains five porcelain figures that can be arranged however you like. In a a playful and wintry twist on the traditional story, the birth of Jesus takes place in an igloo (still no room at the inn, we’re guessing).




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