Archive for the 'Everything Else' Category



12
Jul

Break Out the Togas! It’s Caesar’s Birthday!

Caesar Costumes

Break out the togas, folks! It’s Julius Caesar’s birthday! On the official calendar of ancient Rome, the old man turns 2018 today!

(If, that is, you believe that he was born in 100 BC. Others, who maintain that he was born in 102 BC, will be celebrating his 2020th birthday today. Whatever.)

It’s going to be a year of Caesarian fun here in Rome, as a huge exhibition dedicated solely to Caesar will be opening in the Cloister of Bramante on 24 October and will remain on exhibit until 5 April 2009.

But, here at the eCool Compound we just can’t wait to Caesar the Day, so we’re planning a imperial-scale birthday party and dictating that our guests show up in ancient Roman garb. Of course, that means we’d better have some amazing ancient threads ourselves, so we’ve spent a bit of time investigating the costumes for sale online and thought we’d share the results with you, our faithful readers.

Caesar Wigs & Cleopatra Hair

Though we’ve browsed through costume sites before, we’ll readily admit that never before have we so delved deeply into the Costume Craze website, which offers a vast assortment of ancient Roman outfits and accessories.

In the category of Julius Caesar (see top photo), we show you just a few of the possibilities, including (from left to right) a Plus Size Julius Caesar costume ($36.95), the Caesar-as-Orator outfit which is based on a look sported by Caesar in HBO’s ROME series and includes some totally sexy wrist cuffs ($51.95), an adult Julius Caesar costume ($36.95), and the Deluxe Julius Caesar Look ($129.95). Children’s sizes are also available.

If you’re not willing to go all out and have your hair cut in the Caesarian fringe, you might also want to invest in the Caesar wig (above), which comes in both black and brown (what color was his hair anyway?) and will run you an additional $17.95.

And for the women? Costume Craze carries a Wife of Caesar outfit that’s a bit too staid and stiff for our taste, so we’ve concentrated our energies on the Cleopatra costumes. If you’re already in possession of an elegant Egyptian evening gown, then you might want to invest in the headdress alone (above). There’s a whole variety of Cleopatra coiffures available on Costume Craze. The extra-regal Asp Beaded Headdress we show you above runs a mere $17.95, while the more generic and everyday Mesh Cleopatra Costume Headdress is $19.95.

Need the whole look? In this department too, Costume Craze has a great deal of choice, from the children’s Cleo costume to the Plus Size Queen of the Nile outfit. We show you four of our favorites below, from left to right: the Adult Super Deluxe Cleopatra Costume ($129.95), the Cleopatra Queen of the Nile Outfit ($41.95), the Adult Cleopatra Costume ($31.95), and best of all, the Adult Sexy Cleopatra Costume ($39.95).

Cleopatra Costumes

11
Jul

Blowout Sale on Medieval Popes

Pope Innocent III Action Figure

Via Quid Plura, we’ve discovered that Pope Innocent III action figures are on sale at Archie McPhee for the entirely reasonable price of 2 for $4.99!

Introduce this Pope to your other action figures and watch the spiritual sparks fly!

Armed with his formidable power of excommunication and an intimidating scroll inscribed with Latin text, this 6″ tall, hard plastic model of the 176th Pope will soon have all your other action figures lining up for confession.

Read the back of the illustrated blistercard and you’ll find that Pope Innocent III (who reigned from 1198-1216) was a good guy in all respects. He was a patron of the arts, cared about orphans, built a hospital and reunified the Papal States!

Comes with removable fancy Pope hat. (eCool Disclaimer: Beware of smiting!)

They’re sure to blow out of the store at this price and it’s hard to imagine they’ll be restocking. So click here to get yours now!

06
Jul

Vaffancola

Vaffancola, the New Italian Drink

This morning’s online edition of La Repubblica brings the humorous announcement of a new soft drink that’s growing in popularity in the Eternal City. Called Vaffancola and flavored with coconut (the same small producer makes a classic cola version and one called “black” with licorice flavor added), we wonder if the drink is an homage to Beppe Grillo and his famous V-Days?

If you’ve not been keeping up with Italy’s numerous protests and political problems over the past year or so, here’s what you need to know to understand the relationship between this strangely named soda and Beppe Grillo:  Grillo, an Italian activist, comedian, and actor,  has declared war on crooked politics in Italy.   As part of his spirited protest against corruption in Italian society, he writes one of the world’s most read blogs (in which he’s dubbed Berlusconi “the psycho-dwarf”) and last year, he declared the 8th of September to be a new unofficial Italian holiday called V-Day (Vaffanculo or “F*ck Off” Day), motivating some two million people in two hundred and twenty cities across Italy (and many abroad) to celebrate V-Day as an unofficial new national holiday.

Grillo’s purpose in staging the highly successful V-Day event was that of persuading Italians to sign a petition calling for the introduction of a Bill of Popular Initiative to remove members of the Italian Parliament who have criminal convictions of any kind from their office. (At present there are twenty-four convicted criminals currently serving as senators and representatives in the Italian parliament, or as Italian representatives in the European Parliament).

If you’re interested, it’s well worth reading Tom Mueller’s “Letter from Italy,” published in the New Yorker in Feburary 2008. Mueller calls Grillo “a distinctly Italian combination of Michael Moore and Stephen Colbert.” And, on these hot summer days in Rome, you’ll want to keep your eye out for a refreshing Vaffancola.

Photos by Paulo Siqueira/Franceschi .

Vaffancola Soda

10
Jun

do-it-yourself Football Fans

DIY Football Fans by Samsung

If you’re reading this blog, there’s a good chance you’re supporting Italy in the Euro 2008 football championships–despite their brutal defeat by the Dutch last night. Maybe you’ve even dashed off to your local Standa to acquire Azzuri t-shirts and a variety of red, white, and green wigs (they come in both the curly- and straight-haired models).

Despite such full-blown enthusiasm, you may be finding that it’s just not as fun cheering for the Italians from your living room. You may be missing the experience of sitting jam-packed without thousands of other rabid football fans in the stadium at the Foro Italico. We certainly are!

If that’s the case, you’ll want to get busy creating Samsung’s DIY Office Toy Supporters. Download their four enthusiastic football fans, cut them out, and assemble them, and you’ll have a crowd of your own! Rino, Lillo, Igor, and Lina are currently on offer, but there’s more to come!

DIY Footbal Fans by Samsun

27
May

The Girandola That Happened Early

The Girandola at Castel Sant'Angelo

Great excitement spread through the worldwide press last week when the city of Rome announced that a fireworks display designed by Michelangelo would be staged at 10:30pm on Saturday 24 May in commemoration of the 500th anniversary of Michelangelo’s work on the Sistine Chapel Ceiling (Michelangelo signed the contract that bound him to paint the Sistine Ceiling on May 10, 1508).

The plan–as reported by websites and newspapers worldwide–was to reproduce Michelangelo’s Girandola, an elaborate fireworks display created by the artist for Pope Julius II, which was first staged from the heights of Castel Sant’Angelo in the early 16th century and repeated annually until 1834.

As many of our readers might imagine, we at the eCool Compound were extremely excited about the recreation of the Girandola. We did a bit of research. We discovered the color-washed etchings of the event (above) created by Francesco Piranesi and Louis-Jean Desprez in the 1780s (now in the New York Public Library and the Metropolitan Museum of Art), and we cleared our Saturday evening calendars in preparation for a fireworks extravaganza.

We were excited to see how Michelangelo’s fireworks display would differ from the modern fireworks that so often light up the Roman sky at night. And we were interested to hear that an historic fireworks expert, Giuseppe Passeri, had spent years studying ancient documents and finding ways to reproduce the fireworks-making materials of Michelangelo’s era.

In article after article, Passeri explained that unlike modern firework shows, the Girandola used few explosives and focused on transparency and color definition:

The Girandola was an unmistakably baroque event, an astounding play of colors wedded to its surroundings. It was a kind of elaborate game, like a fountain transformed into fire.

Yes! This would be interesting! And it would be made even more so by the fact that Renaissance fireworks production techniques were vastly different from modern ones, using entirely natural materials and relying heavily on the location to enhance the effect. According to Passeri, his team would do its best to reproduce the original shape of Michelangelo’s fireworks, which were meant to mimic a volcanic eruption on the island of Stromboli, off the coast of Sicily.

And so, on Saturday evening, we took ourselves to Castel Sant’Angelo. We arrived about 10:20pm and found an excellent vantage point on a nearby bridge. We stood there amongst Romans, tourists, and any number of lederhausen-clad oom-pah-pah bands (we can’t explain their enthusiasm for the event). We waited. And we waited. And we waited some more. But the Girandola never happened.

ADDENDUM:  Since we first published this article some days ago, Jennifer and Hande, two intrepid residents of Rome, have written to tell us that Girandola DID take place.  Despite being scheduled for 10:30pm, the fireworks actually went off early, about 9:45 or 10:00pm.  We must not have been the only ones foiled in our efforts to photograph the event, for no images have appeared in the press.

Some information via ANSA

14
May

Ecco Italy in Charlottesville, Virginia

Ecco Italy Collage

What do you do if you’re a busy Italophile living in Charlottesville, VA and your schedule keeps you from visiting Italy as often as you’d like? You make your way to the Main Street Market to visit Verity Blue, an Italian boutique that serves a mean cappuccino and a downright delicious gelato.

But what if you want more than an immediate Italian fix for your stomach? What if your ears long to hear the music of the Italian language, your eyes are desperate for the beauty of the boot-shaped peninsula, your tongue wants to gyrate across a long Italian “rrrr,” and your hands wish they knew how to create the beautiful, simple food for which Italy is so well known?

Then you’ll need to pay a visit to Ecco Italy, an innovative and Italo-centric learning center located just above Verity Blue. Founded by Christina Ball, a former academic with a lot of entrepreneurial spirit, Ecco Italy offers Italian language courses (as well as French and Spanish!) for beginning and intermediate learners, as well as more specialized courses such as “Book Club Italiano,” “Cinema Chat,” and “Ecco Opera.”

Best of all, this is not your conventional school room language course. The friendly atmosphere of Ecco Italy invites students to hang around, to get to know their teachers and their fellow students, and to partake of a wide variety of cultural events–from lectures to cooking classes to wine tastings.

And, if you do find that you’re headed to Italy, Christina and her team at Ecco Italy can advise you (or even escort you!). Their travel services include a sister language school in Todi, an apartment for rent in Pisa, and a brilliantly conceived crash course in Italian language and culture that includes history lessons, basic language practice, cultural orientation, wine tastings, and travel advice.

A few years ago, we at the eCool Compound had the good fortune to meet Christina Ball, owner and director of Ecco Italy. We were impressed and charmed, and, thus, we were thrilled when she recently agreed to an interview with eCool. We hope you enjoy reading about Christina and Ecco Italy. We only wish we lived a bit closer so that we could be part of the “Little Italy” she’s created in Charlottesville.


Ecco Italy is a great idea! What compelled your to start this company and/or how did you come up with the idea for Ecco Italy?

I always knew I was too creative, too enthusiastic for academia. Still, it wasn’t until 2004, 6 years after earning my doctorate in Italian Literature from Yale, that all of the pieces fell into place for Ecco Italy in Charlottesville, Virginia. I had always dreamed of running my own school, a place without grades, a classroom that opened out onto the marketplace and the world, a place where conversation would be more important than written tests, where students of all ages would be encouraged to pursue their dream of “becoming Italian” in a supportive and beautiful environment.

Charlottesville is not only the home of Thomas Jefferson - a huge Europhile - and his University of Virginia, but it’s also a place with a sophisticated and varied cultural scene, a constant stream of interesting visitors and a strong local food and wine presence. Especially in recent years, many people have fled bigger cities and stressful jobs to seek a higher quality of life in Charlottesville. Somehow, it seems that when people pause for a moment in life to focus on themselves and their long-neglected dreams, Italian makes a dramatic appearance.

In addition to teaching undergrads, I taught a popular continuing ed night course at UVA called “All Aboard Italy” a sort of traveler’s Italian class. It was always full and at the end of the eight weeks the students, ranging in age from 22-82, would always beg me to teach them more Italian, to take them to Italy with me. After the third term of “All Aboard” in 2003, I was sure that there was a market for Ecco Italy here in Virginia, and when I was offered a beautiful space above an Italian café and farm table store downtown, there was no saying no.

My first class back in the fall of 2004, conversational Italian for beginners, had 5 wonderful students – including a young poet, an engineer who designed parts for Ferrari cars and a retired opera singer. Over the next few years, my vision took hold and I gradually added more language and culture classes – Cinema Chat (conversation through Italian film), Buon Viaggio: Italian for Travelers and Dreamers, a Book Club Italiano, Ecco Cibo regional Italian cooking and culture classes. I also added travel and business consulting and training to the mix.

By 2006 I had 6 Italian courses on the curriculum and about 200 students and, since the model was so popular, I added a Spanish division (Spain on Main) and French division in 2007. (note: Soon the center’s name will be changed to SPEAK Language and Culture Center – just for clarity’s sake! Ecco Italy will refer only to the Italian component)

Would you describe the kinds of opportunities offered by Ecco Italy?

Ecco Italy (if we consider the Italian part only – not the entire center with Spanish and French) is an oasis for the Italophile or for anyone desiring to appreciate life a bit more through language and culture. We offer a range of classes for everyone from the traveler needing to learn the basics (greetings, pronunciation, ordering, etc.) to nearly fluent speakers looking to practice what they know through stimulating discussion topics and activities.

Now that we have a “sister school” in Italy – La Lingua, La Vita in Todi (Umbria), we also offer the chance to be fully immersed in the language and culture of Italy through our Two Weeks in Todi course held in Todi (and Roma!) each September.

We also love to foster community and education through our cultural events such as wine tastings, events in conjunction with local book and film festivals and guest speakers such as our recent lecture on Rossini in Paris by an opera expert.

How is learning at Ecco Italy different from taking the normal evening language course?

First of all, the location and the living room/dining room décor of the colorful classroom (farm table, stylish couches, a big flat screen tv) are a refreshing change from the fluorescent lights and monochrome furnishings of the typical university classroom. There is often music playing when students arrive, and they may be carrying a cappuccino and a pastry as they take their seats around the farm table.

Lessons in our classroom are highly interactive and filled with partner activities, games, film clips and even occasional food (cheeses, gelato) and wine tastings. Instructors often take the students on “field trips” to the bakery or the cheese shop of the coffee bar so that students get the chance to use their language skills in a setting that’s as real as possible. I often get behind the bar and take orders for gelati and espressi from my students in italiano (luckily, the real baristi do the making and the serving!). I took my recent Buon Viaggio class to our swank new Italian wine bar in Charlottesville, enoteca, for a lesson on Italian regional wines and wine tasting. Anything to keep it fresh, to get people moving and speaking and to bring us as close as possible to the real thing – being in Italia.

Beyond just learning the language, what do you hope that clients at Ecco Italy will take home with them?

One of the most rewarding comments I’ve received from a student is that classes at Ecco Italy make them believe that change and seemingly unrealizable dreams (i.e. someday speaking Italian and traveling to Italy) are in fact, possible. I often overhear students saying that Ecco Italy is their “social life”, that it is the highpoint of their week or day, that it has turned on a light inside of them that they never want to extinguish. That’s pretty incredible to hear and is the fuel that keeps me going when, as multiple hat-wearing owner/director/manager/instructor, I run out of steam!

How would you describe the Ecco Italy community?

It’s a very diverse (all ages, professions, linguistic skill levels) and supportive community that’s luckily growing by the week. A person might sign up for a beginner’s class for an upcoming trip, but before they know it they’re attending cooking classes, French events and coming to Todi with me and their new friends!

I’ve had everyone from stay-at-home parents to massage therapists, graduate students and bestselling writers in my classes, and this variety serves to create a kind of “family-style” approach to education. Instead of competing, students support each other and this is vital since, for adults, foreign language learning can often bring to the surface deep insecurities and fears.

What is your most popular course offering?

It really changes! Since my core group that’s been with me from the beginning is still with me, our intermediate morning classes are always full. But I’d say Buon Viaggio and anything involving food and wine are also quite popular for those not pursuing a long-term dream of fluency.

Ecco Cibo must be a real bonus for the participants in the cooking class—what would you say is the primary difference between cooking in Italy and cooking in America?

Italy still eats and drinks regionally – something we are just learning to do here in the U.S. these days. Here in the States we favor new flavors and cuisines (for the most part) and love being able to get Maine lobster in Chicago, San Francisco sourdough in South Carolina, strawberries in December.

When I am in Umbria with my group in September, we drink Sagrantino and Orvieto wines, eat porcini-chick pea soup and thick umbricelli pasta coated in black truffle paste. The students return to Virginia understanding that there is no such thing as “Italian cuisine”, but instead there is Umbrian cuisine, Tuscan cuisine, Roman cuisine etc. Like the Italians themselves, Italian food has deep local roots and we can only fully appreciate this truth by eating our way around its 20 delightfully distinct regions – one of my personal life goals!

Italy is one of the top travel destinations for Americans. Why do you think Americans are so attracted to Italy?

It seems to me that the Italians, whether it’s true or not (I’m married to one!), have a lifestyle that most Americans crave and romanticize. In the eyes of most Americans, Italians still maintain many of the values that many feel are slipping away from us in the U.S. – long lunches and even longer vacations, the chance to be more than your profession, a sense of being grounded by both geography and family, a sense of style and elegance, the overarching importance of beauty (human, natural, artistic, culinary) and, of course, the melodic language.

What advice do you offer your clients as they prepare for trips to Italy?

I encourage them from the start to explore and learn about the incredible geographic, cultural, culinary diversity of Italy. I also encourage them to look closely at themselves and their own likes, dislikes and dreams. If someone loves nature, beaches and small towns, they will certainly be happier in Maremma or Puglia than Florence or Milan.

Often people have a very limited view of Italy at first, and they are constantly surprised by the things they learn in class – that there are cities called Parma and Reggio where “Parmigiano-Reggiano” is made, that unemployment is high, or that big families are no longer the norm in Italy.

Would you share with us your favorite place in Italy and tell us why it’s so special to you?

This is a hard one! I suppose part of the reason why so many of travelers start planning their next trip to Italy as soon as they get home is because each new place we discover becomes a special favorite place. My own favorite places shift over time and with my own changing life. I am quickly falling in love with the tranquil hilltown of Todi and the surrounding Umbrian countryside, but I am also a new resident of Pisa (my husband and I bought an apartment in a medieval Casa Torre/Tower House last year).

As I spend more time in Pisa’s relatively unexplored (by tourists) historic center, shopping at the market just outside my door, sipping wine in Piazza Vettovaglie packed with Pisans, taking a scooter-ride to nearby beaches – it is quickly becoming my new favorite place, my new home.

But there’s one place in Italy that has been my eternal favorite ever since my first visit to Italy in 1985: Roma. Wandering the streets and river banks of Rome’s Trastevere and Ghetto neighborhoods in the late summer is an experience I constantly crave when I’m home in Virginia. It’s both blissfully peaceful and energizingly urban at the same time. Everything radiates warmth and beauty. Only in Rome have the otherwise conflicting powers of chaos and mystery declared an eternal truce.

13
May

Gifts for the God Who Has Everything

Build Your Myth Barbells by Greece is for Lovers

Every so often, we at the eCool Compound leave our happy little Roman domus and head on over to Greece just to take in the reverse classical view. And while we love to stroll about the ruins and muse upon the foundations of western civilization as much as any good classics geeks, we’ll freely admit that we also like to indulge in a bit of shopping.

So, imagine our delight and surprise when we discovered that those darn Greek gods have gone off and founded themselves a little boutique full of hard-to-find, one-of-a-kind unique gift items that are sure to delight any deity! Heavens! A divine shop right in the heart of Ancient Athens!

Greece is for Lovers Thunderbolt

In keeping with traditional labor practices, the gods have enslaved a group of mortals, forcing them to invent, produce, and market objects that will please and entertain the Olympians. Calling themselves the “Greece is for Lovers” collective, the mortals toil day and night, fueled only by an occasional ration of ouzo and pita distributed by Dionysus and Demeter. And yet they invent mighty and marvelous toys for the deities!

Take, for example, the “Build Your Myth” barbells (top photo) made of solid brass and sold in 1.5 and 3 kilogram weights. Finding it hard to cope with the demanding demigod lifestyle? Does everything feel like a Herculean task? It’s probably time to start pumping iron in the Ionic style! Why hoist the world upon your shoulders when you can bulk up with just a few columnar reps?

Greece is For Lovers Thunderbolt

Then there’s the Zeus-Endorsed Thunderbolt which can be thrown by both left-handed and right-handed deities (or used as a letter opener to rip through hatemail with the stealth and fury of Zeus!) It’s available in both solid or silver–plated brass (see above and below) and is signed by the King of the Gods himself!

And for the god whose street cred is on the wane? The mortals at Greece is for Lovers suggest that any deity who’s a bit compromised in the cred department should strap on a leather skateboard and hit the pavement. (See below) Socks optional.

Greece is for Lovers Skateboard

Headed to Athens and want to pick up a few little pretties for your own patron god? The studio/shop of Greece is for Lovers is located at 13a Karyatidon Street in Athens, very near the New Acropolis Museum. The closest metro stop is Akropolis, on Line 2/Red). (Oh how we mortals love that new Athenian metro that lets us tour the underworld in safety!) Open from 10:00am to 6pm on weekdays and from 11:00am to 3:00pm on Saturdays.

You can also contact the mortals in charge of this divinely inspired endeavor by email at info@greeceisforlovers.com and by phone or fax at +30 210 9245064.

And, if you’re headed to Germany rather than Greece (for reasons that we could never understand–but, hey, to each his own), you can pick up products by Greece is for Lovers in the Museum Shop in the Deutsche Guggenheim in Berlin. Good luck with the Cimbrians!

Skateboard by Greece is For Lovers

28
Apr

Third Annual Pillow Fight!

3rd Annual Pillow Fight in Rome, Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere

Yesterday evening, just before 6pm, it seemed that Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere was being invaded by an army of some 300 people, all of whom were clutching strangely-shaped bags that appeared to be filled with soft objects of similar size. What were they doing? What were they carrying?

The mission of the bag-bearers became clear at the moment that the fine medieval bell tower in the piazza began its six-o-clock chime. To the tune of pealing bells, the mysterious bags were thrown aside to reveal that each member of the invading army was armed with a pillow. Time for the third edition of Roman Pillow Fight!

3rd Annual Pillow Fight in Rome's Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere

Organized by the so-called Committee for the Termination of National Apathy, the aim of the annual Pillow Fight event is that of relieving anxiety and stress.

You can read more at the official Roman Pillow Fight Blog where you’ll be directed to images of the event posted on Flickr (the source of our images) and to video on YouTube. You’ll also find links to the Facebook and MySpace Roman Pillow Fight pages. Want to stage your own Pillow Fight? Visit the World Pillow Fight Day website - as it turns out, March 22nd was World Pillow Fight Day.

3rd Annual Pillow Fight, Piazza Santa Maria in Trastevere, Rome

23
Apr

Birthday of Rome: Street Performers Honor the Eterna

Romulus & the She-Wolf Puppets

One last Birthday of Rome post from the eCool Compound!

Some readers have been asking how we know the foundation date of Rome - a good question!  Rome’s birthday was given to us by the first-century BC historian Marcus Terentius Varro who wrote that it was on 21 April 753 BC when Romulus founded the city.  Thus, as of today, the Eternal City is 2761 years + 2 days old.

This year, celebration of Rome’s birthday began on Saturday 19 April with the re-enactment of an ancient ritual.  On Sunday 20 April, (almost) all of Rome turned out to celebrate the big day on Via dei Fori Imperiali, where a paradea full of gladiators, centurions, and senators marched from the Circus Maximus to the Colosseum and along the Via dei Fori Imperiali (click here and here).

But that wasn’t all that was going on!  The street was lined with stalls touting the wholesome goodness of Italy’s most traditional foods, while a range of sporting demonstrations wowed the crowds - we at the eCool Compound were blown away by the Ruzzolone, a traditional cheese-rolling contest held in an Umbrian hill town.

There were street performers galore, including clowns, fire-eaters, roaming musicians, acrobats, and puppet shows.  Two groups in particular caught our eye.  We couldn’t help giggling at the Romulus & the She-Wolf hand puppet troupe that’s seen in the photo above.  And these stilt walkers clad in 18th-century costumes left us wondering just how tall the Colosseum really is.

Stilt Performers at Rome's Colosseum

22
Apr

Birthday of Rome: Roll the Cheese, Please!

Ruzzolone - Cheese Rolling in Via dei Fori Imperiali

For those of you who may not have been keeping up with events in Rome over the past few days, it’s important to note that yesterday, 21 April, was the 2761st birthday of the Eternal City.   Celebrations began on Saturday 19 April with a re-enactment of the ancient Parilia Festival in the Forum Boarium, and then continued on Sunday 20 April with a parade in which a thousand people dressed as centurions, gladiators, Vestal Virgins, senators, prisoners of wars, and goddesses strolled around the Colosseum.  (See our coverage here and here).

The events just described were staged by the Gruppo Storico Romano, but other celebratory events organized by the Comune di Roma and Legambiente were also on offer on the Via dei Fori Imperiali: Stalls showcasing food products particular to various small towns and villages across Italy were set up along the roadside while folk bands and demonstrations of traditional sporting events were given.

Among the strangest and most interesting of events was a demonstration of the Ruzzolone - a sporting event practiced only in the Umbrian village of Panicale - in which huge roundels of Pecorino cheese are rolled around town on Pasquetta, the day after Easter (Please note that in the demonstration of this event on Via dei Fori Imperiali, no effort was made to roll the cheese all the way around Rome, nor even to coax it into following the contours of the pomerium, the city boundary established by Romulus.  Darn!)

Ruzzolone - Cheese Rolling in Via dei Fori Imperiali

The event - as practiced in Panicale in Umbria - is described in fascinating detail here:

From the NY Times:  Mr. [Stew] Vreeland tells of the Ruzzolone in Panicale — the rolling of the cheese. A sporting event that combines elements of bocce and yo-yo, it is, Mr. Vreeland says, “as crazy as it sounds.” The giocatori, or players, send a nine-pound round of Pecorino cheese rolling on a course around the perimeter of the ancient, walled village. It is launched with a leather strap, wrapped around the cheese and pulled by a stick of wood. Spotters run alongside the cheese to mark where it falls. The winner — the player who completes the race course in the fewest strokes — gets the cheese.

Often the cheeses go careening into nearby olive groves or, as Mr. Vreeland wrote on his Web site, www.seeyouinitaly.com, “get wedged under the one Fiat Uno that didn’t get the No Parking message.” When the race is completed, the crowd is entertained by a bandaccia (literally “bad band”), with people playing pots, pans, cowbells, horns and a few actual instruments.

Kind of crazy, eh?  But that’s not all that was on display.  Crowds were also treated to a mighty display of tiro alla fune or tug of war - a contest that apparently has long been a favorite in Italian towns and villages.

Tug of War on Via dei Fori Imperiali

The competition was fierce - it was the azzuri against the rossi or the blues against the reds.  Both teams pulled to a rhythmic chant, each trying to gain ground with every grunt as the crowd yelled and cheered.

Tug of War in Rome's Via dei Fori Imperiali

Ultimately, the brute strength that was the blue team managed to exert their power over the reds, pulling their opponents over the magic line and declaring victory.  Are these gusy wearing azzuro the Italian National Tug of War Team?  We don’t know but it seems their jerseys suggest that might be the case.

Tug of War in Rome's Via dei Fori Imperiali