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Forum Meeting & Lecture for October |
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Blog -
Archeotrek
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Written by Leslie Xavier
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Wednesday, 13 October 2010 14:30 |
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Forum Meeting Agenda
Support Site Community Center
Date: Thursday, October 14, 2010
Time: Begins 18:30 – 20:30
18:30 - Opening of Meeting & Welcome – Leslie Xavier
18:35 – Lecture – “Matera – The Passion of the Sassi” by Leslie Xavier, President, IAS.
The Sassi is the only place where the “dead are above ground and the living abide below”. Here you can sence a timelessness as you look out over an area that has been continuously inhabited since the Neolithic Period. What was once the “Shame of Italy” is now a World Heritage Site. Join us as we discover why producers such as Mel Gibson are drawn to the Sassi and its rustic cave dwellings and curious rock cut churches.
After the lecture we will address the following items of business
- September Tour to Ancient Roman Port of Ostia Antica – Our recent tour to Ostia Antica. Jorge Silva will report
- October Tour – Morbid Curiosity, October is the perfect month to enjoy a spooky adventure into some of the most intriguing of Neapolitan cemeteries and funerary practices. A tour of Cimitero delle Fontanelle along with tour of Greek Necropolis at Piazza Cavour – Jorge Silva will give us the scary details.
- November Tour – Matera – Passion of the Sassi, An overnight tour including Parco della Mergio Materno – Leslie Xavier
- Upcoming board elections – we will plan to hold elections for board members November 7 on line.
This will be a round table discussion of the above topics. Other topics can be added to the discussion if time allows. Please note, due to the limited time, tour payments can be made only after the meeting not before. |
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Last Updated on Monday, 29 November 2010 05:39 |
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Blog -
Archeotrek
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Written by Leslie Xavier
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Wednesday, 14 April 2010 15:59 |
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Whether it is the beautiful mosaic in the House of the Tragic Poet or his contemporaries that inhabit Pompeii today, dogs have always been a significant part of the life of Pompeii. It appears that now you can adopt "a life and a story" as the Soprintendenza of Archeologica is propoting the adoption of the dogs of Pompeii. If you are interested you can read more at their site - http://www.icanidipompei.com/english/index.htm |
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Last Updated on Monday, 29 November 2010 05:38 |
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Divine Discoveries - Baia the Underworld |
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Blog -
Archeotrek
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Written by Michael Clegg
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Friday, 19 March 2010 10:29 |
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Last Updated on Monday, 29 November 2010 05:38 |
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Read more...
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The Fable Of The Ruzzola or Cheese Tumbling |
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Blog -
Archeotrek
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Written by Barb
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Sunday, 10 January 2010 11:53 |
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Once upon a time in the Middle Ages the wealthy Baron of Pontelandolfo had a passion for gambling and would find any pretext for a good game loaded with substantial stakes. On the last Sunday of Carnival he was having a late-night card game with his farmhand Pasquale: it was a tense competition with victory often changing sides. In the end dawn saw Pasquale the winner of two farms and pasture hills. Taking no notice of the change of ownership, the Baron's cows went on happily grazing on what was now Pasquale's land. Pasquale complained to the Baron about the trespassing: "I think since I'm feeding your cows, I'm entitled to a share of the cheese from their milk!"
"You wish!" the Baron retorted, "They are grazing on grass that was grown before you won the land, therefore it's still my grass." Now the good folks of Pontelandolfo liked nothing more than the opportunity to see a good, hot blooded battle between the two factions. To add insult to injury the lord had a big wheel of cheese hung on Pasquale's window one night. The farmer, furious but wise, did not want to stir up turmoil, so he challenged his opponent: "What began as a game should be resolved with one: I shall wait for you tomorrow in the square!"
The following morning, surrounded by a shouting crowd, the two men started what was to be a decisive cheese tumbling tournament. According to the legend the game never ended and it is said that their ghosts appear in the nights of Carnival, still playing!
The Origins of the GameThere are clues to possibly very ancient origins of the "Ruzzola": an Etruscan fresco in Tarquinia's Tomb of the Olympiad, shows an athlete in the act of swinging a "disc" that looks much like a cheese.
Even Galileo takes an interest in the game: in his Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems he has a quotation from Aristotle about the rotating motion and speed of "ruzzole".
How the Game is Played TodaySince 1861 the players gather and start the course of some 700 metres from the main square to Palazzo San Rocco and back, throwing their wheels of cheese. These can weigh from 6 to 35 kilos and are swung using a string called a "zagaglia" wrapped around the perimeter of the cheese and the player's wrist. The team that uses the least throws, or "cùlp" wins. Although today the game is properly organized in a Federation, its peasant origins make it popular in many regions of Italy; often the cheese is replaced by a wooden disc, which is cheaper and lighter. |
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Last Updated on Saturday, 23 January 2010 21:03 |
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