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#italian girls
the-goon-master · 6 months
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Tiriolo, Calabria, Italy
The houses in the historic center of Tiriolo are perched like in a nativity scene, making up the old part of the town, while the new buildings extend along the foot of the hill, nestled between the mountains and the valleys.
Legend traces the origins of the settlement of Tiriolo back to Hellenic people six centuries before the Trojan War or even identifies it with the mythical Scherìa, the happy homeland of the Homeric people of the Phaeacians. Archaeological findings, however, support the hypothesis of the existence of a dwelling nucleus since the Neolithic, as revealed by finds such as polished axes, rudimentary chisels and obsidian scrapers. The subsequent Roman presence finds its most relevant testimony in the famous bronze tablet engraved with a text concerning the Senatus Consultum de Bacchanalibus, a decree of the second century AC, with which the Roman senate prohibited the Bacchanalia, orgiastic rites in which even the elites participated and therefore considers it the context of possible conspiracies against the state. The artefact, found in 1640, is now in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, offered in 1727 as a tribute to the Emperor Charles VI of Habsburg.
Follow us on Instagram, @calabria_mediterranea
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psic0paticaa · 1 year
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August Riedel (German, 1799 - 1883) Happy mother, 1840
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cescamarie · 1 year
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“Going through things you never thought you’d go through will only take you places you never thought you’d get to” 🖤
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lasantuzza · 2 years
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elettraml · 5 months
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🎭Thᥱᥲtrᥱ Aᥴᥲdᥱmყ's 2ᥒd Yᥱᥲr🎭
I'm in love with this people. Being on stage is so funny and scary at the same time, but we are always togheter 🎶🥂.
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peaceinthestorm · 2 years
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Henryk Gotlib (1890-1966, Polish) ~ Italian Girls in a Landscape, 1961
[Source: Christie’s]
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Alessandra & Friends
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lu2211 · 2 years
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17 again.
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Civita, Calabria, Italy
Civita is hilltown town in Calabria in the heart of the Pollino National park, in Southern Italy's Calabria.
In Civita, Calabria, the history centers on an Albanian community fleeing from the Turks. While a precise arrival date is not known, the first Albanian explorers most likely came to the area in the 1470s. The “new” arrivals brought their language and culture with them, settling throughout the Pollino Mountains.
In keeping with Civita’s history, the local religion and village architecture reflect Arbëreshe culture. Just off the main piazza stands the Italian-Albanian Mother Church dedicated to Santa Maria Assunta. Its parishioners follow the Byzantine rite as part of the Eparchy of Lungro, an Italo-Albanian diocese in Calabria, subject to the Holy See. The Baroque structure features many elements of the Byzantine church, such as the beautiful iconostasis in walnut and olivewood, numerous icons and frescos.
Civita maintains its original layout, with neighborhoods of old two-story stone houses with large fireplaces situated along narrow lanes. Interestingly, the facades of several homes resemble faces, with a long chimney for the nose and windows for eyes.
The chimney stacks are another characteristic of the village, each unique design giving that personal touch to the habitation.
This village of fewer than 1,000 also boasts the dramatic natural setting of northern Calabria’s Pollino Mountains, part of Italy’s largest national park. One of Civita’s highlights is the Gole del Raganello, a deep canyon carved by the Raganello River, which flows to the Ionian Sea. From Civita’s enviable position of 450 meters (1,480 feet), views of the expansive river valley extend all the way to the sea!
From the oldtown, you can hike down the side of the canyon or take a jeep to the Ponte del Diavolo. This Devil’s Bridge has the familiar tale of having been constructed by the devil in exchange for the life of the first soul who crosses it. Being cleverer than the diavolo himself, the local landowner who made the pact with the devil tricked him by sending a sheep, instead of a person, over the new structure.
Photos by Un Trolley per Due and Calabria: The Other Italy
Follow us on Instagram, @calabria_mediterranea
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psic0paticaa · 1 year
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cescamarie · 1 year
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Good Morning 🌼
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lasantuzza · 1 year
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millificent · 3 months
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Every Nico Di Angelo fan focusing more on the background of the episode than the actual plot
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