Articoli

Tourism in Covid-19’s times: waiting for the rebirth of life

More than a year has passed since the Covid-19 pandemic has broken out and seriously impacted on anybody’s mental state. As the World Health Organization (WHT) claims: “people are experiencing fear, worry and stress“, due to the consequent and inevitable health, social and economic problems caused by the virus.

People are still obliged to restrictions on their movements and relationships. For that reason, everybody is filled with a strong longing to move and travel as soon as possible and to live and be responsible for his or her own life again. According to the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) “tourism is among the most affected sectors” by this emergency “with airplanes on the ground and hotels closed“.

Human contact and interactions, beauty, nature are all the key-words of our future life and holidays! Nature and immersion in it, no doubt, are valuable resources for our psychophysical wellbeing.

Pixabay, public domain

In Sicily beauty and Nature are protagonists, for sure! Sicily is not just an italian island, it is the biggest island in the Mediterranean Sea. Owing to its strategic position and the abundance of natural resources, the island has become crossroads of cultures and symbol of historical, artistic and enogastronomic pluralities. This land is unique and extremely characteristic, really rich in colours and fragrances. Last but not least, food is so tasty! So, when borders are all open, come and visit us, we are really looking forward for that!

Mount Etna (c. 3.350 m), the highest volcano in Europe – Pixabay, public domain
Arancini – Pixabay, public domain
Prickly pears – Pixabay, public domain
Eolian islands – Pixabay, public domain

Electronic reference

https://www.who.int/teams/mental-health-and-substance-use/covid-19 [Last accessed 13/04/2021]

https://www.unwto.org/international-tourism-and-covid-19 [Last accessed 13/04/2021]

Agrigento: between history and myth

A map of Sicily – Wikipedia, public domain

The province of Agrigento is located in the southwest of Sicily. According to the legend, it was founded by Deadalus, protagonist of Greek mythology and inventor of the Knossos labyrinth and of the hollow cow for Minos‘ wife, Pasiphaë. We have already concerned with Bull of Phalaris, now let’s describe these other two inventions in outline. The former, the labyrinth, was built by Minos, king of Crete, in Knossos (Greece), to keep the so-called Minotaur confined in it. The Minotaur was the fruit of Pasiphaë’s infidelity with a divine bull and, consequently, he was a mythical creature with the head and the tail of a bull and the body of a man. The latter, the hollow cow, was designed for Pasiphaë’s will, in order to live her secret passion for the divine bull.

The mythical Minotaur – Wikipedia, public domain
Pasiphaë and Daedalus, a fresco from The House of the Vettii, a Roman domus (a type of house) in Pompeii – Wikipedia, public domain

However, according to history, Agrigento was founded in 580 BC by Rhodian and Cretan colonists, Aristinoo and Pistillo, as a colony of Gela. Several tyrants governed the town, such us: the known Phalaris (580 – 554 BC) and Theron (488 – 472 BC), who made the town a notable cultural and military centre. Agrigento was conquered by different peoples over the centuries: by the Carthaginians, the Romans, the Byzantines, the Arabs (they really improved the local trade, industry and called the town “Girgenti“) and, ultimately, the Normans. The Normans arrived in Agrigento in 1087 and, after a painful resistance, the town surrended. The current “Agrigento” dates back only to 1927.

the fascinating Agrigento (Sicily) – Wikipedia, public domain

Bibliographical reference

Di Giovanni, G., 1998, Agrigento: The head of the Valley and the City of Temples, Edizioni Di Giovanni, Agrigento

Touring Club Italiano, 1997, Guida d’Italia: Siracusa e Agrigento, Touring Editore s.r.l., Milano

Electronic reference

https://www.worldhistory.org/agrigento/?visitCount=2&lastVisitDate=2021-4-1&pageViewCount=3 [Last accessed 16/04/2021]

https://www.worldhistory.org/Minotaur/?visitCount=2&lastVisitDate=2021-4-1&pageViewCount=3 [Last accessed 16/04/2021]

https://www.britannica.com/topic/Daedalus-Greek-mythology ]Last accessed 16/04/2021]

https://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/agrigento_%28Enciclopedia-Italiana%29/ [Last accessed 16/04/2021]

Myths and legends: The bull of Phalaris

In the Sicilian province of Agrigento you can visit a place of breathtaking beauty and full of history: the Valley of the Temples, the ancient city. Let’s have a look! Agrigento (Akragas in Greek) was a prosperous city during the Greek domination of Sicily. In the Valley there are a lot of temples, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Temple of Hera Lacinia, The Valley of the Temples, Agrigento (Sicily) – Pixabay, public domain

History deeply interrelates with myths and legends which are a valuable part of Greek culture. In the Valley there is a building known as the Oratory of Phalaris (1st century BC). It is a Hellenistic in antis temple (it means that it has a portic prolonged at the end of the side-walls in two columns) and in its front there were four Ionic columns, under a Doric trabeation (the architectural horizontal element). So, different styles coexist. Today just the cella remains (the sanctuary, usually in the centre of the building).

The Oratory of Phalaris, the Valley of the Temples (Agrigento) – Wikipedia, public domain

The name of the temple recalls a myth. Phalaris was the cruel tyrant of Akragas in the 6th century BC, sadly famous also for his hollowed bronze bull used to torture his enemies, built by Perillo. Phalaris closed people inside the bull and then lighted a fire under it, roasting them. The victims’ screams seemed the roars of a real bull. According to a terrible version of the myth, Phalaris himself was victim of his creation.

The Bull of Phalaris, copper engraving by Pierre Woeiriot – Wikipedia, public domain

Bibliographical reference

Di Giovanni, G., 1998, Agrigento: The head of the Valley and the City of Temples, Edizioni Di Giovanni, Agrigento

Touring Club Italiano, 1997, Guida d’Italia: Siracusa e Agrigento, Touring Editore s.r.l., Milano

Zingarelli, N., 2008, Lo Zingarelli 2008. Vocabolario della Lingua Italiana, Zanichelli, Bologna

Electronic reference

https://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/agrigento_%28Enciclopedia-Italiana%29/ [Last accessed 15/04/2021]

https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/831 [Last accessed 15/04/2021]

https://www.treccani.it/vocabolario/anta1/ [Last accessed 16/04/2021]

Slow Tourism in Sicily: Saint Agatha and the “secret” corners of Catania

Nowadays, more and more tourists from every part of the world choose slow tourism for their travels. They prefer quality over quantity, slow and typical food over fast food, deep immersions in local culture and traditions, sustainability, emotions.

In every country, in every town there are places which even their inhabitants do not know very well. However, these particular corners can be really beautiful and arouse strong emotions and feelings, such as the one we will deal with today: the so-called “Funtanella” of Saint Agatha, the patroness of Catania (Sicily), on the slopes of Mount Etna, the highest volcano in Europe (c. 3.350 m).

The “Funtanella” of Saint Agatha (Catania, Sicily) – Wikipedia, public domain

Agatha is the patron saint of Catania and she is so loved by her “devoti” (devotees) who every year, from the 3rd to the 5th of February and on the 17th of August respectively, dedicate magnificent, intense and heartfelt celebrations to her. This feast is one of the most important all over the world, after Corpus Domini at Cuzco in Perù and the Easter procession at Seville in Spain and every year a lot of Sicilian emigrants and foreigners come to Sicily to be present and not to miss the event. We have decide to lead you virtually to this fountain which usually does not attract many visitors who sometimes are unaware of its existence (maybe because of insufficient or inadequate promotion and advertisement). And yet, this place represents one of the several stages of the religious procession of the feast, for this reason it is so noteworthy!

The small fountain, with a shell-shaped basin and an effigy facing East, is located exactly in the point where, in 1040, people from Catania watched helplessly the relics of the saint moving to Costantinople, the capital of the Byzantine Empire (in today’s Turkey). They will come back home only 86 years later. The event was caused by a diplomatic incident which will become clearer after having mentioned briefly Saint Agatha’s biography.

Saint Agatha’s bust – Wikipedia, public domain

Saint Agatha or “’A Santuzza” was a Christian martyr and virgin: she was arrested and was victim of appalling tortures, e.g. the removal of her breasts. Apart from her faith, the saint was “guilty” of the rejection of Quintianus’ courtship (the Roman proconsul, an official). Agatha died after undergoing, among others, the terrible torment of the glowing embers. During celebrations, The saint’s bust and relics are brought in procession throughout Catania, it almost seems to see the saint herself having a walk. The feast was declared a UNESCO World Heritage.

The diplomatic incident was caused because Giorgio Maniace, a general of the Byzantine Empire, punished Stefano, at the head of the Byzantine fleet, for letting an Arab prisoner of war escape, (the Arabs had been defeated by the Byzantines, after almost 2 centuries of domination in Sicily, in 1040). Stefano was part of the Byzantine imperial family, so Maniace gave Saint Agatha’s relics to Costantinople as a gift, in order to redress a wrong. Maybe the saint did not want to leave her homeland, seen that, according to the myth, the ship with the relics was held up by a sudden tempest for 3 days.

A magic, solemn and mysterious aura sorrounds the fountain at issue, despite its simplicity and together with silence and a kaleidoscope of emotions giving goose pimples even to unbelievers. During the feats every single person coming here is fascinated and caught by a whirl of different perceptions. You can hear the devotees’ respectful silence while they are praying round the fountain, clashing with the children’s screams who are playing; the perfume of the wax of the votive candles, of the sawdust scattered on the streets in order to soak up the wax heated and felt to the ground; of the sweets and street food. At the same moment and in the same place, you can face East, so the sea, and North with its imperturbable volcano Etna.

This is really an incredible and enchanted corner in Catania, isn’t it?!

Electronic reference

https://www.comune.catania.it [last accessed 13/04/2021]