La festa della
Repubblica is an
important Italian national holiday that occurs on the 2nd of June.
Unfortunately when national holidays in Italy occur at weekends, they don’t
roll over to the following Monday as they do in the UK for example, they simply
become absorbed into the weekend. The day,
as important to Italy as July the 14th is in France or the 4th of
July in the US, commemorates the choice made by the population as to the type
of government Italy should have after the end of fascism; monarchy or republic.
On June 2nd 1946 12.717.923
Italians voted in favor of a republic (with
10.719.284 voting against) and the hostility towards the monarchy, due to their
support to Benito Mussolini, increased so much that the Italian monarchs of the
House of Savoy were deposed and exiled after reigning for 85 years.
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Wednesday 22 May 2013
Wednesday 15 May 2013
Inferno
Brown's new novel, entitled ‘Inferno’, is based on Dante's epic poem of
heaven, hell and purgatory and is set amid the piazzas and palazzi of Florence,
where the poet was born in the 13th century. It promises to do for Dante and
Florence what ‘Angels and Demons’, one of Browns earlier thrillers, did for the
Vatican. Scholars at the Italian Dante Society said they welcomed the new book,
no matter how populist or filled with historical inaccuracies, because it would
bring the poet's work to a much wider audience.
A sneak preview of the prologue and first chapter of Inferno suggests that
much of it is based in Florence. The fast-paced prologue begins with a
character called "the Shade" racing through the streets of the Tuscan
city while being pursued by nameless enemies: "Along the banks of the
River Arno I scramble, breathless... turning left onto Via dei Castellani,
making my way northward, huddling in the shadows of the Uffizi. And still they
pursue me. I pass behind the palazzo with its crenellated tower and one-handed
clock...snaking through the early-morning vendors in Piazza San Firenze. Crossing
before the Bargello, I cut west toward the spire of the Badia..."
The first chapter opens with Brown's hero Robert Langdon, a Harvard
professor of religious symbols, waking up in a hospital with a head wound and
stitches to his scalp. Initially he assumes he is in his hometown of Boston,
only to be told he is in Florence. An easy mistake to make…..In the shadows
outside lurks a female assassin who moves with ‘the intensity of a panther
stalking its prey’ she intends to hunt down Robert Langdon and kill him; which
is what assassins do.
The prologue and first chapter also suggest that Brown may delve into one
of Florence's most enduring art mysteries – the theory that a long-lost
masterpiece by Leonardo da Vinci is concealed behind a painting which adorns
Florence's centuries-old town hall. In the novel, Robert Langdon has a dream in
which a woman tells him "Seek and ye shall find". The same phrase
appears in Italian in an immense battle scene painted by the Renaissance artist
Giorgio Vasari. Scholars have speculated that this is a clue to the fact that
Vasari's painting could conceal an earlier work by Leonardo, The Battle of
Anghiari, completed 60 years before but then covered up."Seek and ye shall find" could also be a Biblical reference,
however – the phrase appears in the Sermon of the Mount in the Gospel of St
Matthew.
The words are clearly a key part of the plot, but exactly what they mean
will only be revealed with the publication of the book.
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