BY: Liz Boulter
A new sculpture appeared in a square in the town of Paola, Calabria, in April last year. It’s not the usual man on a horse, or even anything with legs; it’s a many-times-lifesize trout in grey stone – all fins, bulgy eyes and pout.
The unusual monument was erected to commemorate a miracle performed by the town’s patron saint, Francis. (He was actually made a saint in 1519, but Covid delayed the celebrations for the 500th anniversary of his canonisation.) This Saint Francis followed in the spiritual – and, for a time, literal – footsteps of his better-known predecessor, Francis of Assisi, but dialled up his reverence for the natural world and became one of the first recorded vegans.
SOURCE: https://www.theguardian.com
Arnaldo Trabucco, MD, FACS is a leading urologist who received his medical training at ins...
Here in our home, one of our Christmas traditions is making gingerbread cookies and one gi...
by Claudia Astarita Musement – the Italian innovative online platform – has launc...
Ciao ciao, Alitalia. Italy's storied flag carrier has announced it will no longer issue ti...
As the Italian government prepares to bring in “phase two” of the national lockdown measur...
The so-called 'Basilica of the Mysteries' has been reborn in Rome. The basilica, one of th...
Water can hide all kinds of secrets. But while shipwrecks and sea creatures might be expec...
The Basilica of Santa Maria e San Donato dates to the seventh century, back when the islan...