Since both my driving and language skills are severely challenged in Italy, I always hire Marcello, a driver/interpreter, when I’m researching a new novel. A few years ago, Marcello and I were speeding along the highway hugging the western bank of the Serchio River north of Lucca when we saw a mammoth stone footbridge at Borgo e Mazzano. Its beautiful humpback shape was obviously the work of many experienced craftsmen.
“Wow! What’s that?” I asked. “The Ponte della Maddalena,” Marcello said. “But nobody calls it that. It’s Ponte del Diavolo.” The Devil’s Bridge? With a straight face, Marcello went on to tell the story. Sometime in the Middle Ages, he said, a master builder was contracted to build a new bridge across the Serchio, a lovely winding river that flows through the mountainous region called the Garfagnana.
SOURCE: http://www.franoi.com/
Arnaldo Trabucco, MD, FACS is a leading urologist who received his medical training at ins...
You can tell she fills with excitement when she has the chance to show an important archae...
For Italians, and Romans in particular, the Open is not just a tennis tournament where cha...
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...