San Domenico and San Gimignano

Well, the halfway point of my trip has come and gone—how is that possible? I have, obviously, been keeping busy. There’s just so much to marvel at here, and my school sometimes puts on lectures and trips (last week, there was an olive oil tasting, and over the weekend I went to Montepulciano, Cortona, and Pienza), and as the saying goes, time flies when you’re surrounded by some of the most profound beauty that the world has to offer and constantly awash in new and interesting experiences. (That is the saying, right?)

I’m short on time and, actually, I’ve covered many of the historical details before, so there won’t be too much explanation in this post.

On Friday, I visited the Basilica di San Domenico. This cathedral, built in medieval times to venerate St. Catherine of Siena (and preserve her thumb and skull), has one of my favorite church interiors—it’s dim and gray, without pillars or significant frescoes, and the ceiling is flat and unremarkable, but it is tall and open and peaceful, and sound does not carry except from a few particular places. It is extremely contemplative, leaving you to focus your own thoughts rather than trying to draw your mind to greatness with elaborate art and spectacle.

There are no photos allowed inside the church, and unfortunately, the outside is not very interesting to me. Still, it’s a perfect example of the color of the Senese brick that was so ubiquitous in its medieval architecture, and against the brilliant spring sky, surrounded by cypresses and pines, it is a quintessentially Italian sight.

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I wandered down the hill just past the church a bit to see where the staircase led (nowhere hugely noteworthy, except possibly Alma Domus, a nun-run hotel that I had wanted to stay at last year but missed out on).

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A few blocks from San Domenico is the house where the beloved Santa Caterina grew up. Over time, it has been restored and transformed into a chapel in her honor, with each room containing paintings, statues, and frescoes depicting miraculous events in her life. Once again, no photos were allowed inside, but the courtyard is lovely.

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On Saturday, I took the extra-urban bus to San Gimignano, one of the better-known Tuscan villages, with a distinct—and sometimes overplayed—medieval character. San Gimignano is famous for its towers; fourteen remain where sixty once stood, most part of the fortified homes of squabbling noble families. The oldest towers date from the 900s; by the Renaissance, however, towers had fallen out of fashion due to the development of cannons and other forms of weaponry capable of knocking them down.

Piazza della Cisterna, one of the larger and more commercial open spaces in this little hill town:

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In Piazza del Duomo, with the Palazzo Pubblico (the civic/governmental palace), Torre Grossa, and the Duomo:

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Have any of my readers played Assassin’s Creed II? You know those funny square holes that are spaced at regular (convenient) intervals along all the towers and walls? Those were probably used to secure beams that supported balconies and other structures. Handsome young Florentine assassins might not have been able to use them to climb, but they could probably have waltzed right up a handy wooden staircase.

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Shops throughout town sell famous wines such as Chianti Classico, Rosso or Nobile di Montepulciano, and San Gimignano’s specialty white wine, Vernaccia; you can also find cinghiale (wild boar) sausage, salami, and prosciutto.

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The view from where I ate my lunch (a wild boar prosciutto and pecorino cheese sandwich):

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Even better, the view from the top of Torre Grossa:

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Leaving the Palazzo Pubblico, and back to the steps of the Duomo:

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A brief walk from the center of town leads out to a tiny medieval fortress, now a public park filled with olive trees, drenched in sunlight, and with a lovely view of the San Gimignano skyline from atop one of the fortress walls.

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Clustered around the fortress are towering pines:

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Back into town, I returned to Piazza della Cisterna, bought some gelato, and ate it by the well.

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Night begins to fall:

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Next up: still more gorgeous Tuscan hill towns (they really are endless).

Il Duomo e la Fortezza

On Wednesday, word of an open-air market at the fortress was all over school, so a few of my classmates and I hiked around past San Domenico to Fortezza Medicea, once military fortress housing Florentine troops, and now an enormous public park.

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Merchant stalls surrounded the ancient brick walls like the camp of an army laying siege, selling everything from clothes and shoes to kitchen utensils to beautiful meats, cheeses, fruits, and vegetables.

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(I was much more interested in the latter.)

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The fortress was built in the 1560s by order of Cosimo I de’ Medici after his Florentine forces conquered the city. With its perimeter of over one kilometer, it’s a popular spot for walking and jogging, as well as picnicking. I love to pick up a sandwich from a nearby bar or a bit of fruit and cheese from the market just across the bridge, and eat with a view of the majestic Tuscan hills or the city’s three great towers.

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My friends and I wandered back through town and parted ways at the Duomo, which I’d seen last year but wanted to visit for a second time.

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One of my classmates asked me an impossible question: between the Duomo of Siena and that of Florence, which one do I like better?

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I think I prefer the exterior of Santa Maria del Fiore, with its pastel colors and gentler Renaissance architecture. Siena’s intensely Gothic façade and bold black-and-white stripes are a little too jarring for me.

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Doesn’t stop me from photographing the heck out of it, though.

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The structure is mostly 13th-14th century Gothic, influenced by what was then quite fashionable in France. Note the similarities between this facade and that of Notre Dame, particularly on the upper levels. (The Duomo’s first story, begun in 1215 and worked on until just before 1300, is more Romanesque, while the upper stories and the belltower were designed in the early 1300s.)

If you read my blog last year and are currently going, “but wait, this all looks so familiar!”, then you are right. I featured several shots from Siena’s Duomo last year. That day, however, my camera battery died partway through the trip, so this year, I have taken pains to ensure that you’ll get to witness as much of the Duomo as possible!

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I mentioned before that I prefer the outside of Florence’s cathedral to Siena’s, but the reverse is true inside. While there is something to be said for the contemplative simplicity of Santa Maria del Fiore’s interior (Siena’s San Domenico is similar, and it’s one of my favorite cathedral interiors), the tightly-woven complexity of Siena’s really comes together for me. It is order just bordering on chaos, it’s a bold celebration of contrast.

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The interior includes works by Michelangelo, Duccio, Donatello, Nicola and Giovanni Pisano, Bernini, Pinturicchio, and still others.

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From the Museo dell’Opera del Duomo, you can climb up to a vantage point on the wall of what might one day have been the new façade, if not for the bubonic plague. The Senese intended to expand the existing cathedral to fill the entire piazza, making it the largest church in Europe (and more importantly, larger than that in Florence); after the plague, the project was abandoned, the populace fearing that the plague was punishment for their hubris.

In addition to another lovely view of the countryside, this place gives you an excellent angle on the cathedral itself.

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Note the changing widths of the white stripes on the bell tower. From ground level, this creates the illusion that the tower is much taller than it actually is.

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Later, I returned to Piazza del Campo to people-watch and get a bit of sun.

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Next up: San Domenico, and a day trip to San Gimignano!

Siamo in arrivo a… Siena!

On Sunday, after my morning in Pisa, I took the train to Siena and a cab from the railway station to my host’s apartment, where I have been for a week, now. It’s a clean building in a quiet neighborhood, just a few minutes from the bus stop, and from there a fifteen-minute ride into town past silver fields of olive trees and hills with little golden buildings perched on them. Monday was terribly cold and rainy and I didn’t do much sight-seeing, but Tuesday was all blue sky and warm sun, so I did what I seem to do in every city I visit nowadays: find the tallest tower and climb it!

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Torre del Mangia, seen in the above photo from a viewpoint atop the nearby Duomo, was the tallest secular tower in Italy when it was built, overlooking Piazza del Campo from the Palazzo Pubblico. It was named for Giovanni di Balduccio, whose nickname, “Mangiaguadagni,” more or less meant “he eats his paychecks” and referred to his love of expensive food. (He and I have something in common.) The tower is visible from almost all of Siena, and was designed to be the same height as the belltower of the Duomo, symbolizing the equal power of the church and the secular government in the medieval Senese republic.

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The tower is 330 feet tall and provides an astounding view of the city, the Piazza, and the surrounding countryside. From it, you can identify three other “high points” of this hilly Tuscan town: the Duomo, the church of San Domenico, and (difficult to see in the below photo, but look just behind San Domenico’s belltower in the far right) Fortezza Medicea.

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The lower levels of the tower have windows overlooking the Piazza, making it an excellent place to watch the milling crowds on a sunny afternoon, or the preparations for Carnevale if you happen to be there on Fat Tuesday…

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The Palazzo Pubblico, seat of the government of the republic for hundreds of years and now a museum and theatre, still sports the symbols of Siena’s medieval independence from nearby Florence and the Papal armies: the black and white crests of the city, and the water spouts in the form of snarling wolves (Siena’s symbol is la lupa who nursed Romulus and Remus, the legendary founders of Rome). When Siena was finally conquered by Florence around 1560, the Medici family coat of arms was added to the building’s façade, topped by fearsome metal crowns.

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The white marble structure at the base of the tower is a chapel, built by the survivors of the Black Death in 1348; today, it is used to bless the participants of the Palio, a twice-annual horse race around the Piazza. (For more on the Palio, see my entry from last year’s Siena day trip.)

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Any of the caffeterie or ristoranti around the Piazza give you a great vantage point for people-watching in the afternoon, and the prices, while somewhat inflated due to the location, aren’t nearly as bad as in places like Piazza San Marco in Venice or near the Vatican in Rome. The food is nothing to scoff at, either. A good Senese specialty, well-represented in the historic center, is pici, a type of thick, round noodle that is satisfying and chewy. You can also find lots of typical Tuscan secondi such as coniglio (rabbit) and cinghiale (wild boar).

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The day wore on and Piazza del Campo began to fill with people in anticipation of Carnevale. I didn’t stick around, since the festivities were mostly oriented towards children and I was getting tired of the crowds, and instead took a walk towards San Domenico.

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On deck: Fortezza Medicea and Siena’s striking Duomo.

6 January (part II): Siena e il Palio

I wrote last time that I have been in love with Siena, very deeply and in secret, for a long time. Because of this, I wanted to devote an appropriate amount of effort to the story (and to the photos), and I simply didn’t think I could do it justice in the little time I had this morning. I also had been lazy and hadn’t finished processing the photos, but I like the first excuse better.

When I was little, my mother had all of these books from her childhood by an author named Marguerite Henry. The books were all in hardback, with gorgeous color illustrations, and they were all dramatized but ostensibly true stories about horses. I was in one of those phases at the time and I must have read all of them cover-to-cover a dozen times each. A number of them were about a family on the island of Chincoteague on the American east coast, but there was one about a boy in Italy and a horse that he rescued, trained, and raced in the Palio in Siena. The book was called Gaudenzia–the name of the horse, which one character translates as “the joy of living”–and because of it, I became obsessed with the Palio for a good few years, in spite of how dangerous it was made out to be. I would play make-believe with props made hastily from whatever objects and art supplies I could find lying around and run around the yard, pretending that I was racing in the Palio.

The obsession faded after not too long, but you know, that sort of childhood love for a thing or a place never goes away. Even if I have not read that book in probably ten or twelve years, I remember the story in glimpses, in fragments of prose and mental images. Ever since reading it, I have secretly wished that I could see the place where it is held and experience it first-hand.

But before we get to that, I’ll roughly follow our guided tour and show you a few other things first.

Siena is very much a Tuscan city; the streets are narrow, and generally stone rather than cement pavement, with no real delineation between sidewalk and drivable surface. A defining feature of Siena is its hills; the city is built over three of them, with prominent city features placed on each one. When walking through Siena, you’ll go up and down, up and down, on steep terrain with abrupt changes in inclination.

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The dominant architectural style is medieval; there is lots of old stone and terracotta brick. Some areas have an almost Roman feeling to them.

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Our first stop on the tour was the Church of San Domenico, important to the Sienese because it was built in honor of St. Catherine, the patron saint of Siena and one of the two patron saints of Italy (along with St. Francis of Assisi). The story goes that Catherine, who had entered the public eye by traveling throughout Italy to help the poor and the ill and to advocate for clergical reform, went to Avignon (at the time, the seat of the Papacy) to ask the Pope to return to Rome. Less than a year later, her request was granted, and Pope Gregory XI moved to Italy. She died and is buried in Rome, but her skull and her thumb are preserved as relics in San Domenico.

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There were no photographs allowed inside the church, though some members of our group were taking photos anyway. Let me take this moment to say that it really frustrates me when people do not respect the wishes or regulations at historical sites. Regardless of one’s religious belief, I think it’s important to at least give respect to the people who live in, worship at, and take care of these places, and above all, to never use your flash at historical or artistic sites, EVER. I could rant forever on this subject, but I will spare you.

Our next stop was the Duomo of Siena, formally the Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta.

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Constructed in the 13th century but including works from the Renaissance and additional chapels and structures from even later. As such, this Duomo is unusual among Italian churches in that it incorporates four architectural styles: Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance, and Baroque.

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The black and white marble is all from Siena (and other colors and varieties of local marble can be found inside, mostly in floor mosaics). Black and white, the colors of Siena, are said to represent the colors of the horses owned by the city’s founding brothers, Senius and Aschius.

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The façade is distinctly Gothic, and in fact reminiscent of the Duomo of Milan.

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The interior is rich with frescoes and statues, and of course, the black and white stripes.

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The Duomo has a library that was, until recently, closed off from the public and kept dark. As such, the frescoes on its walls (our guide attributed them to Rafael himself, but Wikipedia says differently—I shall leave it to you to decide!) are preserved in astounding color.

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After leaving the Duomo, our guide took us at last to Piazza del Campo, where the Palio is held twice a year (once in July, once in August).

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It is a surprisingly small space for a horse race! In fact, the race itself takes only a little over a minute.

The race represents a traditional rivalry between the seventeen districts, or contrade, that make up the residential sectors of the city. Each contrada has a mascot and a distinct identity. If you are born in a contrada, you belong to it for life, no matter where you may move. In each Palio, ten of the seventeen contrade contribute a horse and a jockey; the jockeys ride bareback, and use their whips as much to disturb other jockeys and horses as to encourage their own. Preventing one’s rival from winning is as much a part of the sport as aiming to win oneself, and a surprising amount of physical interference is permissible. It is not uncommon for jockeys to fall (or be pushed) off, though it is important to note that a horse can win the race with or without its rider.

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Standing in the Piazza del Campo was certainly one of the top ten most amazing moments of this trip. (Also among the top ten were: the tower in Lucca, my first cappuccino, standing in the Colosseum, the bistecca fiorentina that I had for dinner last night.)

After Siena, we went to a wine-tasting at a small Chianti vineyard called Sant’Appiano, which ages its wines in oak barrels in a traditional underground cellar that is more a cave than a constructed space. It’s beautiful.

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The wines (and the olive oil) were excellent.

6 January (part I): San Gimignano

I have given up on trying to keep track of how many days I have been here (correct answer: quite a few) and will just give dates from here on. In any case, I have survived three weeks, have moved into my host family, and have made some friends!

Thursday was Epiphany, so the school was closed and we decided to take a tour of the Chianti region and Siena. Chianti is the name of the hilly regions south of Florence; it is best known for its wine but also produces some of the best olive oil in the world. The gently-sloped hills are all shades of green, covered in mist, and scored with vineyards and olive orchards.

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Our first stop was a tiny town called San Gimignano. It is perched on the top of a little hill, overlooking the rolling landscape, surrounded by olive trees and pines.

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It is deliciously medieval.

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Really, it’s the kind of place where seeing a car or even a person in modern clothing seems an anacrhonism.

The history of San Gimignano and the Chianti region is tied to the ancient rivalry between Florence and Siena, and was shaped by the effects of the Black Death. The ruling powers of both cities wanted the land between them (and each other) for their own, not only for control of wine and oil production, but for control of the roads and the ability to tax the goods that were transported there. Florence eventually won, and Siena was subsequently crippled by the Plague; thus, it was Florence that had the greater political and financial power, and Florence that gave birth to the Renaissance, while Siena did not experience the same population growth or architectural evolution. Thus, Siena and many of the small towns in the Chianti region (such as, for example, San Gimignano) have retained this medieval character and tend to have very small populations.

In the piazza by the town’s cathedral, surrounded by fourteen ancient towers, there is an open-air market of clothing, gifts, and fresh food.

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San Gimignano’s town hall shows some of the earliest examples of perspective in frescoes. The three-dimensionality is striking in person—the images pop out at the viewer and really have an astonishing sense of depth.

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We had about an hour to wander San Gimignano; my friends and I stopped for coffee, bought some postcards and souvenirs, and mostly wandered the stone streets gaping in awe. When our time was up, we piled back onto our tour bus and were on our way to Siena.

Now, as you may remember, I had a misadventure in Siena during my first few days in Italy, so I was really looking forward to the chance to experience it properly. I also have been secretly, deeply in love with Siena since I was very young, and I will tell you why in my next post!

For now, here is a preview:

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Until next time! Ciaociao!

Day 3: Siena, mi dispiace

Mi dispiace! No photos today. The attempted trip to Siena turned into a slight disaster due to my lack of understanding of Italian bus systems. I had the address of a nun-run hotel that I was planning to stop by, but attempting to follow the provided directions somehow left me at a bus stop on the outskirts of town. After spending hours hiking up and down icy hills and trying to find my way to the city center, I gave up, returned to the train station via street signs and dead reckoning, and caught the next train back to Florence to nurse my wounded ego.

I am exhausted, sore, a little overwhelmed, and sad to have lost an entire day to this, but I am really coming to love Florence–good, because I’ll be spending a lot of time here starting in January–and I think I’ll hang out here until it’s time to head to Rome (hotel reserved starting the 23rd). I’ve found a comfortable youth hostel that I think will do for the next few days, and I’m excited to do some more in-depth sightseeing here.

Listening to Italians chatting on their cell phones can be entertaining, especially as they say their good-byes. They seem to like the word “ciao” as much as I do and will say it repeatedly, all mushed together, as a farewell. Most men stop at two repetitions (and I think this “ciaociao” is mostly reserved for girlfriends), but women may say it five or six times in rapid succession.

It’s currently raining, which will either melt the snow or freeze it overnight into an icy deathtrap. Weather Underground reports rain and (for the most part) temperatures above freezing.

Tomorrow, conditions providing: let’s go to some museums!