Hello everyone, welcome back to ItalianPod101.com. |
My name is Desy. |
Mi chiamo Desy. |
And in this video, we're going to talk about legends in Italy. |
cinque leggende in Italia |
I'm going to tell you about cinque, cinque, five legends in Italy. |
cinque leggende italiane |
Actually, there are plenty, but I thought these five in particular are really interesting. |
The first one is about the foundation of Rome. |
la leggenda di Romolo e Remo |
Romolo and Remo's legend. |
You probably know about this already, but let's see what happened in details. |
So since Rome came after this legend, |
here we're talking about the city called Alba Longa, Alba Longa, |
founded by Enea's son, Enea's son, il figlio di Enea, Ascanio, Ascanio. |
Many descendants had the power until the throne was passed to two brothers, |
Numitore and his brother Amulio. |
I don't think you really care about the name, but anyway, |
one of them took power with violence |
and forced his brother's daughter to take a vow of chastity |
so that there was not hair that could actually oppose him. |
However, Mars, Marte, Marte, the god, fell in love with this girl, |
Rea Sidia, she was called, |
and from this love, two twins were born. |
Romolo and Remo, of course. |
Guards were ordered to kill them, but they pitted the babies |
and just left them in the forest without killing them, |
but then later on saying that they did kill them, even though they didn't. |
So the two babies left by themselves were actually taken care of by a wolf, |
una lupa, lupa. |
They grew up and later on founded what today we know as Roma, Rome. |
It's interesting to notice how this legend may be based on real facts, |
because lupa, so the word wolf in ancient Rome, |
was also used in ancient Alba Longa, was also used to refer to prostitutes, |
so it may be possible that actually some girl, some woman, |
really did take care of the kids that were abandoned, |
but the legend says that it was a real wolf. |
Number two, il fantasma di Azzurina, Azzurina's ghost. |
Azzurina is just the name or actually the nickname |
that was given to a girl that disappeared in 1375, |
when she was only five years old. |
So the legend says that this baby girl was born albino |
and it wasn't a good sign for superstition at that time, |
so the population didn't really like her, |
and because the father was afraid something would happen to her, |
he always made her be followed by two guards. |
One day there was a storm and she was playing with a ball |
and that fell into the ice cell, the ice box of the house, |
and she went to catch it. |
Guards say that they heard the scream and when they went in, |
mind you there was no window or other door where she could escape from, |
they didn't find her anymore. |
Why the name Azzurina? |
That's because the mother, because she didn't want people to just discriminate her, |
tried to dye her hair with natural pigments, |
but that didn't really work well at that time, |
so it just became light blue and she also had blue eyes, |
so that's why her name became Azzurina, |
even though she was supposed to be called Guendalina. |
And people say that every five years during that day, |
which was the solstice of summer, |
you can hear screams and voices in the castle and that's Azzurina. |
There's also a painting that was actually made after she was dead |
because people said that that's what they saw in the castle. |
By the way, the castle is in Montebello, Romagna. |
On a lighter note, let's move to legend number three, |
La Principessa Sicilia, Princess Sissidy, Sicilia. |
So it's said that once upon a time in a far, far country of the east, |
a girl was born, a princess. |
Everyone in the country was really excited for this new girl to be in the country, to be alive, |
but an oracle said that when she turned 15, |
she would die eaten by a monster if she didn't go away taking the sea. |
So when she turned 15, she did that in order to escape death, |
and even though she thought she was about to die because it was a long, long trip, |
she then landed in what today we call Sicily, Sicilia, |
a beautiful land with trees, fruits, sun. |
However, she found herself alone, so she started crying |
because she was just alone in an unknown country, unknown land, right? |
And a guy came to her telling her that everyone on the island was actually dead |
because of a plague, and it was then them who populated the island. |
And this is the legend of Princess Sissidy, Principessa Sicilia. |
From the south, we move to north for the fourth legend, which talks about Hell's Door. |
La Porta dell'Inferno, a Torino, in Turin. |
Piazza Statuto, it's a square in Turin, |
and it has a statue of an angel with his palms down, facing down, |
and also he's looking down. |
People say that he's Lucifer when he was kicked out from Heaven, |
so he's just looking down where he is supposed to be now in Hell because he's going there. |
And this is also because on his head of this statue, |
there was once a pentacle upside down, which disappeared in a mysterious way. |
Talking about Hell and not moving from Piemonte, |
the fifth legend is about Il Ponte del Diavolo, Satan's Bridge. |
So the name of this bridge comes from the fact that according to the legend, |
it was Satan himself who built the bridge, |
because it happened that the bridge fell down twice, |
so the third time it was Satan himself who came on Earth and was like, |
look, I'm going to do it for you, okay? |
Just give me the soul of the first being that crosses the bridge. |
Population was so smart that they sent a dog, actually, |
so he couldn't in the end take anybody's soul, not from humans at least. |
He got really angry and he stomped his feet on the ground, |
making what today is called Marmitte dei Giganti, |
Giant's Pot, which the legend says it's basically Satan's feet. |
Something else that is said to justify this geological phenomena, |
which is not only under the bridge but nearby as well, |
is that the Giant's Pot is where Satan cooked meal for his helpers |
that did actually help him to build the bridge. |
So either way, Satan was there, the legend says. |
As I was saying, there are plenty of legends in Italy, |
a lot of them with gnomes, elves and fairies, gnomi, elfi e fate, |
but I hope you liked my selection of legends. |
Let me know in the comments which one you liked the most |
and remember, if you haven't done it yet, |
to sign up for your free lifetime account on italianpod101.com. |
I'll see you soon, thanks for watching, ciao ciao, bye bye. |
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