Only in
Italy!
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View of Lago Trasimeno from Tuoro
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Yesterday
was the first global climate crisis demonstration. There would be demonstrations all over the
world and we wanted to take part. Steve
had contacted the 350.org website for the demonstration nearest to us in
Tuscany. A message came back with an
address in Tuoro sul Lago, a small hill town overlooking Lago Trasimeno, the largest freshwater lake south of the Po River in Italy, less than an hour from our house. We had expected to be directed to Arezzo, a
larger town in Tuscany and closer than Tuoro, but never mind. We had found a place where we could make our
voices heard, and we had an address for the navigator.
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Castiglion Fiorentino
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We got up
very early (for us) on Friday, limited our breakfast at home to cappuccino, and headed
out under a clear blue sky to the event.
We stopped in Castiglion Fiorentino, the town within which our borgo is incorporated, for cornetti (Italian croissants) and
another cappuccino. We mentioned to the
bar owner that we were going to the climate demo in Tuoro and did she know about
it. She looked at us quizzically and
said no. That seemed as odd as the
location of our nearest demo, but we figured 350.org knew what it was doing. We pressed on.
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Tuoro Hillside
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Back in the
car, our navigator took us on a beautiful road that we’d never traveled
before, avoiding the state highway, and arrived in Tuoro about an hour after 9
a.m., the start time, according to the email confirmation Steve had received
from 350.org. The address was a post
office, whose empty parking lot was closed off and there was no one to be seen. Were we too late? In Italy?
Hardly. Thinking that maybe the
demo was down by the lake, we headed there.
Again: nessuno e niente, no one and
nothing. So we decided to turn around
and drive back up into Tuoro and find the main square. Maybe we’d simply missed the meeting point.
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Tuoro Municipio
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We found parking
in front of a bar, next to the main square, and I went in to inquire where the
demo was. The barman was putting cornetti into his oven and said he’d
heard about the climate strike but didn’t know of any participation in
Tuoro. He suggested I ask the police in
the municipio (town hall) next
door. Thanking him for his excellent suggestion,
I entered the municipio. Two policemen in perfectly pressed blue uniforms,
each sitting on opposite sides of the high-ceilinged room, looked up from their
desks. In my best Italian, I asked if
there was a climate demo in town today.
They looked at each other, raised eyebrows, and shrugged as only Italians can. Meaning: Not that they knew of, and if there had been
one, they would surely know, because they would have issued the permit and
blocked off the march route.
So, who had
it wrong? 350.org or the local climate
activist group in Tuoro who told 350.org that the group would participate? Choosing not to dwell on an unanswerable
question, we decided to make lemonade out of this lemon. We pointed ourselves toward a sign for the local history museum.
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Gaius Flaminius Nepos
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The museum
was devoted to the Battle of Lake Trasimeno, the definitive battle of the Second Punic War. The antagonists were the Roman general and consul Gaius Flaminius Nepos (born 265 BC), who built the Via Flaminia (which still exists) to connect Rome with Rimini on the Adriatic, and the Carthaginian general Annibale
Barca (born 247 BC). You know him as Hannibal, one of the greatest generals of the ancient world, right up there with Alexander the Great. At that time, 217 BC, Rome and Carthage
shared the western Mediterranean in a relatively peaceful period following the
end of the First Punic War. Carthage had
control of the Iberian Peninsula south of the Ebro River and Rome held the area
to the north.
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Annibale Barca
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Then Rome
upset the balance of power in 219 BC by striking an alliance with Seguntum, a town south of the
Ebro. Wanting to reinstate equilibrium,
Carthage decided to show Rome a thing or two.
Hannibal gathered his troops in Carthage, traversed the Mediterranean, raced up the Iberian Peninsula, crossed
the Pyrenees and then the Alps with a contingent of Carthaginian, Gallic, Celtic,
and North African soldiers on horseback and driving elephants, no less, to meet
his Roman foe first in Lombardia and then in Tuscany/Umbria. (We
lived in Pavia, a university town in Lombardia, and I remember first hearing
about Hannibal’s crossing of the Alps on elephants and that mastodon bones had
been found in the Ticino River that runs through Pavia. I’ve also crossed the Pyrenees--on foot, not
elephant—and can attest that this was no mean feat on the part of Hannibal’s army.)
The two-room
local history museum was tricked out with a cool diorama, that reminded me of New York's Natural History Museum, showing the staging of the battlefield. There were also some high tech SONY touch
screens that laid out the various theories of how Hannibal outsmarted Flaminius
on the shores of Lake Trasimeno. It’s an inspiring tale. Remember, these armies were fighting without
maps and were new to the terrain.
Hannibal had never set foot in the area.
In the case of Flaminius, Rome had only recently established itself mid-peninsula, but Flaminius was unfamiliar with the environs. How did they know where they were going, who
was camped where, and what lay in between?
To hear the
museum guide talk about the strategy, the battle unfolded like this. Hannibal arrived west of Tuoro, near what is
now a stop in the Milano-Napoli main train line. He sent out some scouts to reconnoiter the
countryside. They found high ground
above the lake from which they could see a natural trap: a very narrow pass between the hills and the
lake shore. Hannibal determined to lure
the Romans into the narrow pass and onto the plain below Tuoro by positioning a
small number of soldiers on the far side of the plain and sending the rest of
his men into hiding in the surrounding woods. Once
the Romans entered the plain, Hannibal blocked their retreat by cutting them
off at the proverbial pass.
It
worked. 15,000 Roman soldiers lost their
lives that day, while between 1,500 and 2,500 Carthaginians, Celts, Gauls, and
North Africans lost theirs. Hannibal
returned to Carthage victorious, but Flaminius was felled by a lance and
beheaded. Still, the political victory
belonged to the dead Roman. The
inhabitants of the Italian peninsula trod by Hannibal declined to rally behind Carthage
and remained loyal to Rome, preventing any restoration of shared hegemony in
the western Mediterranean.
We, too, having
been lured to Tuoro by either 350.org or the local Tuoro climate activists, were
vanquished at Lago Trasimeno. Our diesel
engine car left a nice, big, fat carbon footprint in close to 2.5 hours of
driving from our house to Tuoro, down to the lake, back to Tuoro, and then home. So much for our attempt to save the planet!
Later that
afternoon I went for a walk. A few
months ago, the county had mowed the grass alongside the road that winds
through our hills, something they haven’t done for several years. In the space of two kilometers (about a
mile), I counted 128 pieces of mowed-down, shredded-up plastic bottles (some post-mow
and intact), soft drink and beer cans, crushed aluminum foil, a video cassette, cellophane packaging,
tubes of denture adhesive (whaaaaat?!), and empty cigarette packs.
And that’s not counting the discarded paper
and cardboard. Mind you, there are only
two buildings on this stretch of road. One of them is an abandoned stone house and the other
is currently vacant, being a vacation residence. That means that all the trash along the side
of the road was jettisoned out of the windows of passing vehicles, into a
pristine, wild landscape that has remained unchanged for millennia. Nice.
I must say, I felt vanquished for the second time yesterday. I don’t understand how anyone could be
immersed in such natural beauty and choose to defile it. We need more than a climate
demonstration. We need to respect our Mother.
Keep it
real!
Marilyn





Hey Marilyn, really enjoyed reading this. Sorry it didnt work out with the demonstration but the Hannibal story is fascinating. Keep em coming! Adrian x
ReplyDeleteYou bet! And thanks for the support.
DeleteShame about the demo and being part of something with like minded people all doing something about what they are passionate about. And even more disheartening to see all that trash. I wish plastic water bottles were extinct! Or prohibitively expensive. UGH. I hate it.
ReplyDeleteWell, you did your part with the insulated, re-usable water bottles you gave us as guest gifts this summer!
Delete