Bright and joyful colours couple with the warm sunlight in the marine burgh of Termopoli, from where we continue our journey discovering the 136 Communes of Molise; they are linked each other by a fixed course twisting amid a small plot of land, in which inhabitants are proud as always to dwell. Thanks to a perfect architectonic restore, alleys, houses, churches and artisan workshops (all dating back to the Middle Age) have maintained the same conditions that the writer Francesco Iovine, born in Guardialfiera, chanted so poetically. Moreover, [Read more...]
Bright and joyful colours couple with the warm sunlight in the marine burgh of Termopoli, from where we continue our journey discovering the 136 Communes of Molise; they are linked each other by a fixed course twisting amid a small plot of land, in which inhabitants are proud as always to dwell. Thanks to a perfect architectonic restore, alleys, houses, churches and artisan workshops (all dating back to the Middle Age) have maintained the same conditions that the writer Francesco Iovine, born in Guardialfiera, chanted so poetically. Moreover, still remains the vitality of the ancient burghs: in fact, every year they revive with numerous folkloristic events, which tell their history, art, customs and culinary traditions. Le Carresi, for example: a “palio” of chariots hauled by a pair of oxen along the streets of Ururi; or the “Ndocce di Agnone”, which, together with the Festival of the bagpipe occurring in Scapoli and the famous living crib in S. Polo Maltese, present a flurry of emotions that surround the magic atmosphere of Christmas.