LAGO TRASIMENO
Lake Trasimeno is the third ( or fourth?) largest lake in Italy and it dominates northern Umbria. It is only a drop of what it once was, it once stretched from Arezzo in the north to Spoleto in the south. Leonardo Da Vinci proposed linking the Tiber and the Arno to the Lake so there could be navigable commerce between Rome and Florence. He was full of big ideas, rarely realized. The Lake is quite shallow so the water is often turquoise green. Unlike lakes in New England,no vacation house dot its shores, only fields and a few marshes.
The name is derived from the legend a failed (what else) love affair between the nymph Agilla, who was born in nearby Agello, and Trasimeno, son of the god Tyrraene. As their union was impossible, they threw themselves into the lake that now bears his name.
Isola Polvese from San Feliciano
James Aponovich
pencil on paper, 9" x 14"
The largest of the three islands that seem to float around on Lake Trasimeno is Polvese. It is largely uninhabited now but its history goes back to before the Etruscans. During the 13th Century, a fortessa (castle) was built on the south side of the island by the Knights Templar. Later, on the other side a monastery ( Orvieitan) was constructed and both ruins still stand. It once housed hundreds of people but malaria drove them out. Napoleon wanted to drain it.
All I know is when you see the emerald Polvese sitting in the turquoise water....magic happens
{ week 33}
Copyright2015 James Aponovich
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