A very good
whatever time of day it is to you all! I am currently sitting in my bed feeling
rather sorry for myself as I am recovery from the flu. It would
appear having a chest infection is not enough sickness for one winter so the
flu came to say hello too. In fact that is why there was no post last week as
my brain could not hold enough concentration even to read my book let alone
write out a relatively eloquent post for you all. Which, by the way, bugged me as I do
happen to have a particularly fantastic 3 day weekend I wanted to share with
you all while it was still fresh in my mind, however, a week as not completely
lost it from memory. So here we go, my three day holiday in the amazing city of Turin.
The best
thing about Turin is that in that one city name, so much significance is
stored. To any football fanatic they will instantly think JUVENTUS (a team I
have come to learn far more about in my time here in Italy than I ever intended
learning about any football sports team. Ever!) To historians it is full
battles between Europe, it holds the old Parliament house from its time as
Italy’s Capital. For chocolatiers it is the birth place of the idea to combine chocolate
with hazelnuts which eventually brought that amazing spread everyone has come
to know and love. Nutella. But whatever your passion is, it would seem this
city holds some form of it in its chock-a-block full history.
When I first
decided to go to Turin, Filomena went through my Lonely Planet Italy book,
pointing out all the sights I simple HAD to see. This then gave me an idea. As
any regular readers will know, when I go and play tourist in a new city I always
end up seeing the big sights famous to the area and then just end up wandering
the streets and exploring the city that way. I am in no way saying I dislike this
approach, in contrast I love it hence always doing it. But this time I figured,
why not do a proper, full on, Lonely Planet recommended tour of Turin? So
that’s exactly what I did. I mapped out activities, cafes, sights and museums for
each day. That meant that when I arrived in Turin, despite the fact it was 5ᵒC
and raining, I grabbed my map (as little help as it probably would be to me!)
and finally found Grom which according to my guide book was the number one
gelateria in Turin. That hazelnut and chocolate gelato did certainly manage to
find a place on my top gelaterias in Italy. The smoothness of it, and the real
and intense but not too sweet flavour was truly delicious.
My lamp lit rain wet first view of Turin |
As I only
had an afternoon that Friday due to the train ride, I decided to spend the rest
of it at the Egyptian Museum. And here is where I become lost for words. I
honestly don’t even know how top describe how amazing this museum is. The first
room is so jam-packed full of artefacts that you could spend an entire day just
in that one room and not have seen everything in all its detail. The intricacy
and age of these pieces blew my mind. And from there, every room just got
better and better. I saw real life (well dead) mummies, their sarcophagus’ and
treasures which were laid to rest with them. Statues lit in an eerie gold light
casting spooky shadows across the floor, reflected by floor to ceiling walls
making their quantity more yet ever changing. Whenever I try to find a way into
which to describe the amazingness of this place all I come up with is
asdfghjkl!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Just please, if you EVER even pass through Turin, go
to this museum!
A real life (dead) Mummy |
Ancient Book of the Dead |
Ancient Egyptian statue |
Ancient Egyptian statues |
Mole Antonelliana - home to the Cinema Museum |
Costumes from Gangs of New York (yes including Leonardo's!) |
Wall of fame |
The incredible Italian hot chocolate |
Panoramic view of Turin |
Hill top view of the Mole Antonelliana |
Now I
realise I have written a rather huge amount today so need to wrap it all up
rather quickly with this one simple sentence. If Turin is not already on your
places to go, put it there.
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