
PLEASE VISIT THE MYSTERIOUSLUCANIA.BLOGSPOT.COM FOR INFORMATION REGARDING THE FINDING OF AN UNKNOWN ORIGINAL LEONARDO DA VINCI SELF-PORTRAIT IN LUCANIA
THE MYSTERIES CONTINUE …
Some of the mysterious puzzles that Lucania possesses will be a true pleasure to work out. Though one confusing object still sits consistently in our minds; the magic cane of Saint Canice-Canio or Kenneth if you will, leader of the Glinni-Gaimen clan of Ireland during the 6th century A.D.
Was this his walking stick? Was he a real wizard with powers? Or was he simply a shepard boy who carried around a long curled staff?
Why do we ask was a piece preserved only to travel from Ireland all the way to a place called Lucania? The suspiscious question is why to this day does it move on its own? I suppose this could cancel out many of those nagging questions. Only wizards possess powers that last centuries...
He was related or tagged as very close to the Glinni-Gaimen's and now where we find his clan, we find his cane had followed. Lucania, and why there we ask? Well, we still can't figure that out.
But nevertheless we have this magic cane behind glass in a marble altar that moves, a holiday preserved to Saint Canio, May 25th and a saint still worshipped and no one knows why.
This is truly one of the most unsolved mysteries of Lucania.
THE PATRON SAINT OF ACERENZA IS IRISH SAINT CANIO, A WIZARD AND LEADER OF THE
We owe much to the research done by the Glinni's, and by them we find out the truth of Saint Canio's 'true' identity. Saint 'Canio' is Saint Canice..
Erroneous information attests that Saint Canio was born in the 3rd century. The original source of this information also insinuated that Saint Canio was of Italian or even African descent. This is hard to believe since his name depicts that of a Gaelic background. The most incredulous part is knowing he was part of the Glinni-Gaimen clan of
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Canio secondo la versione storica tramandata da un canonico del 1000 di nome Suddiacono, era un vescovo proveniente dall'Africa vissuto all'epoca delle persecuzioni dei cristiani fatta da Diocleziano. Secondo questa storia dopo essere miracolosamente sfuggito alla morte arrivò in sud Italia, vicino Salerno, e dopo aver fatto molti miracoli e covertito molte persone, morì inseguito sotto un cespuglio. Secondo I Padri Bollandisti si tratta di una storia falsa! Secondo I Padri Bollandisti Canio è realmente esistito ma intorno al sesto secolo (Los stesso tempo di Canice) e la sua storia fu inventata da Pietro Suddiacono perchè non aveva notizie o documenti
According to my research, Canio traveled to southern
Atella was an ancient city of Campania, halfway between Naples and Capua; its ruins lie between the towns of Orta di Atella and Sant'Arpino. Atella is not mentioned until the Second Punic War, when, although an independent city striking its own coinage, it was allied with Capua and the other Campanian cities in siding with Carthage after the battle of Cannae. It was occupied by Rome in 210 BC, the chief citizens executed and the survivors enslaved or exiled; the city was refounded as a home for the refugees from Nuceria. In the first century BC, Cicero speaks highly of it and appears to have been its patron; it continued into imperial times as a municipium, famed for its traditional scenic performances known as Atellanae.
The Christian bishopric seated at Atella had its origins in 438 or 439 when Canion and eleven associates from North Africa were either expelled by Gaiseric, the Arian king of the Vandals or fled: ex Africa pulsi vel propria sponte exulantes, in Italian advecti. As 'Saint Canio he took his place among the saints and martyrs of Capua and of Campania in a mosaic iconography in the Basilica of Saint Prisco in Capua, where his image is identified with his name. His feast is recorded in the martyrologies as 25 May.
The city had been laid waste by the eighth century to such an extent that bishop Leo of Acerenza in Lucania translated the saint's relics to Acerenza, where he would be made the patron saint.
THE MYSTERIOUS MESSAGE OF THE ACERENZA CATHEDRAL
and translated by Jacqueline J. Jarvis ©2007
CELTIC WAVES IN ITALIAN MUSIC
Music with Celtic roots in the heart of Lucania-Basilicata is to be found by chance, by one musician who noticed. Celtic beats influenced a certain Italian dance, which were inherited by an organist who shared his gift during local festivals. The rich musical flavors of Lucania owe much to the Celtics. New beats were formed, mixed with the Italy’s original Tarantella, and chants were distributed after the “Flight of the Earls,” when they fled from Ireland from the English tyrants. This is a spectacular musical discovery.
Celtic music in southern Italy had existed for over four centuries, and the passion of it still lingers amongst the elders still living in Lucania who aren’t shy to cry out tunes of the lost days when Gaelic nobles arrived with tired feet and a freedom in their hearts from Ireland. Native Lucanians are familiar with the term “Tarantella,” which has two distinctive characters of execution; one antique and one modern. The modern dance started from the late 1700s and was practiced by meridian Italians, above all, by the Neapolitans. It was celebrated by numerous Italian and foreign artists with sophisticated and romanced elements of Italian folklore. Described as “a popular dance,” it was lively music from meridian Italy with beats of 6/8 and 3/8, which was often accompanied by voice and popular instruments like tambourines. Dancers usually danced in couples.
The Celtics were an antique people from meridian Germany and Bohemia and faded from France around 1000 B.C., being pushed over to the British islands and into Italy, Greece, and Asia. This helps us understand the various faces that exist in the Celtic culture.
Celtic influences where tracked down in Italian Tarantella dance beats especially in the versions played by the Lucanians.
Even today, a specific investigation marked the “ARHIJ” following beats of 4/8 and 9/8—perfectly superimposable to the Italian tarantella. If closing your eyes while listening to the Tarantella played in Lucania, you’d hear beats of Celtic origin. The primary anthropomorphic was profoundly and rapidly modified leaving space for new tendencies in the rapid turnover of a few centuries. In certain verses, I compared the ancient Celts to a mark of oil falling on paper, just like Gaetano Cantisani says in his book “Celtic Waves in Lucanian Music.” It’s an effect that marked the territory in a profound, definite and total way. He tells of his story; during musical festivals his discovery of a Celtic wave influence ran through the Lucanian folk music. As a musician playing with various artists, whom bring along their Mary Poppins bag of surprises, that day of revelation came when an absurd beat was detected during a performance. The organist brought along a diverse mode as he played the tarantella, this he inherited. The tarantella was always played around 3 and 6 octaves, there was no other way to play it. This is what scholars had been saying for centuries, and now had changed their opinion as they listened to the Celtic version of an Irish Tarantella.
The beloved ethnic music, with its unique blend of beats became the passion of the band Ethnos. The group performs folk music representing a Lucanian music tradition. Their collection of ancient popular chants pour into the music with loved roots which identify with the Lucanian people (of Irish descent) forming compilations of modern musical styles. With love, Ethnos was born to spread the chants of the Madonna, Tarantellas and popular ballads through musical pieces with modern technical additions. Ethnos is a group of artists, professionalists who became well-known through songwriter Pino Mango; a follow Lucanian himself. Mystifying their audiences is the result of many years of artistic maturity and experience.
Then a “score for eighteen strings and voice,” in which the musicians feel that “dialogue among three guitarists and a voice” was where life of a civilization flows; the mysterious and fascinating peasant civilization of Lucanian people is now performed. Through the softness of string sound and the suggestive strength of voice, Ethnos tries to connote a people, one who represented a rich history; the Lucanian people.” Cantidipassione.it
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