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| I Love You Trulli.
©
by Jeanne Manfred "Toto, I don't think we're in Kansas anymore..."
A "trullo" (two or more make "trulli"), built out of the plentiful local stones, is a rectangle outside, an oval inside and a triangle on top. The lower edges of the steep cone roofs come down to meet all the different heights of the walls and the peak above the little front door, making the whole structure look as quaint as an English thatched cottage or as cute as a gingerbread house. Seldom do you see just one lonely "trullo" by itself, for as a family grows so does their tiny one room house. A new "trullo" is nestled right up beside the first one, naturally, with an opening made in their common wall to connect the two. Later, if the family wants even more room, it's simple, just add another one, then another, each with its very own pointy headed roof. Some have also added lofts under their roofs. And, a few very fancy ones are even two-story, such as the most famous one in Alberobello, built in 1780. It's called Il Trullo Sovrano, making it truly one prince of a place.
Some trulli have been turned into small shops for the tourist trade. So, as you stroll around among the little houses, you find a few of the usual souvenir shops, but most display the handicrafts of the local artisans. Others offer the wines, jams and other tempting foodstuffs that are specialties of the region. At the top of the hill, there is a sprawling trulli hotel where the night can be spent in your own private trullo. However, since meals are included in the price, it is a bit pricey. Much better bargains can be found in one of small hotels in the standard Italian part of town, within easy walking distance to and from the trulli section.
However, even earlier, perhaps around 3000 BC, peoples from
the Mid-East,
looking for a more fertile land, migrated westward. Some of these
wanderers
finally settled down in what is now La Puglia, bringing with them their
primitive culture. The native stones lying about all over the fields,
ready
to be easily picked up, were first used to build their tombs.
Eventually,
as this method of construction evolved, they also began to build
primitive
domed dwellings, with empty spaces inside to shelter them during bad
weather—the forerunner of our cozy family home, without the monthly
rent or
the
30 year mortgage. A story that one hears in Alberobello is that the origin of
the conical roof has to do with the ease of dismantling and
reassembling at tax time! Roofed buildings—again, this is what they say—were taxed more than open
stalls
or sheds; thus, when the tax collector was in the area, you simply took
down the roof of your house, paid the lower taxes and reassembled the
roof after he left. (I hope that's a true story!) These prehistoric colonists also brought along their magic
symbols,
which are still being used as special designs of white stone set into
the
roof of a trullo. Later, Greek and Christian symbols, such as
the
cross, were added to the ancient ones. However, even today, many of the
doors face east, toward that first god of all, the Sun.
Much of the region of La Puglia is full of undiscovered treasures—at least, undiscovered by most American and English tourists. For instance, just a short distance from Alberobello is one of the great natural wonders of Italy, the Caverns of Castellana (Le Grotte di Castellana). These are tremendous underground caves with spectacularly beautiful rock formations, plus stalactites and stalagmites that abound in a fantasy of colors. Going from "Munchkinland" to "Fantasyland" sound more like a
trip to
Disneyland, but it's really even better. It's REAL. Trulli it is!
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