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**Ten Things You Don't Know About Turin Italy (Free Italy Travel Advice)**
1. Turin is considered a "city of magic." Lying on the 45th parallel, Turin is, one of the three vertexes of the triangle of white magic with Prague and Lyon, and of the triangle of black magic with London and San Francisco. Other reasons: Nostrodamus once lived here. Legend has it that the Holy Grail is also buried in the city. Somewhere Tours (www.somewhere.it) runs a three-hour evening walking tour called Magic Turin. 2. Turin's Egyptian Museum (www.museoegizio.org) holds the largest collection, some 30,000 pieces, of ancient artifacts outside of Cairo.
4. Between 1861 and 1864, Turin was Italy's first capital. See Italys first parliament at the Museum of the Risorgimento, devoted to the history of Italian unification. 5. The Shroud of Turin is rarely on public display. You can see the chest where it is stored when visiting the city cathedral, but can only lay eyes on the holy sheet when the Pope decides to put it on display. Next scheduled appearance -- 2025. There's also a museum (www.sindone.org) devoted to the holy cloth. _______________________________________________________________________________________________ Like what you're reading? and hundreds of others from over three years of issues of Dream of Italy, The Insider's Guide to Undiscoverd Italy on ABC World News This Morning and Associated Press Radio. Click here here _______________________________________________________________________________________________ 6. As the birthplace of Vermouth (1786), its no wonder Torinese have made the aperitif a nightly tradition at the city's many traditional cafes. 7. Turin's royal palaces are on the UNESCO World Heritage List. When the Duke of Savoy moved his family from France to Italy in the late 16th century, he set out to show the power of the royal house by building opulent homes. 8. Numerous films, including The Italian Job,have been made in Turin. Guests at the Meridien Lingotto Hotel, housed in a former Fiat factory, can jog around the rooftop test track used in the movie. The city's National Museum of Cinema (www.museonazionaledelcinema.org) offers plenty of film history and a fantastic view.
10. The world's oldest map will be shown to the public for the first time ever at Turin's Palazzo Bricherasio (www.palazzobricherasio.it) between February 8 and May 7, 2006. blog comments powered by Disqus
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