Incredibile opening of Atlantis Hotel in Dubai

Shrugging off the global financial crisis, Dubai overnight toasted a new luxury hotel with a 20 million dollar bash attended by film stars and sporting greats and marked by a spectacular fireworks display.
More than 2,000 world celebrities were invited to the event, which began Thursday night and continued into Friday.

Among those who showed up for what the local press described as the "party of the decade" were Hollywood stars Robert de Niro, Charlize Theron, Mischa Barton and Wesley Snipes. Other notables who walked the red carpet at the 1.5-billion-dollar "Atlantis, The Palm" hotel included singers Kylie Minogue, who performed before the fireworks display, and Shirley Bassey, Hollywood star Priyanka Chopra and catwalk model Yasmin Le Bon.

Located at the trunk-top of the Palm Jumeirah, one of three palm-shaped islands, Atlantis occupies the entire central part of a huge breakwater. The 1,539-room hotel is made up of two pale rose towers, which are linked by a bridge which houses a 35,000-dollar-a-night suite.

The bash cost a hefty 20 million dollars, said Sol Kerzner, the South African billionnaire, hotel and gambling tycoon, who organised the party. "We built something that’s quite extraordinary. We’ve got to tell the world about it," Kerzner told AFP about the lavish hotel. The hotel opened unofficially on September 24 and has had an occupancy rate of 80 percent, Kerzner said. "We don’t know how long it’s going to take for the economy around the world to take off again," he added. The Dubai hotel is inspired by the original Atlantis that Kerzner built in the Bahamas but is not an average 5-star hotel.

It boasts the largest waterpark in the Middle East and a gigantic aquariumin which 65,000 fish, along with an enormous whale shark, swim in 11 million litres of water.

Here some aother pictures and the original article

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Luminaria in Pisa

Every year on the night of the 16th of June the enchantment of the Illuminations of Saint Ranieri is renewed on the streets running along the river Arno (the so-called Lungarni). In fact, following an ancient tradition the Pisans celebrate their patron saint, St. Ranieri, of the following day. There are about seventy-thousand wax candles which at every edition are meticulously set in smooth and white glasses and fixed then onto wooden white-painted frames, modelled in such a way as to exalt the outline of the palaces, of the bridges, of the churches and of the towers reflecting on the river.

The exceptional appendix to this scenery is the leaning tower, enlightened in the same old fashion with oil lamps, set also on the crenulations of the city walls in the area encircling the Piazza dei Miracoli. After the lighting, because of the reverberation of the myriad of trembling lights on the Arno and because of the candles that are left floating on its waters, the event offers the visitor a unique feeling impossible to describe thanks to the ecstatic enchantment that since antiquity makes the Pisan nights of the 16th June magic. On the 25th of March 1688, the urn containing the body of Ranieri degli Scaccieri, patron saint of the city who died as a saint in 1161, was placed inside the chapel dedicated to the Crowned Virgin in the Cathedral of Pisa. Cosimo III De Medici asked that the old urn containing the relic was changed with a more modern and richer one.
click to zoom in

The translation of the urn was the occasion for a memorable feast, from which, following the tradition, started the three-year illuminations of Pisa, first called Illumination and that then during the nineteenth century took the name of "Luminara"(or Luminaria).

The idea of celebrating the feast by enlightening the town with oil lamps was still not conceived at that time, but it was an ancient habit gradually consolidated during particularly solemn and joyful events having nothing to share with the worship of the patron saint. There is clear evidence of this tradition: on the 14th of June 1662 (before the translation of Saint Ranieri’s body) the Illumination was made in honour of Marguerite Louise, princess of Orléans and wife of Cosimo II, who passed through Pisa on her way to Florence. There is also evidence of some previous editions such as the one organised in honour of Victoria della Rovere on occasion of the night feast for the carnival in 1539.

Started as illuminations of the windows of the houses during parades or procession, the Luminara, following the new scenographical fancy of the time, in the XVIII century it became a free enlightened architecture placed on buildings, of which progressively they redesigned the outline creating strange shapes that transformed the city and especially the banks along the river. In some cases the illuminations still underlined the real structure of the buildings. The history of the Luminara constantly followed the one of the city. It was abolished in 1867, then restored in 1937 on occasion of the resumption of the Gioco del Ponte and then suspended during the Second World War. In 1952 the Luminara of Saint Ranieri was resumed and the tradition lasted until 1966.

In November of the same year the violence of the floods of the river Arno caused the collapse of the Solferino bridge and of long stretches of the banks along the river. The Luminara was then suspended again, and finally revived in June 196

from www.comune.pisa.it

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The Palio of Ferrara: the most ancient of the world!

The Palio of Ferrara is the most ancient one in the world and in addition to this is peculiar for its kind of ride that is joyful and so different from other warlike palii. In these last there are always enemy that you have to fight with the lance.
This is a very important moment for the city: all the Contrade participate wearing dress of different colours to gain the “palio”, but also and over all, to make party and to remember the Renaissance, a period in which Ferrara was really a capital.

The Palio of Ferrara was institutionalized by Ferrara’s Commune in 1279. The statutes of 1287, first real group of rules promulgated by Ferrara’s Commune, decided that the Palio had to be ride two times a year: the 23rd of April as tribute to San Giorgio that is the patron of Ferrara, and the 15th of August as tribute to the Saint Virgin.
The rides of horses, donkeys, women, men for which everybody could participate under registration, had to take part in those days and under the eyes of the authorities of the city.
The prize for the winner was the “palio”, a cloth; for the second and to the third classified the prizes were a salami and a cock.
The traditional Palio of San Giorgio generally took place all along the Via Grande (today called Via Ripagrande-Via Carlo Mayr) parallel to the shore of the river Po, starting from the village of the Pioppa up to Castel Tedaldo (that today is the zone of the aqueduct). Associations of the city used to offer to the owner of the horse the cloth as symbol of triumph. Other rides used to take place at the “delizie” estensi, together with hunting, merry-go-round and tournaments.
In 1391, when the Marquis Alberto d’Este come back from Rome (where Pope Bonifacio IX gave him the “Rosa d’oro”, symbol of distinction from the Santa Sede, and the note called “In supreme dignitatis” that was the permission to open an University in Ferrara), were organized as tribute for him, three rides of horses, one of donkeys, two of men and one of women. In history remained important also the parade and the Palio of 1471, tribute to Borso d’Este that come back from Rome after having obtained the title of duke of Ferrara from Pope Paolo II.
We have to underline again the rides that took place during the period of the duke Ercole I (1471-1505) and of his wife Eleonora d’Aragona: this last made proclaim the Palio if Ercole wasn’t in Ferrara. In that period there were also rides in occasion of births, marriages, important guests and other particular events.
The memory of the ancient rides of the Palio is still alive also thanks to the paintings into the Salone dei Mesi at Palazzo Schifanoia. Here we can find represented men, women, the duke Borso, the court, ladies and noble knights on their balconies of the palaces, and a great party in the background.
In the course of the Renaissance the rides of Ferrara were very famous also because many noble families took part in these with their own horses. In 1466 king Ferdinando di Napoli would try the speed of his horses in Ferrara; in 1475 the Gonzaga’s family, marquises of Mantova, participated to the Palio with 19 horses and won the prize; the second place, in that same competition was of Isabella d’Este’s horse. In chronicles we can read that the prize for the ride of the horses in 1481 was a golden cloth together with a crest.
The traditional rides at the Palio were a great popular party, being these opened to everyone who wanted to participate. In times, other rides were add to the traditional ones (especially during the dukedom of Ercole I), but these new ones were more aristocratic, and had place in the area of Barco the nearest to the city: the “Barchetto del duca”.
Talking about the putte’s rides – that took place from Santa Maria delle Bocche (at the corner Gioco del Pallone) up to the gate of Gusmaria – we can refer just to an edit issued by the duke Ercole I. This document was an invitation for every person of every village of his city to send “putte” of 12 years old to participate. For the first classified there would have been a green cloth and to the other 15 the duke would have offered new fussiness. That 23rd of April had ride 57 girls.
The men’s ride took place from the corner of San Pietro up to the gate of Gusmaria, instead the donkeys’ ride took place from the gate of Sotto up to the gate of Gusmaria.
During the XVI century the rides were move in the widest streets of the “Addizione Erculea” (created by Biagio Rossetti) and so from Corso della Giovecca along Via degli Angeli (today Corso Ercole I d’Este) and up to Via San Benedetto.
After the assignment of the Stato Estense to the Santa Sede (1598) some parties went on, but were more similar to the happy atmosphere of the carnival. Real rides become more and more rare, there were instead many dances and masks. In the first half of the IX century there were still some horses’ rides, but soon substituted with “sedioli’s rides” until the 1860.
In 1930 Guido Angelo Facchini took again the estense’s tradition, but this was restored just in 1967.

Today the rides take place the last Sunday of May as tribute to San Giorgio, but the real meaning of that particular date is to remember the famous edition of 1471, ride in honor of Borso who became duke of Ferrara. The chronicles and the statutes have handed down to us the four palii: the green one dedicated to San Paolo for the putte’s ride, the red one of San Romano for the putti’s ride, the white one dedicated to San Maurelio for the asine’s ride and last but not least the yellow or golden one of San Giorgio for the horses’ ride.
Opponents for the achievement of the palii are the four quarter that all have territory inside of the walls: San Benedetto (white-light blue), Santa Maria in Vado (yellow-violet), San Paolo (white-black), Santo Spirito (yellow-green) and the four village: San Giacomo (yellow-blue), San Giorgio (yellow-red), San Giovanni (red-blue) and San Luca (red-green).
There are also competitions of flag-wavers and musicians that represent the eight Contrade in seven different speciality: traditional single, traditional double, little team, big team, musicians and assignation of the “combinata” (sum of the best scores gained).

The program

FRIDAY 23th and SATURDAY 24th MAY - PIAZZA ARIOSTEA - 6 p.m.
Mandatory horse-race trials

SUNDAY 25th MAY - PIAZZA ARIOSTEA - 4 p.m.
THE PALIO'S RACES
  • Corsa dei Putti (Boys' race) - Palio of San Romano.
  • Corsa delle Putte (Girl’s race) -Palio of San Paolo.
  • Corsa delle Asine (She-ass race) - Palio of San Romano.
  • Corsa dei Cavalli (Horse race) - Palio of San Giorgio.

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The Canadian Tulip Festival

With attendance of over 500,000 visitors annually, the Canadian Tulip Festival claims to be the world's largest tulip festiva.
This major cultural event is held annually in Ottawa and Gatineau, Canada, generally on three weekends in May, concluding with the Victoria Day long weekend.

These are the dates of this edition: May 2 to 19, 2008.

Although tulips are displayed throughout the city, the most extensive tulip beds are to found on the shores of Dow's Lake, at the south end of the Ottawa section of the Rideau Canal.

Major's Hill Park will also host a new spectacular addition to the Festival in 2008 - the Tulip Festival Mirror Tent. Coming from Belgium, the Tulip Festival Mirror Tent recreates the renowned European art nouveau days with lavish interiors of carved wood, polished mirrors, crystal, leadlight and luxuriant furnishings. The Tulip Festival Mirror Tent will host the 2008 Celebridée - Celebration of Ideas program, as well as five food and music Cabaret Nights and will be the home of the 2008 Tulip Ball Reflections! on Saturday, May 10. Open daily for lunch and snacks, the Tulip Festival Mirror Tent will be a highlight of the 2008 Canadian Tulip Festival.

Tickets for all Tulip Festival Mirror Tent events can be purchased at the on-site Box Office, open from 11am to 11pm daily or Capital Tickets.

A kaleidoscope of more than three million tulips is the focus in Canada's Capital Region each spring as the Tulip Route follows the historic Rideau Canal to the Parliament buildings and Major's Hill Park and then across the Ottawa River to the Outaouais.

All tulip events are free at the 'festival without fences'!

Commissioners Park at Dows Lake showcases 300,000 tulips in cascading tulip beds and is the primary spectacle of the Official Gardener of Canada's Capital, the National Capital Commission. The park also features the NCC's Tulip Legacy, the story of the Gift of Tulips and Music in the Tulips where school bands and choirs play throughout the Festival. Artists in the Tulips demonstrate their talents and sell their paintings in the Tulip and Art Boutique. Buskers in the Tulips entertain on the weekends.

Parliament Hill, where the Gift of Tulips were first planted in 1945, presents a stunning array of tulips in front of Canada's majestic Parliament Buildings and the Peace Tower. Across the street, Capital Infocentre will provide visitors with all they need to know to make their excursion to the Festival and the Capital truly memorable.

The Canadian Tulip Festival seeks to preserve the heritage and character of its 55-year-old history around its original founding idea, International Friendship. In 2007, the tremendously successful International Pavilion featured the Embassies and community groups of 15 participating countries, attracting a record 125,000 visitors to Major's Hill Park in just 11 days. In 2008 we will extend the Free International Pavilion to the full 18 days of the Festival with over 25 countries participating and featuring enhanced international entertainment at noon hours and selected weekend evenings.

Countries with Embassies and community groups participating include Argentina, Brazil, Canada, China, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, European Union, Germany, Guatemala, Honduras, Indonesia, Israel, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Morocco, Netherlands, Peru, Philippines, Romania, Russia, Thailand and Turkey.

International Pavilion Passport

Visitors will be able to enjoy a-taste-of-the-world experience by purchasing an International Pavilion Passport that will include food sample coupons that can be used throughout the Pavilion.

Major's Hill Park features several stunning tulip beds as well as the collection of 150 five-foot tulips, each of which is a work of art painted by Ottawa and area visual artists. Music in the Tulips and Artists in the Tulips are also presented in Major's Hill Park and Buskers in the Tulips perform on weekends.

www.tulipfestival.ca

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Big bang part II

Hello and welcome to the english version of GIROVAGATE, my italian website all dedicated to travels and what is around them.
I'll try to follow and traslate all the ideas of my italian blog as much as I can... happy travel!

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