Of all European countries,
Italy is perhaps the
hardest to classify. It is a modern, industrialized
nation. It is the harbinger of style, its designers
leading the way with each season's fashions. But it is
also, to an equal degree, a Mediterranean country, with
all that that implies. Agricultural land covers much of
the country, a lot of it, especially in the south, still
owned under almost feudal conditions. In towns and
villages all over the country, life grinds to a halt in
the middle of the day for a siesta, and is strongly
family-oriented, with an emphasis on the traditions and
rituals of the Catholic Church which, notwithstanding a
growing scepticism among the country's youth, still
dominates people's lives here to an immediately obvious
degree.
Above all Italy provokes reaction. Its people are
volatile, rarely indifferent to anything, and on one and
the same day you might encounter the kind of disdain
dished out to tourist masses worldwide, and an hour
later be treated to embarrassingly generous hospitality.
If there is a single national characteristic, it's to
embrace life to the full: in the hundreds of local
festivals taking place across the country on any given
day, to celebrate a saint or the local harvest; in the
importance placed on good food; in the obsession with
clothes and image; and above all in the daily domestic
ritual of the collective evening stroll or passeggiata -
a sociable affair celebrated by young and old alike in
every town and village across the country.
Italy only became a unified state in 1861 and, as a
result, Italians often feel more loyalty to their region
than the nation as a whole - something manifest in
different cuisines, dialects, landscape and often
varying standards of living. There is also, of course,
the country's enormous cultural legacy: Tuscany alone
has more classified historical monuments than any
country in the world; there are considerable remnants of
the Roman Empire all over the country, notably of course
in Rome itself; and every region retains its own relics
of an artistic tradition generally acknowledged to be
among the world's richest.
Yet there's no reason to be intimidated by the art
and architecture. If you want to lie on a beach, there
are any number of places to do it: development has been
kept relatively under control, and many resorts are
still largely the preserve of Italian tourists. Other
parts of the coast, especially in the south of the
country, are almost entirely undiscovered. Beaches are
for the most part sandy, and doubts about the
cleanliness of the water have been confined to the
northern part of the Adriatic coast and the Riviera.
Mountains, too, run the country's length - from the Alps
and Dolomites in the north right along the Apennines,
which form the spine of the peninsula - and are an
important reference-point for most Italians. Skiing and
other winter sports are practised avidly, and in the
five national parks, protected from the national passion
for hunting, wildlife of all sorts thrives