
Game Of The Bridge – Pisa, Italy
Game Of The Bridge
Pisa, Italy
The tradition of the Game of the Bridge dates back to February 22, 1568. Rival teams from different quarters of Pisa fought for symbolic possession of a bridge over the Arno River. In those times, the game often degenerated into brutal and bloody man-to-man fighting. In modern times, the gore has been eliminated but not the fierce rivalry among the players. Under the government of the Medici, the game was played during particularly important festivities and anniversaries along with palios, luminare and other public demonstrations. Even nowadays, this event is held together with a series of cultural, artistic and folk events.
The actual battle is preceded by representatives (including sixty judges) of Tramontana, situated north of the Arno river, and Mezzogiorno, south of the Arno, who parade along the banks of the river forming two big processions. Each one consists of three hundred figures wearing magnificent historical 18th century costumes and armour, carrying colorful banners symbolizing participating teams from the four historical quarters of Pisa. The two formations establish themselves in their squares at the two ends of the bridge.
After the challenge and the display of flags, the battle round begins every time two of the six teams of each district (consisting of twenty people) go out onto the bridge. The object of the game is to push a wooden trolley, weighing more than seven tons, that is placed on a fifty-yard-long track, to the opposing side of the bridge. The final victory goes to the team that has won the greater number of battles, by pushing the trolley into the enemy field and knocking over the staff with the banner displaying the colors of the enemy party.
The origin of the game is lost. Legend attributes its beginnings to Pelops, the mythical founder of Pisa, who wanted to recall his native Olympic Games. Another story attributes it to the Roman Emperor, Hadrian, who wanted to give a version of gladiatorial combats on the shores of the Arno. Another tradition mentions the battle on the bridge between Pisans and Saccens. It was Lorenzo the Magnificent who decided to move the game to its natural setting. In 1782 Pietro Leopoldo suppressed it on the grounds of public order. After an extraordinary contest in 1807, it lapsed into oblivion until 1935, then it was suspended because of World War II. The game resumed from 1950 until 1963. It returned to its original magnificence in 1982 and has been held each year since then on the last Sunday of June.
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