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Captain Leale Martelli - The Odyssey in the Realms of Time
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<blockquote data-quote="LITTLE DOCTOR" data-source="post: 166711" data-attributes="member: 7165"><p>Giuseppe Costagliola and Piero Sampaolesi formed a well-affiliated team, tending to follow in the footsteps of Captain Leale Martelli, convinced they could access priceless finds. The two art lovers divided the tasks, the Costagliola took care of the whole area adjacent to the Valle Benedetta, the Sampaolesi addressed his research in Florence until arriving in Turkey. The Livornese Costagliola established his headquarters in a room at the elementary school of the Valle Benedetta he knew for having used it during the Second World War. From the municipal school ex Villa Trumpy you could enjoy a beautiful view and Costagliola spent a lot of time watching the village of the Valle Benedetta and the church that seemed to have been built by magic. In one of these moments Costagliola noticed almost by accident a structure emerging from the lawns owned by the church. This linear structure of bricks formed like arches and ran across the lawn. In some places it was clearly visible. Intrigued Costagliola wanted to see that structure closely and was surprised to find that it was an ancient aqueduct. This aqueduct was flanked by a second tunnel and both seemed to lead to Villa Huygens. Costagliola was convinced that inside the tunnel he could find the tomb of Antonio Huygens and with it his immense treasures. According to Costagliola's studies, the tunnel started from the Stone Garden of Villa Huygens, while the aqueduct started from inside the hill from a place called Poggio Lecceta.</p><p>At one point the two structures joined together until they reached the church. On the top of the hill where Angelica Palli once lived, there is a very old well with iron ladders leading into the well. Thanks to these stairs it was possible to access the aqueduct and the tunnel. With the passage of time the land that ran alongside the school became a building land and at the beginning of the 90s a complex of buildings was built that covered the aqueduct. Although the builders had seen the tunnel, the work continued without warning the authorities. However, all was not lost. Just behind that housing complex, it is still possible to access a secondary entrance to the ancient aqueduct. This entrance, hidden for centuries, has been brought to light during some maintenance work done by the inhabitants of the condominium. This entrance is still in excellent condition and has been secured without being explored. In the surrounding area, in some points, the ground collapses causing large holes that the inhabitants of the area covered with sheets of iron for fear of falling into it.</p><p>Piero Sampaolesi's research was much more complex. Thanks to his position as superintendent of Florence he could have access to all the places and documents that could interest him. Sampaolesi wanted to find the house where Captain Martelli lived, an apartment that according to Sampaolesi had to be found in a street called Via della Forca. Sampaolesi never managed to find the captain's relatives, almost as if he had never existed.</p><p>When he spoke to the descendants of the Martelli family he had no confirmation, and he was kicked out badly. Sampaolesi made it clear that around the life of Leale Martelli there was a wall of silence. Later Sampaolesi's research moved to Turkey, after an exponent of the ancient Levantini family confided to Sampaolesi of a possible presence of the capoitano in the city that once was called Constantinople ...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LITTLE DOCTOR, post: 166711, member: 7165"] Giuseppe Costagliola and Piero Sampaolesi formed a well-affiliated team, tending to follow in the footsteps of Captain Leale Martelli, convinced they could access priceless finds. The two art lovers divided the tasks, the Costagliola took care of the whole area adjacent to the Valle Benedetta, the Sampaolesi addressed his research in Florence until arriving in Turkey. The Livornese Costagliola established his headquarters in a room at the elementary school of the Valle Benedetta he knew for having used it during the Second World War. From the municipal school ex Villa Trumpy you could enjoy a beautiful view and Costagliola spent a lot of time watching the village of the Valle Benedetta and the church that seemed to have been built by magic. In one of these moments Costagliola noticed almost by accident a structure emerging from the lawns owned by the church. This linear structure of bricks formed like arches and ran across the lawn. In some places it was clearly visible. Intrigued Costagliola wanted to see that structure closely and was surprised to find that it was an ancient aqueduct. This aqueduct was flanked by a second tunnel and both seemed to lead to Villa Huygens. Costagliola was convinced that inside the tunnel he could find the tomb of Antonio Huygens and with it his immense treasures. According to Costagliola's studies, the tunnel started from the Stone Garden of Villa Huygens, while the aqueduct started from inside the hill from a place called Poggio Lecceta. At one point the two structures joined together until they reached the church. On the top of the hill where Angelica Palli once lived, there is a very old well with iron ladders leading into the well. Thanks to these stairs it was possible to access the aqueduct and the tunnel. With the passage of time the land that ran alongside the school became a building land and at the beginning of the 90s a complex of buildings was built that covered the aqueduct. Although the builders had seen the tunnel, the work continued without warning the authorities. However, all was not lost. Just behind that housing complex, it is still possible to access a secondary entrance to the ancient aqueduct. This entrance, hidden for centuries, has been brought to light during some maintenance work done by the inhabitants of the condominium. This entrance is still in excellent condition and has been secured without being explored. In the surrounding area, in some points, the ground collapses causing large holes that the inhabitants of the area covered with sheets of iron for fear of falling into it. Piero Sampaolesi's research was much more complex. Thanks to his position as superintendent of Florence he could have access to all the places and documents that could interest him. Sampaolesi wanted to find the house where Captain Martelli lived, an apartment that according to Sampaolesi had to be found in a street called Via della Forca. Sampaolesi never managed to find the captain's relatives, almost as if he had never existed. When he spoke to the descendants of the Martelli family he had no confirmation, and he was kicked out badly. Sampaolesi made it clear that around the life of Leale Martelli there was a wall of silence. Later Sampaolesi's research moved to Turkey, after an exponent of the ancient Levantini family confided to Sampaolesi of a possible presence of the capoitano in the city that once was called Constantinople ... [/QUOTE]
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