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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: 183634" data-attributes="member: 7165"><p>Villa Huygens will not be abandoned any longer. The new owners, surely foreigners, will install it. They don't realize what they bought. They didn't buy a villa with land, they had the audacity to buy history, a story that will make them, despite themselves, part of it. Will the new owners be able to handle the huge burden? Will they be able to match the other important families that have followed the management of the villa over the centuries? Now that a new chapter is about to open, we need to give a more detailed account of the noble families who have taken over the management of the villa, leaving an indelible mark. My task is to transform the past into the present and the future into legend. Nothing must be forgotten, nothing must be lost in the memory of man, since in creation there are three types of beings endowed with matter and spirit, the Gods, the demigods and men, they are distinguished mainly for a reason: men can dominate the present, the demigods can dominate the present and the past, but only the Gods know the future and can dominate it. Only they will decide what the future of Villa Huygens will be. I can only tell his glorious past before it is forgotten. You yourself who are reading will ensure that all this is not lost. After the death of Guglielmo Filippo Huygens, son of Antonio Huygens, the property was sold to the Pelletier family. The Lorenese nobleman, knight of the order of Santo Stefano, certainly Guidanni Battista Pelletier de Berminy, enlarged the property by building another large building, later called the "farm". The last descendant of the Pelletier to inhabit the villa was Ms Emilia, who, knowing the great secret that was hidden in the villa, would never abandon it, even when, unbeknownst to her, in 1917 her grandchildren sold the villa to a Florentine, Gino Benini. The Benini family could take possession of the villa only after the death of Mrs Emilia in 1919. Unfortunately, beyond the villa, the terrible secret also passed to the Benini family. A scion of the Benini family, Enrico Benini, paid for it. The Benini family, like the Martelli family, came from Florence. Some members of the Benini family had moved to the Valle Benedetta, others for work reasons, had remained in Florence and occasionally went to the Valle Benedetta. This was the case of Enrico Benini, the first-time fascist hero and well-known car driver. Enrico Benini had participated with moderate success in 1928 in the mythical Ciano cup, a car race in vogue in those years in Livorno. After the race Enrico met with his relatives for lunch at the villa (now Villa Benini) in Valle Benedetta, just at lunch, Enrico learned from his family about an ancient legend that revolved around the villa. Some manuscripts had been found citing the presence of an important Templar artifact hidden in the ancient aqueduct of Siena. Enrico Benni, intrigued, made an inspection in Siena, taking advantage of the fact that after a few days he would have to participate in a race that would have just passed from the province of Siena. . . .</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LITTLE DOCTOR, post: 183634, member: 7165"] Villa Huygens will not be abandoned any longer. The new owners, surely foreigners, will install it. They don't realize what they bought. They didn't buy a villa with land, they had the audacity to buy history, a story that will make them, despite themselves, part of it. Will the new owners be able to handle the huge burden? Will they be able to match the other important families that have followed the management of the villa over the centuries? Now that a new chapter is about to open, we need to give a more detailed account of the noble families who have taken over the management of the villa, leaving an indelible mark. My task is to transform the past into the present and the future into legend. Nothing must be forgotten, nothing must be lost in the memory of man, since in creation there are three types of beings endowed with matter and spirit, the Gods, the demigods and men, they are distinguished mainly for a reason: men can dominate the present, the demigods can dominate the present and the past, but only the Gods know the future and can dominate it. Only they will decide what the future of Villa Huygens will be. I can only tell his glorious past before it is forgotten. You yourself who are reading will ensure that all this is not lost. After the death of Guglielmo Filippo Huygens, son of Antonio Huygens, the property was sold to the Pelletier family. The Lorenese nobleman, knight of the order of Santo Stefano, certainly Guidanni Battista Pelletier de Berminy, enlarged the property by building another large building, later called the "farm". The last descendant of the Pelletier to inhabit the villa was Ms Emilia, who, knowing the great secret that was hidden in the villa, would never abandon it, even when, unbeknownst to her, in 1917 her grandchildren sold the villa to a Florentine, Gino Benini. The Benini family could take possession of the villa only after the death of Mrs Emilia in 1919. Unfortunately, beyond the villa, the terrible secret also passed to the Benini family. A scion of the Benini family, Enrico Benini, paid for it. The Benini family, like the Martelli family, came from Florence. Some members of the Benini family had moved to the Valle Benedetta, others for work reasons, had remained in Florence and occasionally went to the Valle Benedetta. This was the case of Enrico Benini, the first-time fascist hero and well-known car driver. Enrico Benini had participated with moderate success in 1928 in the mythical Ciano cup, a car race in vogue in those years in Livorno. After the race Enrico met with his relatives for lunch at the villa (now Villa Benini) in Valle Benedetta, just at lunch, Enrico learned from his family about an ancient legend that revolved around the villa. Some manuscripts had been found citing the presence of an important Templar artifact hidden in the ancient aqueduct of Siena. Enrico Benni, intrigued, made an inspection in Siena, taking advantage of the fact that after a few days he would have to participate in a race that would have just passed from the province of Siena. . . . [/QUOTE]
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