&w=3840&q=100)
Pope Leo to escape summer heat at Castel Gandolfo. The history of the villa, where the pontiffs holiday
Pope Leo XIV is set to resume a tradition that dates back to the 17th century when he heads out of Vatican City for a summer vacation. The Pontiff will be heading to Castel Gandolfo, the lakeside town about an hour south of Rome, on Sunday (July 6). The tradition was abandoned by Pope Leo's predecessor, Pope Francis, for the 12 years that he presided over the Vatican.
Pope Leo is set to stay at the summer retreat from July 6 to July 20, stated the Vatican. But what is this place?
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
What is Castel Gandolfo?
The town is nestled in the Alban Hills, approximately 25 kilometres southeast of Rome, overlooking the serene Lake Albano. The palace was built by Pope Urban VIII in 1624 and is a former Roman villa featuring vast Renaissance-style gardens that was adapted into a papal summer residence. The lake town has been owned by the Vatican since 1596. At 55 hectares (136 acres), it is bigger than Vatican City itself.
According to the Vatican, Leo will move to the papal retreat of Castel Gandolfo from July 6 to July 20 for a period of rest. Although he will not stay at the palace, but another Vatican-owned property, reported news agency Reuters.
People walk in front of the Apostolic Palace in the central square of the town of Castel Gandolfo. Reuters
Though Leo's vacation will largely be private, spent within a Vatican-owned building, he is expected to appear publicly at religious celebrations on July 13 and 20.
Another short stay has been planned around the Catholic Assumption feast day in August, the Vatican said.
Why did Pope Francis not visit the summer home?
The late Pope Francis, who died in April, deliberately avoided many of the traditional trappings and splendour of the papacy. One of them was choosing to stay at his humble Vatican residence over Castel Gandolfo for summer stays.
So, during the years of his papacy, the tradition of travelling to the Castle Gandolfo was halted. Before him, both of his immediate predecessors, John Paul II and Benedict XVI, spent time at Castel Gandolfo, interspersed with visits to the northern Italian Alps.
Benedict was especially fond of Castel Gandolfo, closing his papacy out there in 2013.
How have the people of Castel Gondalfo reacted?
The residents of the town are extremely excited about Pope's visit, as many feel that it will boost local tourism and business.
Mayor Alberto De Angelis told news agency Reuters that residents were excited about the visit. 'The presence of the popes in Castel Gandolfo has always meant a lot of activity, a lot of economic growth,' he said. 'Pope Leo has given us a wonderful gift,' Stefano Carosi, the owner of a coffee shop on the town's main square, said. 'The pope has always been important here, because he attracts people.'
People sit at a restaurant overlooking Lake Albano in Castel Gandolfo. Reuters
Francis had Castel Gandolfo's papal palace turned into a museum and opened the gardens to visitors. According to Marina Rossi, owner of a local mosaic studio, tourist visits have increased beyond the summer papal audiences, with people now coming more frequently. 'It was more of a hit-and-run tourism, because there was the audience and then they would leave,' she told Reuters. 'Now there is a steady flow of tourism throughout the whole year.'
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Rossi believes Leo's return offers the town an opportunity to attract even more tourists. 'It's an important moment,' she said. 'I won't hide my happiness.'As for what Leo might do during his vacation, Maurizio Carosi, brother of Stefano, had a suggestion, saying he'd tell the pope, 'If you want a good glass of wine, come visit with me!'
What about Europe's heatwave?
Europe is currently in the middle of a heatwave with temperatures having exceeded 40 degrees Celsius in several places. So far, at least eight people have lost their lives due to the extreme heatwave gripping Europe, reported Reuters.
According to reports, two people have lost their lives in France while the weather department issued a red alert, the highest extreme heat warning across 16 regions in the nation, including Paris. Hot temperatures have also scorched the United Kingdom, which is reporting its second heatwave of the summer. Spain and France have also reported casualties as temperatures shoot up.
With inputs from agencies

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NDTV
2 hours ago
- NDTV
6 Countries That Are Best Seen By Train If You Are Travelling Through Europe
There is something uniquely charming about travelling through Europe. From cobblestoned towns and snowy mountain peaks to postcard-perfect countryside, every route feels like it belongs on a fridge magnet. But what truly makes the experience memorable is how simple it is to move around. Skip the airports and rental car confusion and take the scenic route instead. Europe's railway system is one of the best in the world. It is fast, connected, and honestly, ridiculously beautiful. If you love slow travel, nature, and the idea of watching villages, vineyards and castles pass by your window, this is for you. We have rounded up six of the best countries in Europe where travelling by train is not only convenient but also a complete visual treat. And yes, your wallet will thank you too. Here Are 6 Of The Best Countries To Explore Europe By Train: 1. Switzerland Ask any frequent traveller or scroll through social media, and Switzerland will always top the list for scenic train journeys. Think snow-draped Alps, blue lakes, and villages straight out of a movie set. The Glacier Express, which runs from Zermatt to St. Moritz, is known as the world's slowest express train and for good reason. Every second of the 7.5-hour journey is worth savouring. Clean, punctual, and smooth, Swiss trains are ideal for travellers who want a front-row seat to some of Europe's finest natural views. 2. Italy Italy is not just about gelato and Renaissance art. It is also home to some excellent rail routes that show off its natural and cultural beauty. High-speed trains like Italo and Trenitalia connect cities like Rome, Florence, and Venice in just a few hours. But the journey is as stunning as the destination. Tuscany's rolling vineyards and Naples' sparkling coastline make the ride unforgettable. Most train stations are located in city centres, so food, art, and coffee are never too far away. 3. Austria Austria is often overlooked, but train travel here is smooth, scenic, and well-connected. The route from Vienna to Salzburg is especially popular for its lakes, green meadows, and occasional castle views. Austrian trains are known for being clean and efficient, and they also offer easy access to neighbouring countries like Germany and Switzerland. If you are planning a longer train holiday across Europe, Austria fits in seamlessly. 4. Germany Germany's train network is one of the largest and most reliable in Europe. High-speed ICE trains take you to major cities like Berlin, Munich, and Frankfurt in comfort and style. But do not ignore the slower regional trains. These routes take you through charming villages, half-timbered towns, and wine valleys along the Rhine. The Deutschland Ticket and other group rail passes make travelling even more affordable. If you are looking to go beyond the tourist map, this is the way to do it. 5. France France has one of the fastest trains in Europe, but there is more to the country's railway than speed. Yes, you can zip from Paris to Marseille in a few hours, but there is something equally rewarding about a slower train through Burgundy's vineyards or Provence's lavender fields. French trains offer wide seats, onboard cafés, and views that belong in a film. If you are landing in Paris, it makes a perfect starting point for a rail holiday through France and beyond. 6. The Netherlands Netherlands. ( Small but mighty when it comes to rail efficiency, the Netherlands makes train travel feel effortless. Trains are frequent, fast, and well-connected. You can zip between Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and Utrecht in no time, and day trips to smaller towns like Delft or The Hague are incredibly easy. Along the way, expect views of tulip fields, old windmills, and green fields that stretch forever. No need to rent a car, just hop on a train and watch the country pass you by. So, if you are planning a holiday through Europe, consider trading the chaos of air travel for something calmer, greener, and frankly, more fun. Book that train ticket, charge your phone, and let the window views do the talking.


Mint
7 hours ago
- Mint
Rags to Riches from Rome to the China Seas
The hot Roman summer sun can ignite daydreams and, a few weeks ago, while visiting a friend at an art gallery on the Via Giulia, I walked by the nearly half-a-millennium old Palazzo Sacchetti and pondered the fate of the families who owned it, lost it, sold off parts of it and passed into history. My colleague Adrian Wooldridge has written columns about contemporary European and Italian dynasties and their effective stewardship of family businesses. But my thoughts were all about the romance of declines and falls — and what lessons there might be for today. The musings took me from Rome across 6,000 miles to the south China coast and a little beyond. I've never been to Zhangli village in Fujian province, just outside the city of Quanzhou, which the Venetian merchant Marco Polo described as one of the world's greatest ports in the 13th century. I'm not taking you that far back in time, just to the middle of the 19th and the construction of a set of 23 red brick mansions, arranged along five rows and spread across 16,300 square meters became lords of a commercial empire of their own, encompassing a sprawling bazaar in Manila as well as farming, forestry and construction interests. Also known as Chua Chengco, my great-great-grandfather was dubbed 'Mariano Velasco' by the colonial administrators who hoped the 'honor' would tie him — and his money — even more closely to the regime. Because there was a local Spaniard with the same name, he was referred to as Mariano Velasco el Chino. Still, it kind of worked: To this day, around the world, there are scores of Velascos of Chinese descent very proud of their Spanish apellido. I like to think of Spain as one of my 'old countries' — along with China and the Philippines. The money, however, has long dissipated. The Zhangli village property — built with repatriated wealth and exotic material from the family's plantations in the Philippines — needs both conservation and renovation. The provincial government would like to turn it an open-air museum. But that requires financing, and there really isn't a paterfamilias among the existing Velascos to take charge of the legacy. In fact, tracking what became of the Velasco wealth is a genealogical headache. In terms of business, there is a department store that can claim some descent from the old bazaar. The physical house that Velasco built in Manila may actually have been larger than the Zhangli complex, but it has vanished. With his two wives, Don Mariano had nine sons; and inherited assets diminished as they were divided among succeeding generations. Add in the depredations of the Spanish flu pandemic, the Great Depression, the Pacific war that left Manila a charred wreck… Sic transit gloria mundi. The Velascos are a chapter in the long sojourn of the Chinese in Southeast Asia, escaping poverty and chaos in the Middle Kingdom to win prosperity and influence in a new world. The historical experience involves questions of assimilation and integration as I've noted in a previous column. Some of the lessons are rags-to-riches sagas familiar to every culture. For example: A huge fortune will be hostage to many heirs, even if a clearly documented will exists. When the Indonesian industrialist Eka Tjipta Widjaja — born Huang Yicong in Quanzhou, China — passed away in 2019, some of his children sought control of the corporations he founded in addition to what had been left to them from his estimated $9.3 billion fortune. Sometimes, the feuds break out even before the dynastic founder is gone, as evidenced by the father-son battle in Singapore's Kwek family. It remains to be seen whether this age of 'high net worth family offices' — an industry that's growing dramatically among rich ethnic Chinese families — can discipline the human drive to bag the biggest inheritance. Most Chinese migrants learned that life in a new country was better with new names. Most didn't wait — as I assume Mariano Velasco did — until the authorities realized their worth and rewarded them with a culturally integrated moniker. They just took what they thought would help them with their prospects and careers, just as F. Scott Fitzgerald had James Gatz transform into Jay Gatsby in his famous novel about social climbing. They chose names that looked less foreign, that sounded more like the languages of their adopted lands. Hence, Huang became Widjaja in Indonesia. In the Philippines, the businessman Carlos Palanca — whose surname now graces the country's most prestigious literary award — was originally Chen Liulai . In the late 19th century, the Fujian-born migrant cadged the name of a Spanish diplomat who'd been briefly assigned to Manila a couple of decades before and wasn't around to contest the steal. Palanca's wealth was founded on a distillery that also had a distinctly Iberian name, La Tondeña . They also learned to avoid politics — there's a long history of xenophobic riots and massacre against foreign-born merchants who order locals around or who are perceived as a threat to the prevailing status quo. Indeed, the political dynamics of contemporary Malaysia are based on racial tensions among the native Malay and the descendants of Chinese and Tamil migrants. That didn't mean that rich Chinese families didn't support politicians. Often, they supported all the major parties simultaneously, spreading their bets to cover all eventualities. They preferred to be kingmakers rather than kings. And so, many ethnic Chinese clans look askance at the billionaire and former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra as he and his clan are rocked back and forth by political controversy stirred up as they try to dominate Thailand. In Singapore, while the political legacy of founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew is nowhere as turbulent , the family honor was still stained by an unseemly squabble among his heirs over a house he left them. That's spilled over into politics, with the ambitions of Lee Hsien Yang — who says he has won political asylum in the UK — now aimed at his older brother and former prime minister Lee Hsien Loong. Aiyah, as they say in Singapore. In the Philippines, ethnic Chinese still shy away from personal involvement in politics. Being too closely tied — even as a financier — to politicians is risky. The plutocrat Lucio Tan was an influential player in the administration of Philippine President Joseph Estrada, but that didn't save the billionaire from scrutiny after Estrada was ousted in a civilian coup in January 2001. Still, many descendants of Chinese migrants in the Philippines do engage in politics. For the most part, that's because they're members of the Chinese mestizo class — which, from generation to generation and every intermarriage, is less and less Chinese. The most successful example is the sprawling Cojuangco family, a clan founded by an immigrant from Fujian who made his fortune in sugar. The family's most famous politicians were Corazon Cojuangco Aquino and her son Benigno Aquino III, both of whom held the office of president. I have politicians in my family now. I'm particularly proud of my first cousin Josefina 'Joy' Belmonte, who is in her third term as mayor of Quezon City, a constituency of nearly 3 million people. Our grandmother — our mothers' mother — was the Velasco. For the Chinese, mestisaje is a poignant survival mechanism: preserving one's genes but slowly forgetting the ways of one's ancestors. I hope to one day visit Zhangli village and see what's left of the estate of Mariano Velasco. I wonder if my thoughts will then turn to Rome and the the Palazzo Sacchetti. There are echoes. It was designed by its first owner, a man named Antonio Cordiani. He'd grown up poor in Florence and moved to the city of the popes to apprentice with his uncles. Eventually he took their surname — Sangallo, which is still what Romans call the street by the Tiber next to the palazzo. The house didn't stay in his family for long. The building still stands. But the people who lived in it and their riches have faded away. It's almost Chinese. More From Bloomberg Opinion: The name-changes did not prevent calumnies. There is one theory that Don Mariano was the basis for the greedy and manipulative Chinese merchant Quiroga in El Filibusterismo, a novel by Jose Rizal, the Philippines' national hero. News reports of the anti-Chinese pogroms in California and the western US states as I noted in this column reinforced the anxieties of Chinese in Southeast Asia. This column reflects the personal views of the author and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners. Howard Chua-Eoan is a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion covering culture and business. He previously served as Bloomberg Opinion's international editor and is a former news director at Time magazine.


Economic Times
13 hours ago
- Economic Times
Europe's too hot, too crowded; Could this be the end of Australia's Mediterranean holiday dream?
Synopsis Heatwaves and overtourism are prompting Australian travellers to ditch the traditional July-August European summer. Travel companies report a significant shift towards cooler, quieter months like April, May, and September. Bookings for peak season destinations like Italy and Croatia are down, while off-season demand surges, indicating a rapid adaptation to climate change and overcrowded hotspots. Reuters Climate change and overtourism push Aussies to abandon peak summer travel. (File Photo) Australians are turning away from the traditional July-August Mediterranean escape as heatwaves and overtourism reshape travel across Europe. For the first time, more Aussie travellers are choosing cooler, quieter months like April, May, and September, a shift travel companies say is happening far sooner than expected. Melbourne-based Intrepid Travel reports that 55 per cent of its Europe-bound customers now prefer the shoulder season over the peak summer stretch. Also Read: Obese and want to lose weight? Wegovy is not the long-term answer, according to leading weight loss surgeon'I thought we had five to ten years before this trend hit the mainstream, but climate change has accelerated everything,' said Brett Mitchell, the company's Australia and New Zealand managing summer, Europe has seen record-breaking heat. Spain hit 46°C in June, its hottest June on record. Portugal and France followed with similar highs, and England recorded its hottest June ever. Health warnings, wildfires, and even fatalities have raised concerns among tourists. UN Secretary-General António Guterres recently called the heat 'the new normal' and warned that no country is immune to the rising risks of climate change. In response, Intrepid Travel has cut certain summer itineraries altogether, especially active tours in southern Europe during July and August. Some experiences are being rescheduled to cooler times of day, such as evening walks on Dubrovnik's city walls in Croatia. Yes, overcrowding may be another key reason Australians avoid the peak European summer. Destinations like Italy, Greece, and Croatia are struggling with overtourism. In some places, locals have taken to the streets in Centre also confirms that more Australians are opting for shoulder-season trips. 'We're seeing 'Euro Summer' stretch from May to late September,' said the company's global leisure CEO, James Kavanagh, to Northern Europe, including Finland, Norway, and Greenland, is also gaining popularity for its cooler climate and unique numbers show a clear shift. Intrepid Travel says bookings for Italy's peak season are down 72 per cent year-on-year, while off-season bookings have jumped 166 per cent. In Croatia, peak demand dropped by 19 per cent, with off-peak bookings up 179 per data from shows interest in Paris, Athens, Lisbon, and Milan is now highest in September, a sign that travellers are adjusting their schedules to avoid the heat and the not in the near future, as tour operators are also adapting according to the new norm. Intrepid has introduced 'climate-resilient' itineraries, reduced reliance on flights in favour of trains, and added carbon labelling to 800 trips. The company recorded 151 climate-related incidents affecting its tours last year, twice as many as the year before.'We're shifting away from over-saturated hotspots to quieter, lesser-known places,' Mitchell said. For example, Positano is being replaced by Minori on Italy's Amalfi Coast. On Croatia's coast, Hvar is giving way to the more peaceful Mljet Island.