The villagers love to organise fêtes and
festivals, and grab any excuse to parade through the narrow streets.
Barely a month goes by without some sort of procession or carnival and
the principal annual events are listed below.
San
Antonio Abate An interesting festival mainly in honour of
animals, widely celebrated in Italy on 17 January.
Early
in the morning, a huge bonfire of olive branches is lit in front of the Chiesa
di San Antonio. During the day, every person in Capena lights a cigarette from
the fire. The use of tobacco is recent – formerly rosemary was smoked in clay or
reed pipes.
Some
academics have sought parallels with the ancient pagan rite of throwing
fragrant herbs on fires during sacrifices. The amazing thing about this
festival is the fact you can see even the tiniest children puffing away on
cigarettes throughout the day. The night before the festival, the children go
from door to door carrying improvised collection boxes bearing religious images
and singing nursery rhymes in the hope of earning a few cents.
A
procession takes place through the streets of the village in the morning, with
the saint preceded by horses and followed by every imaginable kind of domestic
animal and pet. This culminates with the parish priest climbing the steps of
the church to bless the bonfire and the animals.
The
traditional sweet eaten to celebrate the festival is a ring-shaped sweet loaf
flavoured with aniseed or rolls.
This
festival has recently raised international interest and outrage. See a press
report.
Good
Friday The
GoodFriday procession is another local
event well worth seeing. It takes the form of a simple, compelling restaging of
events (something similar may be seen in many of the surrounding villages),
involving costumed characters and the symbols of the Passion carried on silver
plates in a procession. During the Easter festivities, it is traditional to eat
a local delicacy known as pizza ricresciuta: a very tall egg-based sweet that
requires long, laborious preparation. On Easter morning, all the families
breakfast on this “pizza”, accompanied by salame and hard-boiled eggs.
San
Marco Celebrated
on 25 April, the day on which the children in Capena traditionally receive
their First Communion.
At
the end of the religious ceremony, a procession takes place with the statue of
the saint preceded by the children taking their first communion. This leaves
the parish church and ends up at the little church dedicated to San Marco some
distance from the village. The priest blesses the fields in the sacristy of the
chapel, and also some special sweets made for the occasion known as lepericchio
and sposateila.
The
sweets are made in a special shape: the lepericchio is for men and is round
with an egg at the bottom: the sposateila, made for the women, is in the form
of a young girl with her hands on her hips, wearing a dress decorated with
sugared almonds and two peppercorns for her eyes.
Both
sweets are decorated with pretty satin ribbons and carried in the procession by
all the inhabitants of the village.
Santa
Maria Assunta This
is the village’s main festival and is celebrated on a night between 13 and 15
August. It involves two famous icons of Our Lady of the Assumption (the Virgin
Mary) and Jesus mounted on two very heavy plinths.
The
origins of the tradition are very ancient. Some historians believe it dates
back to the Triumphs celebrated in honour of the Roman emperors, which were
later incorporated into the Christian religion to become the Triumph of Jesus
the Saviour and Our Lady of the Assumption.
Under
Pope Adeodatus (672-676), it was decided that the Festival of the Assumption
should take place in Rome during the night between 14 and 15 August. The
tradition then spread throughout Lazio, where it has continued to this day with
very few interruptions.
The
procession held in Capena varies slightly since it is based on the popular
belief that the Madonna has lost her Son and searches for him desperately for three
days. When she finally finds him, she runs to meet him.
Very
late on the night of 13 August,eight
men carry the baldachin or canopy bearing the icon of Jesus from the Chiesetta
down through the village to the entrance of the former Monastery of the Monks
of San Paolo and leave it to stand there throughout the night and the following
day.
On
14August, the icon is visited by the
faithful from Capena and surrounding villages, who come to pray to the
Saviour.
On
the night of 14 August, amid a charged atmosphere of expectation with the
streets lined with people, two processions set out from opposite ends of the
village, one bearing the baldachin with the very fine effigy of Our Lady, the
other bearing the baldachin with the icon of Jesus.
At
the moment when the two processions catch sight of one another, the bearers
(who are members of a special Brotherhood and wear special white robes with
cloaks – blue for those carrying Mary and red for those carrying Jesus) sprint as
fast as they can toward one another: no mean feat given the weight of the
icons.
They meetin the very centre of the villages, to great rejoicing, embraces,
fireworks and even a few tears from the older residents.
The
icons are then escorted in procession back to the ancient Chiesetta. On the
following day, the two images are borne back to Piazza del Popolo, where the
priest blesses the icons and everyone in the village.
As
part of this ceremony, one family in the village is given a small bronze statue
of the Virgin Mary to keep for one year. The family keeps it devoutly in their
home until the next 14 August, when they give it back to the parish priest,
together with a donation to the church.
San
Michele On
29 September, the festival of San Michele is held at the turn-off (or bivio) to
Capena on the Via Tiberina. This farming festival confirms that this area,
together with the nearby Lucus Feroniae site, has been an important trading
post occupying a strategic position on trade routes since ancient times.
This
festival still attracts many visitors, many of whom come to buy and sell
livestock.
Wine
Festival (Vendemmiale) This
important festival is held on the first Sunday in October each year. It was
introduced in 1927 to celebrate the grape harvest (vendemmia). The village is
festooned with laurel garlands and bunches of grapes to mark the occasion and
wine pours out of mouth of the marble lion’s head on the steps of the church of
San Antonio.
The
festival culminates with a procession of floats pulled by tractors and oxen,
carrying girls in traditional dress handing out grapes.
The
procession ends in a grape fight, the drinking of wine and general carousing.
The
end of the festival is marked with a firework display.
San
Luca The
festival of the village’s patron saint is held on 18 October and is marked by yet another
procession through the streets.
As
with the summer festival, a statue of the saint is given to a family in the
village for safe-keeping for one year.
Tasty
maritozzi col mosto are made to mark the occasion: the festival takes place not
long after the grape harvest and the fermented must is used as an ingredient in
these sweets.