Identify the near Future with Wonderful Detail

October 17th, 2008

There are countless ways of seeing the future like tarot readings and currently phenomenal psychic Anne Jirsch has discovered future life progression. This method is comparably unknown. The spectacular method is achievable to everybody who can be hypnotised. You should expect to go into a light trance state and this will probably happen through hypnosis and you may be directed to go forward into your future like eight tens years.

Future life progression, aka FLP, is the opposite of past life regression, aka PLR, you can go directly to a FLP therapist or you might often find a download from the net and try it yourself. Future life sessions allow you to see the future with your own eyes and help you get a great destiny. You will probably use this wonderful technique to pick up your boyfriend or identify future trends in the workplace.

Anne Jirsch started her stunning career as a tarot card psychic in the UK and has a career spanning over 14 years. The eye-opening future insights that Anne gets for her clients has made her one of the most likeable tarot card readers in the UK. Psychic Anne has gave FLP sessions to singers for lots of years and has a substantial client base in the UK and Canada. You can find resolutions to lifes problems with PLR at http://www.annejirsch.com/past-life-regression.php.

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Masking European Animism

October 16th, 2008

The ancient peoples of Europe were more fond of masks and religious ritual than you
would suspect if you saw Europeans today. Mask wearing and shamanism was part
and parcel of everyday life in ancient Western European tradition, say researchers.

There are stories abound about African and North American tribal shamans but not a
lot is known about ancient European peoples’ involvement with masked ritual or the
practice of magic. That is why finding out about similarities between the ideas behind
masks from around the world and those originating from European soil, is a
discovery of intriguing and real beliefs.

The less obvious link of European societies with shamanism or religious ritual than
for instance the North American native Indian customs or magic activity in the past is
due to the more ’sanitised’ way Europe has developed because of church
interference in people’s lives. The church dominance virtually stamped out any pagan
ritual.

It was not until after 1960, when the Americans experienced a revival of the
interest in shamanism, that much has become known about the European version of
the practice of magic and mask wearing. There is more verifyable information about
the true roots of Western European civilisation than initially suspected.

“The spirit if not the exact practise of shamanism has been passed on through
Europe’s generations”, one authority on the subject, Leigh Ann Hussey, believes. The
earliest recordings of ceremonies involving masks were found in the caves of the
Trois Freres (Three Brothers) in France where paintings of a Paleolithic scene
depicting European animism of the first order.
Ian Bracegirdle, a mask expert, describes the cave: A central figure stands wearing
the head and antlers of a deer. He stands, shaman like, surrounded by animals.

Animals that are important to the culture he represents. Some of the animals no
longer exist in this area. Ibex, reindeer, bison, stag and horses. The shaman, for that
is what he seems to be, stands, a human figure amongst the potential food.
It is believed that the paleolithic cave served as a place where hunters were initiated.
The sorceror or shaman was symbol to sympathetic magic. He wore ears and horns
of a stag, the eyes and beak of an owl, the bearded face of an old man, the tail of a
wolf, the paws of a bear and the legs of a dancing shaman. He stood in front of
painted hunting murals. The Shaman served as mediator between humans and their
venerated animal kin.

This is pretty much the best evidence in tangible form that we have of our ancestors’
animistic beliefs. It dates back 10,000 years and is accompanied by an abundance of
myths and stories showing our ancestors had plenty of similar ideas. A close analogy
exists in the stories of Kernunnos, forest god of the later Celts. The masks express
animism to some extent.

His information is confirmed by Ms Hussey, who went on a hunt in European
shamanism and found when she examined ancient sources, that she did not need to
borrow from other traditions. “It is clear that tribal Europe had as strong a shamanic
tradition as, for example, any of the American Indian tribes,” she said.

Summing up the general symbolism that unites masks from around the globe,
Bracegirdle says that there are many striking similarities between the ancient cultures
of the Pacific West Coast of North America and the tribal traditions of Africa. Symbols
that all these cultures share are relating to fertility, the hunted animal, ancestors,
initiation into rites, circumcision, cannibalism real and symbolic, healing and crossing
over into the spirit world for guidance and healing powers or to appease the gods or
ancestors are the accompanying ideas behind masks.

Not a lot has been passed on from generation to generation in any much
recognisable form or shape, but among the most powerful links is the seasonal
nature of many traditions we still know about. In the UK, the Green man and the
Hobby horse are two potent examples. “To me there is a tremendous link which is
bound up with the very nature of the people we are and how we have developed. Our
formative roots live in our societies now”, believes Bracegirdle.

The links to ancient beliefs can also be found in many European languages. When
we say in English that we are going berserk, we even directly refer to the shamanic
state of extasy. The adjective comes from the noun ‘berserker’, or ‘berserk’, the Old
Norse for ‘wild warriors’ or ‘champions’. ‘Ber’ referring to ‘bear’ and ’serkr’ to ’shirt’ or
‘coat’.

These berserkers became frenzied in battle, howling like animals, foaming at
the mouth, and biting the edges of their iron shields as if they acted in a Nike
commercial. Berserker is first recorded in English in the early 19th century, long after
these wild warriors ceased to exist. This is illustrative of how the tradition seemingly
interrupted, still lived on.

Similar “Bear Doctors” stories have been found among California tribes. In some
cases, the Berserkr or Ulfserkr would even eat the heart of the bear or wolf to gain its
power. Another feast of hearts occurs in the seir trance, as described above.

Not a lot was known about Western shamanism until it hit the limelight in the 1960
and the undoubted expert in the field is the late Mircea Eliade, a religion historian
who taught at the Sorborme in Paris and later at the University of Chicago.

He described Shamanism, or ‘witchcraft’ as it is referred to also, as not a religion but
more as a technique. Shamanism, he says, is ‘not strictly medicine men/women,
magicians, or healers’. This is the conclusion of extensive studies of the phenomenon
around the world in his book ‘Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy’.

He
believes that shamans are not the same as priests; they may have coexisted with
priests or even have fulfilled priestly functions as well as shamanic ones. A shaman
was more a mystic than a priest or a minister.
A shaman was not “possessed”, as many people now believe, says Eliade. Neither
was the shaman a medium or trance channeler. “Shamans control the spirit beings
with whom they work, or at least they do not surrender to them. Like a medium or
channeler, a shaman may appear unconscious when working, but upon returning, the
shaman can tell where he or she has gone”, he says.

The shaman is not the instrument of the spirits. Traditional shamans cure people
through their trances, accompany the souls of the dead to the Otherworld, and
communicate with the gods. “This small mystical elite not only directs the
community’s religious life but, as it were, guards its ’soul.”

Modern day processions where you can still see old masks being worn include
processions in which giants and witches are displayed. These and other
masquerades are among the more powerful tangible links we still have to ancient
witchcraft ritual.

In well known childrens’ stories and folklore narrative, the links are also obvious.
Dragons for instance are examples creatures pervading every alley you can imagine
of old folklore and mythology, straight into modern times stories. Descriptions of the
beast’s benevolence vary from the playful Puff (of Peter Yarrow’s song) to the sinister
Smaug in J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Hobbit”. Babylonian legends portray the Queen of
Darkness as a multi-headed dragon - Tiamat. Walt Disney’s Sleeping Beauty
features a battle between Prince Phillip and the evil Maleficent about a curse than
can only be broken by three fairies. Likewise, the Germanic myth “Die Nibelungen”
climaxes with the battle between Siegfried and the giant Fafnir, who has transformed
himself into a dragon in an effort to become more frightening.

Our reaction to the physical characteristics of the dragon is another element that we
share with and which connects us to our ancestors. Around the world the beasts are
typically depicted as huge lizards, larger than elephants on average. Long fangs are
generally accepted as are twin horns of varying length. Western cultures generally
include large bat-like wings giving the dragon the capability of flight. But eastern
dragons, usually wingless, use a more magical means of flying. Eastern dragons also
tend to be more snake-like in nature, albeit with front and rear legs.

Angelique van Engelen is a freelance content writer living in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. She runs http://www.contentClix.com, a copywriting website. She also contributes to a blog http://clixyPlays.blogspot.com

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The Current Trendy World of Liquid Crystal Display TVs

October 15th, 2008

With the scale of revolution going on in telly equipment it is necessary to be acquainted with some of the best advances. This article to liquid crystal display tellies (LCD) scrutinizes the particular pros of the technology. This info gives you all the necessary facts on how to get the best image and gives an explanation on numerous of the critical characteristics to be aware of when it comes to Liquid Crystal Display tellies. Great offers on Cheap 37″ LCD TV online at Sound and Vision!

There at this moment in time 2 convincing benefits with LCD TVs over Plasma TVs. The 1st is that LCD might well be a good deal easier to view when contrasted to a traditional cathode ray tube (CRT) model. This is primarily because televisions screens are significantly brighter with a high contrast and flicker free image. LCD televisions normally work effectively in more or less any manner of environment lighting from bright to ambient. Secondly, Liquid Crystal Display TVs also have a greater native resolution than plasma TVs of the equivalent size thus making them wonderful for hi-definition output. While plasma tellies are at this time superior for sheer display size, as more & more television programs come in hi-definition TV (HDTV), LCD manufactured goods will come to the forefront.

How Do Liquid Crystal Display TVs Actually Work?

LCD equipment is relatively complex & improving each and every day. This technology is founded upon the fact that liquid crystals are, in their usual form, warped. The capacity of the crystals to allow light through can be altered by submitting electric current. Very straightforwardly put, a light source is shone through a liquid containing crystals held between two polarised screens. By permitting the right degree of light to go through, the needed picture is made.

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Jackie O

October 14th, 2008

As an adult woman I was born way after president Kennedy was president, way after she was first lady. I think back in time and I remember reading an article about her husbands passing and I was very intrigued. As I got older, like most American women we all admire her fashion sense. Even, now after so many years, all girls must have a pair of

Jackie O’s fashionable sunglasses. It is not a brand it is the look that she had.

She has been such a fashion icon for all women of different heritages and different cultures, that today clothes with somewhat a Jackie O’ look are still made.

I guess you could not argue why, she was a great inspirational figure for all American, women, represented strength, will power, braveries and many important qualities that

Today’s women struggle with. Even as an older woman she never really lost her sense of style her feminism, but most of all her fashion sense. It will be great to see for how many generations more her style will influence the fashion world. Her sense of style has been with us since the early 60’s and almost fifty years later you ask any women past the age of 18 they will know who she was and most everyone has a pair of her “style” of sunglasses in their collection.

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Medieval Siege Weaponry: Castle Walls Beware

October 14th, 2008

Medieval siege weaponry was required in any self-respecting war leader’s arsenal in a time when castles with thick defense walls were common and cities surrounded by large, fortified walls were not out of place.

With warfare commonplace, it’s little wonder the variety of medieval siege weaponry is great. After all, what was an attacking band of raiders to do when presented with an “impenetrable” castle wall? Break it down, of course, using one of the many designs of medieval siege weaponry available.

One of the earliest examples of medieval siege weaponry appeared around the 300s AD when the ballista was created. The ballista wasn’t the most accurate in the line of medieval siege weaponry, but it could launch a wave of spears further than human arms could muster. Created using two wooden arms, tightly wound ropes and a cord to assist in the hurling of deadly projectiles, this example of medieval siege weaponry used torsion force to launch objects.

The Romans added their own model to the list of medieval siege weaponry when they created the mangonel. This model called for only one wooden arm. The mangonel, however, had somewhat of a design flaw in that in called for a wooden barrier to be constructed.

A ferocious example of medieval siege weaponry came online in the 12th century with the deploying of the trebuchet.

The trebuchet used a long wooden arm rested on a pivot point, which acted as a large lever. A projectile was placed on one end and warriors in this earlier version of the trebuchet pulled on ropes attached to the other end to essentially swing the arm around and hurl the stone.

As far as examples of commonly used medieval siege weaponry are concerned, however, catapults and their sister designs do not hold the only billing. Other tools were readily available to would-be conquerors.

The battering ram, for example, has been used through the ages and still is employed by modern law enforcement.

This version of medieval siege weaponry involved the creation of a very heavy weight placed on wheels used to help batter fortifications. It was usually made of a large tree trunk, and sometimes rather than wheels, a group of warriors or a sling frame helped provide the force necessary to crack fortifications using this simple, yet effective, example of medieval siege weaponry.

Other items in the medieval siege weaponry arsenal included ladders and not-so-simple siege towers. Ladders were employed simply to scale castle walls. If the defenses stopped this measure, siege towers might be built to allow archers clear lines of attack to enemies standing on castle walls.

As far as medieval siege weaponry is concerned, siege towers were somewhat difficult due to their cumbersome nature. Towers were rectangular and often constructed on four wheels. They were as tall as the castle walls or taller and were designed to protect archers, warriors and ladders as an army advanced. The downfall of siege towers in the long line of medieval siege weaponry, however, was their size and the propensity of the defending army to hurl projectiles at them.

The examples of medieval siege weaponry vary greatly, but whatever their design they all had one purpose - to deliver an army to victory.

For more medieval siege weapons information, including how to build a catapult, visit http://www.medieval-castle-siege-weapons.com/medieval-siege-weapons-index.html

Garben Catapult updates the information for http://www.medieval-castle-siege-weapons.com, a site filled with over 100 pages of interesting information covering many aspects of medieval castles and medieval weapons.

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The Life of Nikola Tesla - Intro

October 14th, 2008

It is not my purpose to claim to know all the wonders of the life of this great man who is acknowledged as one of the great inventors of all time. Those who give him that kind of acknowledgement on TV or elsewhere are not telling the whole story. There are secret projects underway that he was involved with. HAARP is just one example; it is an extension of his radio antennae that he spent a fortune trying to develop. These technologies are potentially able to destroy all life on earth; as they are kept by war-mongers and those who might leave earth for a while and then return to take over and start anew. Or maybe it will simply be a case of successful social engineering as the mind control uses get ramped out on space platforms to accentuate the ground carrier thought cloning already done by the likes of Michael Persinger. There was a time when Tesla was hood-winked by the power elite and despite him being a good person he was not politically as wise as we all must become if things are to really change.

You will hear him describe how he developed his own ESP and Dimensional travel long before he was in New York when another mystery man named Aleister Crowley was opening a portal in the Amalantrah working that some say led to the Babalon working done by Jack Parsons (Jet Propulsion Lab’s alchemist founding member) and L. Ron Hubbard. These things are also integrated with worm-holes and even more fantastic things but Tesla did not know his father had initiated him into the Orphic or Pythagorean Harmonic octaves very early in his life. I will also have to consider some of the things Tesla said which relate to aliens and other things deemed weird that even he may not have fully understood. Thus I will be taking a speculative journey and you are totally correct to speculate that I am wrong: just as I say Seen Casteel goes too far in saying a secret fraternal order got scientists who knew anti-gravity and went to Mars in the period when Tesla was born. Tesla gave up his man as a machine ideas and moved towards the great Yogi Vivekananda in later life and I agree with him that this Yogi’s thoughts are scientific.

HAARP is a furtherance of Tesla’s training that included the Lost Chord and direct cognition of the Druids through one of three different sources I can align with he and Von Neumann (all three may apply). There are people who have used lesser technology including Hitler and the tepaphone that the Borgia/De Medici/Rothschilds used to ‘remotely poison’ (Kill) people.

You might want to look up Frequency Fence, Persinger, and Bearden (cheniere.org) as well. Bearden says they will have to develop a better pulse weapon than they have said they are working with to make SDI work - and Tesla had that too. You will have to look many things up as you proceed through this book. I will give summaries or my thoughts but all knowledge relating to the subject of Tesla can not possibly be contained in one book.

“Spirit is beyond the void of space. This realm, beyond the void, is not an empty nothingness; it is the womb of creation. — Nature goes to the same place to create a galaxy of stars, a cluster of nebulas, a rain forest, a human body, or a thought… That place is Spirit.” (1)

The idea of thought coming from Spirit is a little general and not something I agree with unless he means REAL thought rather than regurgitated thought. Deepak Chopra is a great and wonderful human being who escaped the material competitive focused world and the ‘expertise’ that was his, as a doctor. However we have shown that science is getting dangerously close to finding templates or forms that mirror this kind of philosophy and it can be machine replicated. The church felt science was philosophy and that all things came from this kind of godhead in the ‘Dark Ages’; and scientists have justifiably thought any mention of a bridge to religion is fraught with these kinds of intellectual authoritarian terrors. Perhaps now we can re-evaluate our belief in godly forces and not involve religious or priestly interpreters who ask us to ‘follow’ like sheep. To replace one set of interpreters with another form of ‘expertise’ is not good. Surely there is a balance that harmonizes with purpose and true knowingness. I like the thought expressed by James Watson in his foreword to Discovering the Brain. He said, ‘The brain boggles the mind.’. It is also true that a lot of the ‘boggling’ has been done by those saying they seek God.

Author of Diverse Druids
Columnist for The ES Press Magazine

Guest ‘expert’ for World-Mysteries.com

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Why Is VoIP Cheaper than POTS?

October 13th, 2008

The normal perception is that VoIP costs so little because most things are cheap on the internet. There’s fierce competition, and a fraction of the overheads etc. However you need to acknowledge the history of the telecommunication companies and how they relate to computer networks, and the way data actually travels around the net. An appreciation of this is necessary to fully comprehend the riddle behind the VoIP vs. POTS pricing structure.

Long before computer networks became important telephone companies were using digital communication. At the start the very first digital voice circuit was used in Chicago in 1962 although ARPANET, the predecessor to today’s Internet, wasn’t in operation until 1969. The telecommunication companies used these digital circuits to make lots of voice connections over long distances something that analogue circuits were unable to do and they continue to use them for this purpose today.

Voice communication has a few special characteristics. For one thing, it’s inherently real-time. You’d get annoyed if phone calls consisted of long periods of silence followed by a burst of fast conversation to catch up with the conversation on the other end. To keep this from happening digital voice circuits provide guaranteed Quality of Service (QoS). Once a connection is made, you’ll always get all the bandwidth you need. It’s not just bandwidth though; latency is also taken care of by using small, fixed sized data packets. The point is the infrastructure was specially designed to facilitate voice communication.

When computer networks began emerging in the late 1980s) the {telecommunication companies wanted in. They already had the infrastructure there so they started looking at how they could send data over their existing phone lines. They came up with a number of technologies with varying levels of success. But there was (and still is) a problem: data networks are essentially different from voice networks.

Data is transferred in packets, which can arrive randomly sometime after they have been requested, without causing problems. Internet Protocol (IP) was designed to provide best effort delivery. Telecoms companies had an expensive network in place, so there was a lot of incentive to use it. After a few misses Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) was designed as a compromise technology that could carry both voice and data. However it’s much less efficient than a network intended purely for data. The costs for data transfers on ATM is more than 10link, compared to about one percent for an Ethernet running full-throttle.

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News About Blue Skies For Marketing Recruiters

October 11th, 2008

Blue Skies Careers has won splendid reputation targeted at providing first class quality personnel recruitment solutions. BlueSkiesCareers.co.uk ensure every one of Blue Skies Careers’ clientele have access to some of the most adept marketing personnel in just the push of a button.

The recruitment consultants are specialised for loads of different industries including marketing, public relations, advertising and sales promotion. Blue Skies believe the business to be very particular when examined against additional recruitment agencies; the company try to ensure that the recruitment agency always have a translucent understanding of exactly what said company is searching for, Blue Skies are recognized by their ability to inform the customers and marketing candidates around their unique requirements. This develops in the fact that the business hire expert recruitment agents that have worked within the marketing sector, bringing along with them know how and also experience.

Advertising has with time become one of the most popular job markets to start into after qualification and also every type of further education. With a market like advertising it can be decidedly difficult to enter instantly unless you have been fortunate enough to have the proper contacts. This could be the reason why 4 recruitment consultants have become thus fashionable; their guidance could also be required to join the trade and also find suitable available vacancies.

Blue Skies source Blue Skies’ marketing personnel both offline and online via their site. The website makes it uncomplicated for candidates to get possible vacancies and apply directly via the website. There have been numerous key elements to the companies approach and these include; Developing a translucent perception 5 the company clientele needs, Supplying detailed reports for all retained assignments, providing timely data in the marketing recruitment phase. http://www.blueskiescareers.co.uk for marketing recruitment from the Blue Skies website.

The knowledge of dealing along with a number of the worlds choicest companies and also agency networks has helped the company to become a sector best. The recruitment consultants recruit by both renowned market figures and also smaller independent start ups.

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Those Dirty Mexicans–Oh, Really?

October 10th, 2008

When my wife and I announced that we were moving to Mexico, one of my wife’s relatives asked us,

“Why do you want to live with those dirty Mexicans?”

Besides wanting to slap some sense into this person, I was particularly sickened (as in wanting to projectile vomit Linda Blair-style) by this hideous and most heinous stereotype. I have wanted to know since then where this originated.

I think, after doing what writers dotoo much research, I have finally found it.

Apparently, historians, those guys we all love to read, have been recording these views for years. David J. Webber wrote extensively on the origins of anti-Mexican stereotypes. (Thank you very much, David. It took only two years to find you!). Webber has carefully written on the views that are responsible for today’s prevalent stereotypes of the Mexican people. He wrote,

“Mexicans were considered, he wrote, “bigoted, greedy, tyrannical, fanatical, treacherous, and lazy”. These characterizations of the inhabitants of Mexico congealed especially during the decades following Mexico’s independence from Spain in 1821…” [1]

Many have written about the American-Mexican relations of that period. These writings, when taken as a whole, form a tidy little picture of how an American ideology portraying Mexicans as inferior evolved, thus justifying the American government’s action against Mexico. Remember the Alamo?

Another one of those tantalizingly interesting historians, Cecil Robinson, wrote,

“Pioneer America could find little to approve of in the Mexican society it collided with, being affronted in all its major convictions by Mexican attitudes, real and alleged. Americans, in their Protestant individualism, in their ideas of spirit and hard work, in their faith in progress through technology, in their insistence upon personal hygiene, in Puritanism and racial pride, found Mexico much to their distaste because of its priestly power, its social stratification with a pronounced sense of caste, its apparent devotion to pleasure and its indifference to cleanliness, and its reputation for pervasive sensuality … Adding to all this was the Anglo-Saxon’s contempt for a people who had lowered themselves to a state of general cohabitation with the Indians and had thus forfeited the right to be considered “white.” (Robinson, 1977)” [2]

Now isn’t that interesting?

My point of bringing all this up is because of a Reuters’ news item, Bed bugs threaten to put bite on U.S. Hotel Industry. Writer, Paul Simao, reports of a lawsuit brought against the Helmsley Park Lane Hotel in New York in which a couple was severely bitten by bedbugs. Can you imagine that? The case was settled out of court. (For the record, the Helmsley folks have rectified the admitted problem.)

Bedbugs tend to occur in environments that are in disarray, untidy, messy…(dirty?). In addition, their bites are not as harmless as one might think.

“Bedbugs may be a vector for hepatitis B and, in endemic areas, for American trypanosomiasis (Chagas disease).” [3]

So the cleaner your sleeping environment is the less chance you are going to have those nasty critters crawling all over you at night biting the snot out of you.

The rich irony of this is that a MEXICAN businessman filed the lawsuit brought against the Helmsley people for their dirty bedbug-breeding hotel rooms.

Don’t you love it!

[1] EXPERT REPORT OF ALBERT M. CAMARILLO; http://www.umich.edu/~urel/admissions/legal/expert/camarill.html

[2] Ibid

[3] http://www.emedicine.com/derm/topic600.htm

EzineArticles Expert Author Douglas Bower

Doug Bower is a freelance writer and book author. His most recent writing credits include The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Houston Chronicle, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and Transitions Abroad. He lives with his wife in Guanajuato, Mexico. His new book Mexican Living: Blogging it from a Third World Country can be seen at http://www.lulu.com/content/126241

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Toscana Ambassador Hotel in Poggibonsi

October 10th, 2008


A first modern hotel in a fascinating position in the heart of this wonderful Region, ideal for your lodging in Tuscany. You will find all the comforts and complete service in the elegant atmosphere that only a large new Hotel in Poggibonsi can offer.

The main comunative toots are easily accessible from Poggibonsi.
The main italian motorway (l’Autostrada del Sole) is only twenty six kilometres (about sixteen miles) away. Florence airport (Peretola) is forty three kilometres (about twenty seven miles) away, and Florence railstation can also easily be reached.

The hotel offers a range of ninety rooms: doubles, executive studios, lady executives, non smokers’ room, rooms with facilities for the disabled and apartments with hydromassages baths. Air conditioning, radio, colour television, satellite television, close-circuit television and rediffusion all add to the comfort of your stay.

The “Melachecca” is a classical restaurant for important dinners, where you can enjoy not only international meals, but also our famous tuscan cooking and its famous wines. See our exclusive banquet hall “Margherita”.

To satisfy every congressional need the hotel offers meeting halls that can seat from twenty to a hundred and fifty people. They are fully equiped to meet every operative and functional need to allow any project to succeed. The hotel provides large private parking spaces.

In a sophisticated exclusive atmosphere as the “Caffé Amadeus” you can enjoy a pleasant evening with a personal impeccable service.

This price includes:
breakfast, air conditioned, private bathroom, taxes, a map of Florence
We accept foreign currency, eurocheques, travellers’ cheques, Visa card, Eurocard, Mastercard, American Express and Diners.