La chiesa, it has been standing for more than four hundred years, I believe. Time will tell if it’s still standing when (or if) we get there.
Whereas Il Mercatino dell’ Antico, Antiquariato, Collezionismo e Artigianato in town (aka, the “flee” market in my experience around some parts of the New World) only assembles a venerable audience on the second Sunday of each month.
So which won out? The church history or the true believer in the fine art of a bargain?
If anyone awaits the answer at 11:00, I have some relics I might be able to interest you in. Plus some photos of various and sundry direct assaults on the Euro stash I carried.
(Truth be told, of course, one prize has my name written all over it; another, only captioned in pictures, works historically beyond the facts of the matter; while for the last, next signpost points one way toward link, thanks to Earl, for a hoot of a U-tube video about the return to work of a “secretary” from long ago:)
Though as for that, all the items potentially on our tracker’s list today are held most dear by family and friends over the years:
Only fitting and proper, then, to end our outing by overlooking the place where we once began our travels here in Spoleto–the ancient site of Teatro Romana: