Certosa Monumental Cemetery in Bologna
It's no secret that many of us like to walk around cemeteries. Here you can find both history and beautiful architecture, and all this in the open air. And when several bygone generations of families appear before your eyes, you involuntarily think about the eternal, no matter how grandiloquent it may sound. Pere Lachaise in Paris, Recoleta in Buenos Aires, Necropolis in St. Petersburg, Jewish Cemetery in Prague and many small necropolises in different towns of Europe. On our last trip to Italy, we managed to walk around the monumental Certosa Cemetery in Bologna.
The Certosa cemetery was once a Carthusian monastery founded in 1334 and closed in 1797 by order of Napoleon Bonaparte. In 1801, the former monastery was converted into the city's monumental cemetery. The passion of the Bolognese nobility and officials for the creation of family crypts turned the cemetery into an open-air museum. Certosa di Bologna is included by the Council of Europe as part of the main route to places of European cultural heritage.
Bologna is considered a city of galleries and arcades — and the Certosa cemetery consists of rows of galleries containing crypts and columbariums.
It is better not to make my mistakes and not to go without a diagram, because endless galleries with transitions into one another create the feeling that you will never get out of here, and the absence of people around brings a not very pleasant feeling of anxiety.
Although the Internet gives information that tourist excursions are conducted around the Chertosa cemetery, I did not meet a single person, except for the staff at the entrance.
In such rooms there is another level below, a staircase leads there, and the light turns on automatically, triggering the sound of footsteps.
And now imagine: no one around, and suddenly the light turns on in the crypt! Scared? I'm very