The World’s Most Beloved Day of Mischief · Origins, History & Global Traditions Every year, on the first day of April, millions of people across the globe wake up with one shared intention, to deceive, bamboozle, and thoroughly outwit someone they know. Newspapers run false headlines, colleagues sabotage each other’s offices, and even multinational corporations…
Every year on 19th March, Spain celebrates El Día del Padre, Father’s Day, a date that in Spain has nothing to do with the commercial third-Sunday-in-June celebration familiar to the English-speaking world. Instead, it is anchored to the Feast of Saint Joseph (La Fiesta de San José), the patron saint of fathers, workers, and craftsmen,…
In Italy, Father’s Day, La Festa del Papà, falls on 19th March, the Feast of Saint Joseph (La Festa di San Giuseppe). The Italian celebration is among the most culturally rich and food-centred Father’s Day traditions in the world, combining deep Catholic devotion to San Giuseppe with Italy’s extraordinary regional culinary diversity and the warmth…
In Portugal, Father’s Day is known as Dia do Pai, literally “Day of the Father”, and is celebrated on 19th March, the Feast of Saint Joseph (São José). Like its Iberian neighbour Spain, Portugal’s Father’s Day is rooted in the Catholic tradition of honouring Saint Joseph as the model of fatherly virtue, and the religious…
Among the saints venerated throughout Christian history, few occupy as unique a position as Saint Joseph. Though he speaks not a single recorded word in the Gospels, this humble carpenter from Nazareth has become one of the most beloved figures in Christianity, revered as the patron saint of workers, fathers, and especially carpenters. The Man…
✦ FAITH & CULTURE ✦ A celebration marking the end of Ramadan, one of Islam’s most joyous and spiritually significant occasions Each year, as the holy month of Ramadan draws to a close, over 1.8 billion Muslims around the world turn their eyes to the night sky. The sighting of the new crescent moon, or…
The Most Beautiful Station in the World There are train stations, and then there is Antwerp Central. Known locally as the Spoorwegkathedraal, the Railway Cathedral, this extraordinary building has been stopping travellers in their tracks since it opened in 1905. In 2014, the British-American magazine Mashable ranked it the most beautiful railway station in the…
Louis Joseph Jean-Baptiste Delacenserie (1838–1909) was one of Belgium’s most significant architects of the nineteenth century, a man whose career bridged two worlds, the Gothic splendour of medieval Flanders and the eclectic ambitions of the modern industrial age. Born in Bruges on September 7, 1838, and dying in that same city on September 2, 1909,…
The Gateway to Ghent Few railway stations in Europe manage to be both a working transport hub and a work of art. Ghent-Sint-Pieters, named after the historic Sint-Pietersabdij (Saint Peter’s Abbey) that once dominated this southern corner of the city, is one of them. Opened in 1912 and still serving hundreds of thousands of passengers…
Introduction There are railway stations that impress, and there are railway stations that overwhelm. Milano Centrale belongs firmly to the second category. To enter it for the first time is to experience something close to architectural shock, a sudden, vertiginous confrontation with grandeur on a scale that the modern world rarely attempts and even more…