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Gerolamo Frigimelica designed the Maze of Villa Pisani in 1720, and nowadays it is one of the most famous and best preserved in Europe.
Its nine concentric circles originally of hornbeam hedges and now of box hedges, were a place of entertainment and love plays during vacations.
The destination of a long and complex path is the turret.
Two small spiral staircases twining the turret lead to the top, where the statue of Minerva, goddess of wisdom and patron goddess of all arts welcomes the visitor at the end of his "effort".
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10. The maze at Villa Pisani, in the Veneto region of Italy, was created in the early 1700s, and is said to be once of the world’s most complicated.
Located in the town of Stra, the maze is made up of layers of pathways in 12 concentric rings with high hedges leading to a central tower.
Famously, because Napoleon had once been lost in the maze, when Hitler and Mussolini met for a chin wag there, neither of them were willing to venture into the maze in case they too got lost. Imagine the path of history then.
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Minerva was the Roman goddess whom Hellenizing Romans from the second century BC onwards equated with the Greek goddess Athena.
She was the virgin goddess of warriors, poetry, medicine, wisdom, commerce, weaving, crafts, and the inventor of music.
She is often depicted with an owl, her sacred creature and, through this connection, a symbol of wisdom.
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