preliminary internet research led me to locate a number of sites known for charged mystical activities or practices. the following is documentation of a tour i comprised from an American Express travelcast and a text Satan's city A-Z by Dr. Leo Ruickbie found on witchology.com. and although i did not experience any mystical activity during my visit, the presence of Torino's suggested history can definitely be sensed.
Piazza Castello

guarding the Palazzo Reale is a green gate adorned by the Gemini twins Astor and Pollux; the Greek Mythological twins who obtained the ability to alternate between the underworld and the mortal world. these gates are said to guard the heart of white magic of the city and stand at an invisible line where the sacred and the diabolical meet.The Shroud of Turin

located in the Piazza San Giovanni, Turin's Duomo hosts one of the most famous mystical relics; the Shroud of Turin. for years millions of pilgrims have traveled the earth to visit this controversial Christian relic. brought to Torino by Emanuale Filiberto the shroud's authenticity has been questioned for decades. the first photograph of the shroud was taken in 1898 and triggered intensive scientific research. in 1988 experts from Oxford University conducted radiocarbon dating on the shroud and proclaimed it a medieval fake. however, other experiments proved the shroud contained ancient pollens from a plant, that is indigenous to ancient Palenstine, embedded in its fibers. the image on the cloth is like a photographic negative, produced hundreds of years before the invention of photography. the Shroud is rarely exhibited and is contained in a bullet proof case.
Porta Palatina
Santuario della Consolata

nestled in a discrete corner is the Santuario della Consolota, heralded as a place of worship for the comforting Virgin Mary. within its jewel box baroque interior are numerous altars and enclaves filled with medals, photographs and identification cards left as mementos by visitors who were comforted from such tragedies as illness, death, poverty and war.

Palazzo Paesana
located around the corner from the Santuario della Consolata, is the Palazzo Paesana, built around 1720 as a commission for the Count Baldassarre of Saluzzo. during a 1902 renovation the body of a missing girl was found in the basement. in 1903 another young girl, still alive, was found in the same location. many men were arrested and accused of the crimes, but ultimately it was a mentally-challenged garbage collector who eventually confessed. he admitted to the crimes and claimed he was followed by a big shadow who forced him to kill. since then Turino has harbored a number of notable serial killers including Peppino Pisanu (1972 - 1998), Calogero Consales (1980 - 1997) and Giancarlo Giudice (1984 - 1986).
Piazza Statuto


Piazza Statuto is located at the western end of via Garibaldi, a main shopping street and supposedly one of the most haunted locations in Torino. this piazza is the home of the macabre sculpture by Luigi Bella, created in 1879 commemorating the workers who built the Frejuls tunnel through the Alps. the raw stone sculpture is draped with bodies; falling, climbing and crushed by a stone spire which is crowned by an angelic figure believed to be the fallen angel Lucifer.

Piazza Statuto is said to be the black heart of the Torino and is located at the opposite end of via Garibaldi from the white heart, Piazza Castello. Piazza Statuto was once the western outskirts of the city, a place where light ended and darkness began, and coincidentally a necropolis, the site for executions and a depository for the dead during the Roman era. today, located nearby is the entrance to the labyrnith that is the city's underground sewer system which is where the supposed gate to hell can be found. the square's dark reputation has attracted many including the painter Giorgio de Chirico. much of the work from his surrealist period depicts desolate squares with repetitious arches and deep shadows such as the ones found on Piazza Statuto or Piazza Vittorio Veneto. de Chirico was additionally drawn to Torino because Friedrich Nietzsche also resided there for a short while. Piazza Solferino


Fontana Angelica is large semi-circle fountain placed in front of Torino's main tourist information office; a contemporary building consisting of two large glass pyramid domes. the fountain was created in 1930 by Giovanni Riva and commissioned by a city official in memory of his parents, his mother's name being Angelica. the fountain was intended to be located next to a cathederal, but when Riva's affiliation with the freemasons was discovered the church forbode the fountain to be located near any Christian location. the church's relentless adversion for the possible masonic imagery presented in the fountain forced this fountain to be built here in the Piazza Solferino, across from an opera house.


the fountain represents the four seasons; spring and summer as female figures and autumn and winter as male. the two hulking male figures face opposite directions of spring and summer and are said to represent the Pillars of Hercules and the Cave of Light. the negative rectangular space between autumn and winter from which water spouts is said to be a threshold to an unknown dimension; Porta dell'Infinito, a gateway to infinity.
Casa dei Tarocchi
to the east of Piazza Solferino is the narrow street via Alfieri where at #15 the Casa dei Tarocchi of the Savoy Dynasty was located. the Savoy Dynasty formed in the early 11th century and grew to rule the "kingdom" of Italy until the end of the Second World War. there are still many descendants who insist in exercising their "royal" titles. this site was where the Savoy's had their Tarot cards printed.
Palazzo Levaldigi

further down via Alfieri at the corner of via XX Setemmbre is the Palazzo Levaldigi, allegedly another site of a Tarot card factory. however Palazzo Levaldigi, now Banca Nazionale del Lavoro, is also known as La Porta del Diavolo, the Gate of the Devil. the iron-work gates and intricate detail of the wooden front doors hint towards this aspect of the buildings history. the door knocker is a gold ram's head with two intertwined serpents dangling from its mouth. it is also said that the building is haunted by the ghost of a murdered ballet dancer who was killed during a three-day long party.


Gran Madre di Dio



across the river Po is the Gran Madre di Dio. the church was designed by the architect Ferdinando Bonsignore in celebration of the end of Napoleon's rule and the return of power to the Savoy king Vittorio. two female figures flank the stairs that lead to the church: Religion on the right and Faith on the left. held in the hand of Faith is a chalice, a reference to the notion that the Holy Grail is buried close by. same say the statue of Faith is pointing in the direction to where the Holy Grail is buried, while others believe an older statue that has thus been destroyed pointed to the grail's locations. a relic of Christian mythology the Holy Grail was the vessel used by Jesus at the last supper and is said to hold miraculous powers.


it is also said that at this spot on the river Po was the location of a temple to the Egyptian godesses Isis.
in January 2008 a vial of holy water and a prayer book were stolen from the Gran Madre de Dio. the culprites are believed to be satanists who stole the items for use in a black magic ritual. a prayer book can be used to organize a black mass and the objects stolen from an important magical site are said to have more power in such rituals.
Galleria Subalpina: Friedrich Nietzsche's Apartment


Friedrich Nietzsche's apartment is not necessarily a site for mystical or occult activities. however, his presence in this city and his attraction to it are in harmony with the cities reputation for the dark arts. Nietzsche's view of organized religion, mortality and belief seems most appropriately aligned with Torino's supernatural history. from 1888 to 1889 the philosopher spent two months in the spring and fall in Torino, one of three different residences that, he was convinced, had the same air quality at different times of the year. it is here in Torino where Nietzsche stated "God is dead" and also where he suffered a public, psychotic breakdown which led to his departure to a psychiatric clinic in Basel, Switzerland.

his apartment located at #6 Piazza via Carlo Alberto, has been preserved and can be glimpsed from the arcade below. it is on the second floor and a light is usually on.
