2006 Winter Olympics torch relay explained

Host City:Turin, Italy
Countries Visited:Greece, Vatican City, Malta, San Marino, Slovenia, Austria, Switzerland, France, Italy
Torch Bearers:10,001
Start Date:December 8, 2005
End Date:February 10, 2006
Torch Designer:Pininfarina

The 2006 Winter Olympics torch relay took part as part of the build-up to the 2006 Winter Olympics hosted in Turin, Italy. The route covered around and involved 10,001. Stefania Belmondo lit the cauldron at the opening ceremony.

Torch

The torch was a modern interpretation of the traditional wooden torch, in which it is the metal that seems to catch fire and burn. The flame envelops the body of the torch rather than exiting from a hole on the top, like earlier torches. A dynamic, innovative shape was created to develop this concept, which recalls the tip of a ski but also the building that is a symbol of Turin, the Mole Antonelliana.[1] It is criticized for being too heavy at .[2]

Route in Greece

November 27

November 28

November 29

November 30

December 1

December 2

December 3

December 4

December 5

December 7

December 8

Route in Italy

DateMap
December 8, 2005 (day 1): Rome
December 10 (day 3): Rieti
December 11 (day 4): Perugia
December 12 (day 5): Siena
December 13 (day 6): Livorno
December 14 (day 7): Florence
December 15 (day 8): Lucca
December 16 (day 9): Pisa
December 17 (day 10): La Spezia
December 18 (day 11): Genoa
December 19 (day 12): Nuoro
December 20 (day 13): Cagliari
December 21 (day 14): Ragusa
December 22 (day 15): Agrigento
December 23 (day 16): Palermo
December 26 (day 17): Catania
December 27 (day 18): Reggio Calabria
December 28 (day 19): Catanzaro
December 29 (day 20): Cosenza
December 30 (day 21): Potenza
December 31 (day 22): Naples
January 1, 2006 (day 23): Frosinone
January 2 (day 24): Benevento
January 3 (day 25): Taranto
January 4 (day 26): Lecce
January 5 (day 27): Bari
January 6 (day 28): Foggia
January 7 (day 29): Campobasso
January 8 (day 30): Pescara
January 9 (day 31): L'Aquila
January 10 (day 32): Ancona
January 11 (day 33): Arezzo
January 12 (day 35): Rimini
January 13 (day 36): Bologna
January 14 (day 37): Parma
January 15 (day 38): Mantua
January 16 (day 39): Verona
January 17 (day 40): Venice
January 18 (day 41): Trieste
January 19 (day 42): Udine
January 20 (day 43): Tarvisio
January 21 (day 44): Belluno
January 22 (day 45): Treviso
January 23 (day 46): Trento
January 24 (day 47): Bolzano
January 25 (day 48): Urtijëi
January 26 (day 49): Cortina d'Ampezzo
January 27 (day 50): Merano
January 28 (day 51): Lecco
January 29 (day 52): Milan
January 30 (day 53): Varese
January 31 (day 54): Pavia
February 1 (day 55): Savona
February 2 (day 56): Cuneo
February 3 (day 57): Pinerolo
February 4 (day 58): Sestriere
February 5 (day 59): Bardonecchia
February 6 (day 60): Albertville
February 7 (day 61): Aosta
February 8 (day 62): Venaria Reale
February 9 (day 63): Turin
February 10 (day 64): Stadio Olimpico

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Olympic torch. Pininfarina. 25 August 2016. 28 August 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160828072736/http://www.pininfarina.com/en/torcia_olimpica/. dead.
  2. News: Olympic torch too heavy for athletes. The Guardian. 1 January 2006. 1 January 2006.