(Last Updated On: May 30, 2016)

THINK ABOUTIT SIGHTING REPORT

Date: November 1, 1954

Sighting Time: 0730A

Day/Night:

Location: Cennina, Italy

Urban or Rural: –

Entity Type: two little men 3 ft tall

Entity Description: About 1 metre in height, they were wearing a sort of grey overall, all in one piece, including the feet. On their backs they had short cloaks of a grey material, and over the one-piece overall they wore a sort of doublet, fastened, right up to the collar, with little buttons “like shining stars.” Their trousers were tightly-fitting, “like the long underpants that our men wear in the winter.”

Their faces, crowned by helmets, were normal, but small. Both were no taller than a five-year-old infant, but their bodies were in proportion. “It would have taken two of those things to make a man,” she said, “but they were very fine looking, even though rather old.”

Hynek Classification: CE3

Duration:

No. of Object(s): 1

Size of Object(s):

Distance to Object(s):

Shape of Object(s): A sort of double cone, over 2 metres high and about a metre wide in the middle.

Color of Object(s): The outside of it shone as though it was of very polished light metal. On the lower cone there was an open glass door, and inside it could be seen two little seats, little scats like those used by children. In the central part of the spindle, where it was widest, there was a sort of roundish glass, closely following the round shape of the mysterious machine. Rosa Lotti had heard no sound from it.”

Number of Witnesses: Multiple

Special Features/Characteristics: Humanoid/Occupant, Landing, Physical Trace

Source: Sergio Conti, excerpt from FSR (Sept/Oct 1972)

Summary/Description: Rosa Lotti was walking into Cennina, when she perceived a big vertical spindle, “like 2 cones joined at their bases.” From behind this craft emerged two little men 3 ft tall, who approached her with friendly expressions, the older one laughing. They were speaking a language that sounded like Chinese, ‘liu, lai, loi.” Approaching Lotti, they snatched from her the carnations and one of her stockings. Lotti ran away. A deep hole in the ground was later found at the site.

Full Report

Artist Walter Molino’s impression of the incident, from the cover of the Nov. 14, 1954 issue of “La Domenica del Corriere,” an illustrated Sunday supplement to the Italian newspaper “Corriere della Sera.

[Excerpt from the article]

THE CENNINA LANDING OF 1954

Sergio Conti

NOVEMBER I, 1954, is a date that marks the occurrence of one of the most extraordinary UFO landing and contact cases ever recorded (it has already been quoted by Vallee as No. 24 in his Century of Landings).

Cennina is a small town near Biicine, in the Province of Arezzo.

On the morning of that day (a Monday and a feast-day in the Catholic Church) Rosa Lotti nei Dainelli, a forty-year-old peasant woman mother of four children, living at a farm called “La Collina” which is situated in a lonely region between Cennina and Capannolc, had risen early to go down into Cennina to visit the church and the cemetery. She was carrying a bunch of carnations, destined for the altar of the Madonna Pellegrina, whose procession had taken place the preceding evening.

It was 6.30 a.m.

Rosa Lotti rarely went into town, and spent most of her time on her arduous duties on the farm.

On this feast-day morning however she had put on her new dress and started out along the footpath that leads, through fields and thickets, towards the town. She went barefoot, carrying her stockings and her “best” shoes so as not to get them dirty. She would put them on before she came to the first houses.

She reached a point on this path, regularly taken by her, where it passed through a thicket of low bushes. She knew this path perfectly. She had even gone along it many a time at night, without ever having any sort of unpleasant encounter or noting anything unusual.

Arriving in the middle of a small clearing among the shrubs and sparse trees, she suddenly beheld, near a pine tree and on the edge of the little grassy area, a strange and unwonted object that at once aroused in her both curiosity and surprise. It was a sort of huge spindle, fixed vertically in the ground.

The Craft and the “Little Men”

This is how Rosa Lotti subsequently described the strange machine:

“A sort of double cone, over 2 metres high and about a metre wide in the middle.” (In La Nazhnc Italiwa, November 2, 1954.)

“Like two bells joined together at their bases.” (In La Settimana Incotn, No. 24, Year XV.)

“The object was very swollen out in the middle and pointed at the two ends. It seemed to be covered with leather.” (In Il Giornale del Mattlno, November 2, 1954,)

“The outside of it shone as though it was of very polished light metal. On the lower cone there was an open glass door, and inside it could be seen two little seats, little scats like those used by children. In the central part of the spindle, where it was widest, there was a sort of roundish glass, closely following the round shape of the mysterious machine. Rosa Lotti had heard no sound from it.” (In La Nazione Italiana, November 2, 1954.)

Rosa Lotti had stopped in her tracks, astonished and curious. But her surprise was only just beginning. From behind the “spindle” she beheld two strange beings emerge. “Almost like men, but of the size of children,” was her description.

The two little beings approached her with friendly expressions on their faces. She had plenty of time to make a thorough examination of them, so that she was afterwards able to describe them in the minutest details. About 1 metre in height, they were wearing a sort of grey overall, all in one piece, including the feet. On their backs they had short cloaks of a grey material, and over the one-piece overall they wore a sort of doublet, fastened, right up to the collar, with little buttons “like shining stars.” Their trousers were tightly-fitting, “like the long underpants that our men wear in the winter.”

Their faces, crowned by helmets, were normal, but small. Both were no taller than a five-year-old infant, but their bodies were in proportion. “It would have taken two of those things to make a man,” she said, “but they were very fine looking, even though rather old.”

Vigorous, lively, they were talking away “as though they were Chinese. They kept saying: ‘liu.1 lai,’ ‘loi,’ ‘lau.* ‘loi,’ ‘lai,’ ‘liu,’ ” 3

They gesticulated, but with no trace of menace. Indeed, on the contrary, in a friendly fashion, as though they were trying to make themselves understood and to strike up a rudimentary conversation.

The older looking of the two was the more jovial, laughing and obviously trying to establish contact with her. They had magnificent eyes, fjll of intelligence. Their noses were of normal shape, their mouths just like a man’s, but their upper lips were slightly curled in the centre, so that even when they were not laughing their teeth were still exposed. They were teeth like ours, broad, strong teeth, but short (as though they had been filed down) and somewhat protruding, like the teeth of rabbits.

Their ears were hidden under two leather discs, and there was a band around their foreheads, al?o of leather.

Approaching Rosa Lotti, who was now terrified, they snatched out of her hands the bunch of carnations and one of her black stockings. When she remonstrated timidly, the one who seemed the older of the two handed some of the flowers back to her, but kept five of them. Then, having examined the structure of the flowers with an air of curiosily, and laughing the while, he wrapped them in the stocking and threw them into the “spindle” through the small opening.

Then they stepped back a few paces from her, and look two “packages” from inside the machine—white objects, circular, which they carried in the hollow of the arm, holding the arm bent with the hand on the chest. The thing seemed to be wrapped in a newspaper, but it was not a newspaper. (La Naz’tone Sera, November 2, 1954.)

Then they turned towards the lady again, but she had seized the moment to escape. After running about 100 metres, she looked back. Everything had vanished.

(…)

The Carabinieri who went there in an effort to investigate the affair [found] that there was indeed a deep cavity recently made in the ground… The hole was also seen by the Chief Inspector of Carabinieri at Ambra, Signor Zulimo Botarelli, who happened to be out hunting in the vicinity at the time.

The Latest Investigation

Now, eighteen years after the event, we have re-examined the Cennina case and, thanks to the active support that we have received from the Prato UFO Study Group, we have been able to check the details and also gather valuable pieces of supporting testimony.

(…)

Support from Collateral Eyewitness Accounts

A vast network of collateral eyewitness accounts is now available to provide quite particular validity for the Cennina phenomenon, and to cause it to acquire a value, as an eyewitness account, that is well nigh irrefutable.

(…)

Notes and Comments by Gordon Creighton

1. The Italian press reports cited by Signor Sergio Conti are as follows:

La Nazione Indiana, November 2 and 5, 1954.

La Nazione Sera, November 2, 1954.

II Giorno del Mattino, November 2, 3, and 5, 1954.

II Giorno del Mattino, March 2, 1955.

La Settimana Incom, June 17, 1962 (No. 24, Year 15).

The work of two Italian UFO investigation groups has gone into the compilation of this report. These are (1) MUF (UFO Section), or, to give them their full title in English, the UFO Section of the Florentine Humanistic Cultural Movement, in whose files the Cennina Case is listed as No. 92, and (2) the Prato UFO Study Group (Centro di Ricerca Per Lo Studio Sui Fenomeni UFO di Prato), whose energetic young members have just conducted a fresh investigation of the case and have unearthed much valuable corroborative material—for example, the story of the two boys who were out attending to their pigs on the morning of November 1, 1954, and are alleged to have actually seen Signora Rosa Lotti being chatted up by her homuncules.

3. Rosa Lotti’s comparison is good. These are all very typical sounds in Chinese.

4. The Carabinieri are the Italian Gendarmerie.

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