Apartments hotels and farm holidays in Italy – online booking
     
Save place on your checklist
Bookmark and Share

Excursions

Arezzo

Arezzo Many would insist that it is impossible to find a large interesting town in Tuscany with rich medieval and Renaissance remains not overrun by tourists. But you can, and it is called Arezzo.


 

Montepulciano

Montepulciano Montepulciano is about 60 km southeast of Siena. The town is built on the crest of a hill 605 metres above sea level. The town is Etruscan in origin, but became an independent province in the fourteenth century.


 

Castiglion Fiorentino

Castiglion Fiorentino Although these days everybody seems to have been to Tuscany and most have visited Florence, Lucca, Siena and Chianti, huge areas of the region remain quite unknown, not only to tourists generally but also to the Tuscans themselves.

 

Monte Oliveto Maggiore Monastery

Monte Oliveto Maggiore Monastery At the top of a forest covered peak in Tuscany the monastery Monte Oliveto Maggiore stands in solitary majesty. You get here by driving up the winding country road before arriving at the impressive building complex. The monastery was built at the start of the 14th century when 3 Sienese noblemen and the holy Bernado Tolomei settled in this rugged place to pray and work.

 

Siena

Siena centre of Siena is quite indescribable. Once you are through the old city gates you are met everywhere by reminders of times when neither electricity nor industry was available to the local inhabitants. Piazza del Campo with its town hall, the cathedral, Basilica di San Domenico, La Torre del Mangia and above all the streets and houses make an unforgettable impression on visitors.

 

Chianti wine district

Chianti wine district Chianti wine was incredibly popular especially in the years from 1870 to 1900, which led to the shabby copies from other districts. As long as the wine was poured in the classic fiasco bottle, it could pass as Chianti. In 1924 a group of wine producers from central Chianti formed a consortium, which took its name from the Lega de Chianti’s symbol – a black rooster.

 

Sansepolcro

Sansepolcro Sansepolcro nestles in the southeastern corner of Tuscany, just a few kilometers from Umbria and Marche. Although Sansepolcro is today an industrial town, the town centre is a great place to visit and abounds in rich medieval history.

 

Lake Trasimeno

Lake Trasimeno

 

Florence

Florence Florence is the capital of Tuscany and has been a cultural centre since the early Middle Ages. If you travel to Tuscany, you really should pay Florence a visit at some point: Ponte Vecchio, Palazzo Vecchio, Piazza della Signoria, the Uffizi Gallery, the churches Santa Maria Novella and Santa Croce, Palazzo Pitti and its exhibitions, the cathedral with Brunelleschi’s vault and Giotto’s bell tower...

 

For further information: info@in-italia.com
Click on map
Island of Elba Tuscany Sardinia Aeolian Islands Sicily Abruzzi Aosta Apulia Basilicata Calabria Campania Capri, Ischia and Procida Emilia-Romagna Friuli Lazio Liguria Lombardy Marche Molise Piedmont South Tirolo Umbria The Veneto Map of Italy  - Tuscany
Civitella Val di Chiana - Tuscany
Click for larger map
Click for larger map
Nearest airports
  • Firenze: 97 km
  • Perugia: 104 km
  • Bologna: 182 km
See more distances