TREASURES OF TUSCANY

TREASURES OF TUSCANY 

Tuscany is simply one of the most charming corners in Europe. Enjoy the amazing architecture, stunning scenery, fascinating history and tasty cuisine of this Jewel of Italy!!!

7 DAYS
from

  700 €

FLY
from

  Your local airport

  A tailor-made tour for young Dutch tourists in summer!!!

WHAT’S INCLUDED

Arrival at Pisa Airport
Departure from Pisa Airport
Transfer between airport and accommodation
4 nights at the lovely Ostello San Miniato in San Miniato
Accommodation on B&B basis
Triple rooms
English- speaking tour guide on tour
All sightseeing tours as mentioned
Travel on tour by minibus or coach
All local and airport taxes/service charges

PRICES: 700 € per person

 

 

 

DAY 1:SAN MINIATO

                  
 

DAY1:SAN MINIATO

Arrival at Pisa Airport. A coach will take you to the lovely Ostello San Miniato  in San Miniato, a town located on three hills in the heart of Tuscany.

The town is situated at the intersection of the streets that join Florence, Pisa, Lucca, Siena and the famous Via Francigena, which was the main connecting route between Northern Europe and Rome in the Middle Ages. The landscape is enchanting with old boroughs, ancient churches, amazing Medici villas, castles and tobacco mills.

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Our walking tour starts with Grifoni Palace. This Renaissance Palace was built by Giuliano of Baccio d’Agnolo for Ugolino Grifoni, Secretary of the Grand Duke Cosimo I of the Medici Family, in 1555. The building was destroyed during the Second World War, later it was restored and regained its original splendour.

Now it is the headquarters of  Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio di San Miniato.

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We can continue our tour towards Piazza del Popolo with its Church of the Saints Jacopo and Lucia, also called San Domenico’s Church, with its adjacent Cloisters of the Convent. This church dates back to 1330 so it is very old, as we can see from its façade.

Inside the church we can admire some works of art such as Giovanni Chellini’s tomb, attributed to Bernardo Rossellino, a fresco depicting “Scenes from San Domenico’s Life” by Antonio Domenico Bamberini, “The Virgin Mary with the Infant Jesus and the Saints Cosmas, Damian, John the Evangelist and Thomas” by Domenico di Michelino and “The Deposition” by Francesco Morandini called “Il  Poppi” .

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Next to the church we can admire the amazing Via Angelica, which is an ancient path that runs along the right wall of the Church of the Saints Jacopo and Lucia. In the past it was the connecting route between the town and the countryside. Along this ancient path there are three chapels decorated with 14th-century frescoes and 18th-century decorations.In one of these chapels, Saint Urban’s Oratory, we can see frescoes depicting “Scenes from the Way of the Cross” and “Saint Urban Pope”.3

The MuMe is worth a visit. This museum was created to preserve the memory of the Second World War.

The museum contains war relics, vintage posters and documents of the people from San Miniato who lived the dramatic years of  the Second World War.

We next visit the Archconfraternity of Mercy in Roffia Palace , which contains devotional objects connected with the role of this important institution such as a 19th-century horse-drawn ambulance, 18th- century lanterns and some splendid paintings.

Our tour continues towards Piazza del Seminario, where we can admire the Palace of the Seminary. The square has an asymmetric shape. The palace dates back to 1713 and it is characterized by its concave façade decorated with 18th-century frescoes and phrases in Latin.In the Middle Ages there were houses and shops whose wooden doors can still be seen. On the other side of the square we can see the rear façade of the Bishop’s Palace.

We next the  head for Piazza dl Duomo, where we can admire the Cathedral, which is dedicated to Santa Maria Assunta and San Genesio. It was built in the 12th century and has a beautiful Romanesque façade, which also exhibits Gothic and Renaissance architectural elements.

The Church has a Latin cross plan with three naves and houses many works of art such as a 17th-century wooden crucifix by Iacopo di Giuliano Sani, Giovanni Battista Sandrini’s baptismal font, four marble busts of famous men from San Miniato: Iacopo Buonaparte, Pietro Bagnoli, Giovacchino Taddei and Francesco Maria Poggi and frescoes by Antonio Domenico Bamberini and Francesco Lanfranchi.

  Its Bell Tower, called Matilde Tower, has an asymmetrical clock and dates back to the 12th century. Its name refers to the Countess Matilde of Canossa,who was probably born in San Miniato.

Next to the Cathedral there is the Diocesan Museum of Sacred Art housing paintings by famous artists such as Iacopo Chimenti called “L’Empoli”, Francesco Morandini called “Il Poppi”, Lorenzo Lippi, Giovanni Bilivert, Cenni di Francesco di Ser Cenni,  Neri di Bicci, Iacopo di Mino del Pellicciaio and Lorenzo Monaco.

In Piazza del Duomo we can also admire the Bishop’s Palace, which is the residence of the Bishop of San Miniato and features a chapel dedicated to the Assumption and St. John the Baptist, the Imperial Vicars’ Palace,dating back to the 12th century, and its Tower, which was used as a prison.

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2Leaving Piazza del Duomo behind us, we head off to the Sanctuary of the Most Holy Crucifix. This Baroque church, which stands between the Fort, the Cathedral and the Town Hall, was built in the 18th century. While the decoration of the façade is very simple, the walls inside the church are completely painted with “Scenes from Jesus Christ’s Life” by Antonio Domenico Bamberini. On the main altar there is a tabernacle containing the famous “Holy Crucifix”, which is venerated and thought to be miraculous.

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????????????????????????????????????In front of the Sanctuary there is the Town Hall, which was built at the end of the 13th century. Inside we can admire two beautiful rooms decorated with the 14th and 16th- century amazing frescoes: La Sala delle Sette Virtù and La Sala Consiliare.

The frescoes in La Sala delle Sette Virtù were painted between the 14th and the 16th centuries. The most important fresco is the “Virgin Mary nursing her Child surrounded by the Theological and Cardinal Virtues”, attributed to Cenni di Francesco di Ser Cenni. In the middle of the painting, you can see the Virgin Mary and the Infant Jesus. Around her there are some female figures, who are symbols of the Seven Virtues. “Justice” is holding a sword in her right hand and scales in her left hand; “Prudence” is pointing to a mirror with her right hand; “Temperance” is holding a phial of wine mixed up with water in her right hand; “Fortitude” is holding a sword and is wearing a helmet; “Hope” is praying; “Charity” has got a flame in her right hand and a piece of paper in her left hand and “Faith” has a cross on her left shoulder.

“La Sala Consiliare” is situated next to the “Sala delle Sette Virtù” and it contains Francesco Maria Galli Angelini’s famous frescoes depicting the history of San Miniato during the Middle Ages.

In one of these frescoes we can see a knight riding a horse and holding a sword in his right hand. On the right there is a parchment and on the left there is the knight’s Coat of Arms. Next to this fresco, we can see a man holding a green book in his left hand and a quill in his right hand. He is wearing a red robe and a red hat.

In the corner there is his family’s Coat of Arms. In another fresco we can see the Virgin Mary talking to San Miniato, San Genesio, Sant’Agostino and San Francesco. The room is decorated with frescoes depicting the Coats of Arms of famous Noble Families from San Miniato and famous leaders such as Franco Sacchetti, Francesco Sforza and Barone de’ Mangiadori .

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Don’t miss the visit to the Oratory of Loretino, whicb was built inside the Town Hall as the governor’s private chapel at the end of the 13th century. It became an important place of worship in the 14th century when the Most Holy Crucifix was placed there.

According to a legend, the simulacrum was brought to San Miniato by two mysterious travellers, who were probably two angels. They left it in the house of a poor widow. It was closed up in a case and it emanated an “arcane” light at night. It became a symbol of peace and love.

The veneration of the Holy Crucifix increased between 1629 and 1631 when the Bubonic Plague spread in Italy. A church was built in honour of the Holy Crucifix, which was placed in the Sanctuary of the Most Holy Crucifix.

The Oratory contains decorations by Francesco Lanfranchi called “Spillo”, a magnificent altar attributed to Noferi di Antonio di Noferi and a wooden statue of the “Madonna di Loreto”, which gives the chapel its present name. The walls are decorated with 14th-century frescoes illustrating “Episodes from Jesus Christ’s Life”.

During our walking tour we stop at Retrobottega for lunch. Here you can taste typical Tuscan food created by the famous butcher Sergio Falaschi and his staff by using high-quality local products and enjoy a wonderful view of the countryside.

We suggest you have “crostini” and a selection of “salumi” (cold cuts) such as “soprassata”, ham, “rigatino”, “finocchiona”, “spuma di gota”,  “mallegato”, pasta with sausage and leek sauce, “pappa al pomodoro”, Fiorentina steak with grated truffles and “cantuccini” with “Vinsanto”.  

After lunch we head off to the Tower of Frederick II, called the Fort, which is a 37-metre tall tower, built by Frederick II of Swabia in 1217. It was the central core of the Imperial defensive system. It is the landmark of the town.

The tower was destroyed during the Second World War and rebuilt in 1958. From its top you can admire the special ribbon-like layout of the town and stunning landscapes such as the area of the Lower Valdarno, Volterra’s hills, the Apennines and the sea.

 The tower was destroyed during the Second World War and rebuilt in 1958.From its top you can admire the special ribbon-like layout of the town and stunning landscapes such as the area of the Lower Valdarno, Volterra’s hills, the Apennines and the sea. Pier delle Vigne, Frederick II’s Chancellor, was imprisoned here for treason until his death, as Dante writes in “Inferno”(13th “Canto”) in his “Divine Comedy”.

Leaving the Fort behind us, we reach the 14th-century Convent and Church of Saint Francis. Saint Francis stayed in San Miniato for a short time and founded this convent. For many centuries it was one of the main Franciscan centres in Tuscany.

Inside the church there are twelve altars dedicated to Franciscan saints and famous families from San Miniato such as the Buonaparte family, 16th and 17th-century paintings and frescoes depicting Saint Francis and other Franciscan saints, Saint Francis’s statue by Luca and Piero Bonicelli and a 16th-century wooden crucifix.

We next head to Piazza Buonaparte, flanked by ancient palaces built by noble families from San Miniato between the 16th and the 18th centuries. In this square we can admire a marble monument dedicated to the Grand Duke of Tuscany, Leopoldo II also called Canapone, Palazzo Bonaparte and the Saints Sebastian and Rocco’s Church, which was the Bonaparte family ’s chapel and houses Saint Rocco’s relics and a Gothic water soup.

Our walking tour continues towards Piazza XX Settembre, where you can visit Santa Caterina’s Church dating back to the 13th century and the Euteleti Academy, which is housed in Palazzo Migliorati and contains Napoleon Bonaparte’s funeral mask and ancient documents.

Leaving this square we head for Piazza Dante Alighieri, also called “Il Piazzale”, where San Miniato’ s market is held on Tuesday mornings. Here you can see Giosue’ Carducci’s Statue. Giosue’ Carducci was a famous Italian writer, who lived in San Miniato from 1856 to 1857.

We next head off to Palazzo Formichini. The palace was built in the 16th century and contains works of art by famous artists such as Benedetto Bigordi called “Il Ghirlandaio”, Ludovico Cardi called “Il Cigoli”, Iacopo Chimenti called “L’ Empoli” and Giovanni Bilivert.

Our tour proceeds along via Giosue’ Carducci, where you can visit The Most Holy Annunziata’s Church, containing  Saint Augustine’s statue, Saint Dorothea ’s relics and some frescoes .

From here it is easy to reach the Conservatory of Santa Chiara. The Monastery of Santa Chiara was built in the 13th century but the present building dates back to the 14th century. The nuns of Saint Clare’s order stayed there until the end of the 18th century when it was transformed into a Conservatory for girls’ education. Later it became a school premises.

The building is arranged around a cloister with arcades and it has a chapel dedicated to Saint Mary Magdalene. The Conservatory houses “Noli me Tangere”, a wonderful painting by Ludovico Cardi, on which the appearance of Christ to Mary Magdalene is represented. There are also paintings by Jacopo Chimenti and Antonio Domenico Bamberini and a magnificent Medieval cross painted by Deodato Orlandi in 1301.

 

We leave your enjoy your afternoon at leisure. We suggest you have a walk along the famous Via Francigena , which runs through the town centre and touches small villages in the countryside. The landscape is enchanting with tobacco mills, old boroughs, amazing Medici villas and ancient churches.

     

If you are interested in ancient history, you can visit San Genesio’s Archaeological Site. The site was considered one of the main stops along the Via Francigena, which  was the  pilgrimage route  from Canterbury to Rome in the Middle Ages.

We suggest you have dinner at Pizzeria Vecchio Cinema, located in the town centre. Your hostel offers you the chance to have a meal here at a very special price just showing the hostel card.

You can choose two dishes from the menu, which consists of “bruschetta”,  a wide selection of  saumi” (cold cuts) and ham or chickpea soup, “pappa al pomodoro”, pasta with pesto sauce or spaghetti with tomato sauce, chicken stew with beans or pizza and a bottle of water or a soft drink.

If you want to taste high-quality meat, you can have dinner at La Bisteccheria,  a nice restaurant where you can have a large variety of starters such as “crostini” and a wide selection of  salami” (cold cuts), “tagliata” or Florentine steak with roast potatoes and “cantuccini” with “vinsanto”.

After dinner you can stop at Caffè Centrale, where you can listen to music and play board games with friends or at the lovely Chalet, which is a pleasant open-air meeting place. Here you can chat with friends and listen to music, sitting at the tables located in front of the kiosk.

 

If you love music you can go to Le Piscine , where you can dance at the poolside. The disco opens at about 12.00 p.m. and closes at about 3.00 a.m.

In summer San Miniato attracts lots of young people and tourists as a great variety of events are organized in the town centre in the evening .The main  events are La Notte Nera, La Luna è Azzurra, Prima del Teatro, A Castle of Sounds, Francigena Melody Road,Pinocchio in Strada and Meravigliosa Francigena .

   

Overnight stay at  Ostello San Miniato .

 

DAY 2: LUCCA & COLLODI

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DAY2 :LUCCA & COLLODI

                   After breakfast we head for Lucca, which is a destination for many tourists thanks to its charming churches and wonderful museums.

Our tour starts with Porta Sant’Anna, one of the six gates. The city is surrounded by about four kilometres of walls. Lucca had four rings of walls. The first, built by the Romans, had a square shape and encircle the city centre today. The other three rings were built in the 13th, 16th and 17th centuries. The walls are lined with towering trees  from which we can enjoy a beautiful view of the city.Network Turistico Culturale "Itinerari Scientifici in Toscana" "originaFileType: jpg OLYMPUS C-50Z"palazzo-pfanner

We will have a cycling tour on the lovely avenue running along the top of the walls.During our cycling tour  we can admire the lovely garden of Pfanner Palace, one of the most beautiful gardens in the city. This 17th-century palace was named after the Pfanner family. Felix Pfanner, who was an Austrian brewer whose family was from Bavaria, bought this palace and set up a brewery there in 1846. Its garden featuring grassy lawns, ornamental flowers, exotic plants, lemon trees, fruit trees, an octagonal fountain and 18th-century statues depicting Greek Gods and the Four Seasons, is an excellent example of a Baroque garden. Inside the palace you can admire a large reception hall with 18th-century frescoes and a collection of surgical instruments.     Lots of films, such as The Portrait of a Lady, were set in this palace.

Continuing our tour we reach  Piazza del Duomo, where we can admire the Baptistery, a small 14th-century building with a Gothic dome and a wonderful baptismal font. We next visit the Cathedral of San Martino, dating back to the 6th century. Its most ancient part is its façade in the Romanesque style. Inside the church we can see amazing works of art such as the Holy Effigy by Civitali and the Sarcophagus of Ilaria del Carretto by Jacopo della Quercia, one of the finest examples of Renaissance sculpture.

Ilaria del Carretto was the wife of Paolo Guinigi, the Lord of Lucca from 1400 to 1430, and she died in 1406 at the age of twenty-six. The typically classical “putti” holding festoons on either sides of the sarcophagus underline the calm and serene beauty of the woman lying here. On the one of the sides we can see the Coat of Arms of the Guinigi-del Carretto family.duomo-lucca

Leaving  Piazza del Duomo behind us, we head off to Piazza Napoleone, used for many events and public occasions. You can see the marble statue of Maria Luisa di Borbone  in the centre of this square. In front of the statue there is the outstanding Palazzo Ducale or Palazzo Pubblico, used for Council meetings and conferences. It dates back to the 14th century, but it was restored and completed for Maria Luisa di Borbone  in the 19th century.

On the right side of the square there is one of the two schools for Fine Arts in Lucca. The other two sides of the square are lined with shops, cafés and expensive restaurants. On the north-eastern corner of the square there is Piazza del Giglio with its Neoclassical theatre, “Teatro del Giglio”.

Our tour continues with the Church of San Michele in Foro, built between the 11th and 14th centuries. It is one of the best examples of Romanesque style and it is made of white limestone. San Michele ‘s statue dominates from the top. Inside the church there are many works of art, such as Andrea della Robbia ’s “Madonna with Child”.san-michele-in-forno

Near the church we can visit  Giacomo Puccini’s House, housing Giacomo Puccini’s manuscripts and personal items. Giacomo Puccini, the great Italian musician and composer, was born and spent the early years of his life in this house. Later he moved to Torre del Lago in Versilia, where we can admire Giacomo Puccini’s Villa, now known as the Puccini Museum.puccini-casa

From here it is easy to reach the Roman Amphitheatre, which is the area where gladiators’ shows and games were traditionally held in Roman Times. It was built in the second half of the 1st century A.D.The square is very picturesque and is lined with ancient buildings, typical shops, restaurants and cafés.lucca-piazza-anfiteatro-1

During our tour we stop in one of the best restaurants in Lucca, Giulio in Pelleria, located in the city centre. Here you can taste traditional  dishes such as spelt and bean soup, “farinata”, home-made pasta with meat sauce, stockfish with “polenta”, salted codfish with tomatoes and olives, stewed tripe and “cioncia” .giulio-in-pelleria-esterno

We suggest you have an ice cream in one of the best ice cream shops in Tuscany, Gelateria Veneta,                                      where you can taste a large variety of ice cream.
You can also stop at the famous bakery,Taddeucci, where you can buy the delicious Buccellato di Lucca, a cake made with white flour, sugar anise seeds, raisins and beer yeast. There is an old saying in Lucca: “Don’t say you have been to Lucca if you haven’t eaten Taddeucci’s Buccellato.

After lunch you can walk along Via Fillungo, the most lively, popular and sophisticated street in Lucca. It is characterized by Medieval buildings and important monuments. If you like shopping, this is the best place to go, because it is full of exclusive shops, boutiques and jewellers’ stores.via-fillungotorre-delle-ore

In Via Fillungo you can also visit La Torre delle Ore, which is a 13th -century tower and a perfect place to enjoy a beautiful view of the city.

The 12th-century Church of San Frediano is worth a visit. We can admire the beautiful mosaics on its façade. Inside the church you can see a  wonderful Romanesque baptismal font, an amazing altar by Jacopo della Quercia and Santa Zita’s relics.

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Don’t forget  to visit Guinigi Tower, which is an example of Romanesque-Gothic architecture. Its main feature is its garden covered with holm oaks, located on its top. From here you can admire Lucca architectural jewels.

Later in the afternoon our coach takes us to Collodi, which is an ancient village in the hills of Tuscany, which was made famous by Carlo Collodi (Carlo Lorenzini’s pen name), the author of the Adventures of Pinocchio(1883), the most famous and best loved children’s book in the world.

Here you can visit Villa Garzoni Garden, the Butterfly House, Pinocchio Park and Pinocchio Museum.

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After the visit to Pinocchio Park, we have dinner at the picturesque Osteria del Gambero Rosso, a lovely pizzeria in Collodi , where the waiters and waitresses are dressed as the protagonists of the famous children’s book.. Here you can taste “panzerotti “(fried dough) with ham and cheese, a large selection of pizza and “schiacciata”, “tordelli” with meat sauce, tortelli with with mushroom sauce, roast pork or chicken with roast potatoes, fruit salad and ice cream.

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After dinner we head to Lucca, where you can enjoy one of the wonderful concerts of Lucca Summer Festival in Piazza Napoleone in the heart of Lucca, from 9.30 p.m. onwards.

 

The famous Lucca Summer Festival has taken place in Lucca since 1998. It starts at the beginning of July and lasts till the end of the month .It attracts thousands of young people from all over Europe, because concerts and performances by famous national and international rock and pop stars such as Laura Pausini, Elton John, Norah Jones, Duran Duran, Green Day  and Eric Clapton are held here every summer.

Overnight stay at your hostel in San Miniato.

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DAY 3:FLORENCE

 

Day 3: Florence

After an early breakfast we head off to Florence. Our walking tour starts in Piazza del Duomo, where we can admire three marvellous buildings: the Baptistery, the Cathedral, dedicated to Santa Maria del Fiore, Brunelleschi’s Dome and Giotto’s Bell Tower.

The Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore is worth a visit. It was started by Arnolfo di Cambio in 1296 and completed by Brunelleschi and Giotto in the following centuries. Its famous white, green and pink Gothic façade has three bronze portals with mosaic decorations and statues.
Inside the cathedral you can admire frescoes by Vasari and works of art by Giotto and Luca della Robbia.

Outside the cathedral you can see Brunelleschi’s Dome, Giotto’s Bell Tower, which is a wonderful example of Florentine Gothic style, and the Baptistery, dedicated to St. John the Baptist, famous for Ghiberti’s Porta del Paradiso and its mosaics.

From Piazza del Duomo it is easy to reach Via dei Calzaioli, which is one of the most famous streets in Florence, lined with ancient buildings, exclusive shops, cafés, hotels and restaurants.

Our tour continues towards Piazza della Signoria , where you can admire the magnificent Palazzo Vecchio, also known as Palazzo della Signoria. This square, which has been the political centre of the city since the Middle Ages, is one of the most spectacular squares in Italy. Here you can also admire the lovely Loggia dei Lanzi, aOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA late Gothic structure, which contains Giambologna’s The Rape of the Sabine Women Cellini’s Perseus with the Head of Medusa, and beautiful sculptures such as a copy of Michelangelo’s David , the equestrian statue of Cosimo I of the Medicifontana-nettuno Family and the Fountain of Neptune.

 

 

 

Palazzo Vecchio is Florence Town Hall and was designed by the great architect, Arnolfo di Cambio, in the 13th century. As soon as we enter this beautiful palace we can admire a nice courtyard frescoed by Vasari.

Near the courtyard, there are two flights of stairs leading to the lovely Salone dei Cinquecento decorated by a team of painters chosen by Vasari. A door leads to the amazing Salone dei Duecento, the State Apartments and the Hall of the Lilies, so called because it is decorated with golden “fleurs de lis” on a blue field. In the adjacent clock-room there is the famous Map of the World.

Our walking tour continues towards Ponte Vecchio, the oldest bridge in Florence. Here you can get a splendid view of the River Arno. Nowadays the bridge is lined with expensive shops, goldsmiths, jewellers and silversmiths’ workshops.

From here it is easy to reach Boboli Gardens and Pitti Palace. The spectacular Boboli Gardens are the largest monumental green area in Florence. It dates back to the 16th century. Here you can walk along the alleys and admire works of art such as Neptune’s Pond with a bronze statue of Neptune, the charming Buontalenti Grotto, and the Oceanus Fountain located in the centre of a small lake called Piazzale dell’Isolotto.

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After the visit to Boboli Gardens we enter Pitti Palace, one of the most imposing Renaissance palaces in Florence. The palace dates back to the 15th century and was bought by the Medici Family in the 16th century. Cosimo I and his wife Eleonora di Toledo lived here and commissioned Vasari to build the famous Vasari Corridor, a corridor which connects Palazzo Vecchio, their old palace and the seat of Government, with Pitti Palace running through the Uffizi Gallery and above Ponte Vecchio. Inside the palace there are several art galleries such as the Palatine Gallery, the Silverware Museum, the Porcelain Museum and the Modern Art Gallery, containing works of art by Macchiaioli painters and 19th- and 20th-century painters.

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We recommend you have lunch at the lovely All’Antico Vinaio , a typical Tuscan restaurant located in the city centre. There you can taste a large selection of ham, “salumi” (cold cuts) and cheese, “focaccia” and Chianti wine.

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Italian meat platter - prosciutto ham, bresaola, pancetta, salami and parmesan

A trip to Florence has to include a visit to the Uffizi Gallery, which is the oldest art gallery in the world and one of the greatest in Europe. The Uffizi Gallery was designed by Vasari for Cosimo I of the Medici Family  in the 16th century. The gallery has 45 rooms and houses very beautiful works of art by Italian and foreign artists such as Giotto, Cimabue, Masaccio, Raffaello, Rubens, Rembrandt, Michelangelo and Leonardo Da Vinci.

 

 

 

Here we can also admire paintings from the 13th to the 18th centuries such as Botticelli’s Allegory of Spring and The Birth of Venus, Duccio di Buoninsegna’s  Maestà, and Giotto’s Madonna in Glory. We visit Rooms 10-14, Botticelli’s Rooms, which were re-opened in 2016. Here you can admire two famous 15th-century masterpieces by Botticelli: The Birth of Venuand       The Allegory of Spring, which are two of the most famous works of art in the world.

 

 

 

During our tour we can have an ice-cream at Gelateria Venchi, which is the best ice-cream shop in Florence.From here it is easy to reach the main shopping streets in Florence, such as Via Roma, Via dei liu-jo-uomo-5Calziaioli and Via dei Tornabuoni. These streets are lined with Renaissance buildings, cafés, expensive designers’ shops such as “Tiffany & Co.”, “Gucci”, “Ferragamo”, “Prada”, “Guess” and “Liu Jo” and chain shops such as “Coin”, “Zara”, “H&M” and “La Rinascente”.gucci-744x445

Late in the afternoon we head for  Piazzale Michelangelo, an enormous panoramic terrace situated on the hills in the southern part of the city where you can get a breath-taking view of Florence.

We suggest you have dinner at the famous Florence Central Market  ,where you can tasty  Tuscan delicacies.

After dinner you can wander through the cobbled streets of the city, sit in a café in Piazza del Duomo or Piazza Della Repubblicawhich is home to the historical “Caffé Gilli”, “Caffé Paskoski” and “Caffé delle Giubbe Rosse”, which were meeting places for famous artists and writers in the first decade of the 20th century.

 

 

You can also attend one of the main events organized in the city centre in summer. Florence offers a large variety of events in summer such as  Calcio Storico Fiorentino, St. John’s the Baptist Fireworks,  Renaissance Night, Florence Dance Festival and Fiesole Summer Festival.

 

These events attract thousands of tourists who love staying outside after sunset and enjoying the starlit Tuscan sky.

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Overnight stay at the hostel in San Miniato.

 

 

 

 

 

A WALKING TOUR IN VINCI

 VINCI

Vinci is located on the slopes of Montalbano, a beautiful range of hills between Florence and Pistoia, in the heart of Tuscany. The city is famous because Leonardo da Vinci, the great artist and scientist, was born there in 1452. It is also famous for its vineyards and olive groves, which produce excellent wine and extra-virgin olive oil.

Vinci was founded by the Etruscans many centuries ago. In the Middle Ages it belonged to the Counts Guidi Family, who built the castle, which still dominates the city. Vinci fell under the Florentine control in the 13th century and later became a free commune. Vinci was decreed a city in 1954, on the 500th anniversary of Leonardo’s birth.

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 Our tour starts at the Town Walls and continues towards Leonardo’s Museum.

On the way to the museum we can admire the Church of Santa Croce, which was built in the 13th century. It has a Romanesque façade and it contains the baptismal font, where Leonardo was baptized, an ancient wooden crucifix, Giovanni della Robbia’s “Madonna and Child” and beautiful paintings such as Fra Paolino da Pistoia’s “Annunciation”.

 

From here it is easy to reach Piazza dei Guidi, where we can see the Counts Guidi Castle and Palazzo Uzielli.

The castle looks like a fortress and contains beautiful frescoes, decorations, wonderful coats of arms and one of the two parts of Leonardo Museum.

It is also known as the Ship Castle, because of its long shape, which recalls the shape of a sailing boat. Behind the castle, in Piazza Guido Masi, there is a large wooden sculpture by Ceroli (1987), an interpretation of Leonardo’s Vitruvian Man.

Leonardo da Vinci Museum is housed in the Counts Guidi  Castle and in Palazzo Uzielli.

The museum, which has been enlarged recently. The collection has become richer and richer thanks to the contributions of scholars, donors and public and private bodies.

Leonardo Museum is very famous all over the world, because it contains one of the richest and most original collections of Leonardo’s machines and models. All the machines and models on show in the museum are presented together with detailed references to the artist’s sketches and notes and with interactive software.

The museum is worth a visit. Here we can see Leonardo’s projects aimed at automatizing the cloth manufacturing process, important machines and models invented by Leonardo such as the slewing crane, the helicopter, the flying machine, the tank, the loom, the screw-press for oil, the ventilator, the parachute and the paddle boat, the models of the self-propelling car, and mechanical clocks.The museum also houses Leonardo’s studies of water and river navigation.

 

 

From here it easy to reach the Castle Tower, from which we can enjoy a splendid view of the Tuscan landscape: Montalbano hills  and small villages.­ This landscape is very similar to the one depicted by Leonardo in his maps and drawings.

Our walking tour ends in Piazza della Libertà, where we can see the equestrian bronze monument, carried out by the sculptor Nina Akamu. The statue is inspired by the horse Leonardo designed for an equestrian monument commissioned by Ludovico il Moro in honour of his father, the first Duke of Milan, Francesco Sforza

In Vinci there is also the Leonardo Library, which is an important centre for the study of the great artist and scientist, and the    Leonardo Da Vinci’s Ideal Museum, dealing with the complexity of the artist related to his biography and territory.

From the old town centre an ancient path with panoramic views, known as the “Green Road”, leads to Leonardo’s birthplace in Anchiano, a small village near Vinci.

The building is a typical 15th-century Tuscan farmhouse, where Leonardo was born on 15th April 1452 and spent his childhood. The house was part of a small-holding owned by the Da Vinci from the end of the 15th century onwards. Inside the house there are some drawings depicting the Tuscan landscape and a map of the Arno Valley drawn by Leonardo.

FOCUS ON

 

WINE

The historical varieties of grapes used in the area are the red-berry ones, “Sangiovese”, “Canolaio” and “Malvasia Nera”, which are used to make the fine Chianti D.O.C.G. wine of the sub-areas of Montalbano and Colli Fiorentini. The white-berry grapes, “Trebbiano” and “Malvasia Bianca” are used to make both “Bianco dell’Empolese D.O.C.” and “I.G.T. Toscana Bianchi”.

Recent improvements to the local vineyards have also introduced international varieties like “Cabernet Sauvignon”, “Merlot”, “Sirah”, as well as the production of an “I.G.T.” wine labelled “Cerreto”. The harvest of grapes takes place from mid-September to mid-October.

 

 

OLIVE OIL

The fine “I.G.P.” and “Montalbano D.O.P.R.” extra virgin olive oil is made from olives of the groves that cover the hills of “Le Terre del Rinascimento” (Renaissance Lands). They consist mainly of the variety “Frantoio”, followed by “Moraiolo”, and by other varieties. It is the variety of olive oil and the different stages of ripening at harvest time that give this olive oil a significant mixture of tastes. Olive harvest takes place mainly hand from November to January.

 

 

FOCUS ON

LEONARDO DA VINCI

 

 Leonardo Da Vinci was an Italian Renaissance genius. He was a great painter, sculptor, architect, engineer, mathematician, anatomist, scientist, musician and writer. His innovations in the fields of painting influenced Italian art and his scientific studies in the fields of Anatomy, Optics, Maths and Hydraulics anticipated many of the developments of modern science. Leonardo is considered one of the greatest artists of all times.

 

Leonardo was born in Vinci on 15 April 1452. His parents were not married. His father, Messer Piero Frusino di Antonio da Vinci, was a lawyer. His mother, Caterina, was a servant. Leonardo’s full name was Leonardo di Ser Piero da Vinci. He spent his first five years in a farmhouse with his mother. Later, he lived in Vinci with his father, his father’s wife, Albiera, his grandparents and his uncle, Francesco.

 

In 1467, when Leonardo was fourteen, he went to Florence and became an apprentice to the artist Andrea Verrocchio. While he was in Verrocchio’s workshop, Leonardo learnt drawing, painting, sculpting and model making and met famous artists such as Ghirlandaio, Perugino and Botticelli. In 1477 he painted “The Annunciation” and in 1478 he painted “The Adoration of the Magi”, which are on show in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence.

 

In 1482 Leonardo moved to Milan, where he worked for the Duke of Milan, Ludovico il Moro. He painted “the Virgin of the Rocks”in 1483-1486, which is now in the “Louvre” in Paris and the “Last Supper” in 1495. In this period Leonardo began to explore the human flight, designed a flying machine and worked on the giant equestrian statue of Francesco Sforza.

 

In 1503 he returned to Florence and he worked for a powerful nobleman, Cesare Borgia, who was Pope Alexander VI’s son. He travelled around Italy, as a military architect and engineer. and painted his most famous portrait, the “Mona Lisa”.

In 1516, Leonardo went to France. King Francis I gave him a beautiful house called “Clos Lucè”, near his palace, “Chateau Amboise”. He died at Clos Lucè on 2 May 1519 and he was buried in the chapel of the “Chateau Amboise”.

Drawings:

Leonardo did not paint many paintings, but he drew hundreds of quick sketches, plans, maps and detailed drawings.

Some of Leonardo’s drawings are “studies” for his paintings. In these drawings Leonardo planned the things he was going to paint. These studies show buildings, hands, faces, plants and horses.

Leonardo did not go to university to study. He studied by observing things in the world around him. He wanted to understand how they were made and how they worked. He drew the things that he saw and discovered and he made notes and he wrote about them in his notebooks. Many of his notebooks are now in museums.

Notebooks:

Leonardo’s notebooks are difficult to read because he wrote backwards in “mirror writing”. Leonardo wrote (and sometimes drew) with his left hand. In those days pens were made from a quill (a large feather) that was cut with a pen-knife. It is hard for a left-handed person to write with a quill in the ordinary way, but it is quite easy to write backwards.

 

Studies

Leonardo studied:

  • The geology of the earth, with its mountains, valleys, rivers and rocks.
  • The anatomy of the human body with its skeleton, muscles, veins and internal organs.
  • The anatomy of horses, cows, dogs, and bears.
  • The expressions on human faces.
  • The flight of birds.
  • The weather and its phenomena.
  • The way that water flows.
  • Light, shadows, mirrors and lenses.
  • Perspective and the way to make things look near or far.
  • The geometry of solid objects. He drew many careful pictures which were used by the mathematician Luca Pacioli in a book called “De Divina Proportione”.

Designs and Inventions

Leonardo’s most important designs and inventions are:

  • War Machines.
  • Dams and canals for rivers.
  • Flying devices such as a helicopter, a parachute and a hang glider.
  • Churches and castles.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A WALKING TOUR IN VERSILIA

A WALKING TOUR IN VERSILIA

Versilia is a well-known area of natural and international appeal and a popular holiday destination located on the northern coast of Tuscany, between the Tyrrhenian Sea and the Apuane Alps .The area comprises famous seaside resorts, such as Torre del Lago, Viareggio,Marina di PietrasantaPietrasanta and Forte dei Marmi.

Our coach tour starts in Torre del Lago, a small town located between Viareggio and Lucca. It became famous in the early 1900s due to the presence of the composer, Giacomo Puccini (1858-1924), who was born in Lucca and lived in a lovely villa on the shores of Lake Massaciuccoli. Giacomo Puccini, who is buried in the Chapel of his villa, composed his most famous works, such as “Manon Lescaut “(1891), “La Bohème” (1896), “Tosca” (1900) “Madama Butterfly” (1904),” La Fanciulla del West” (1910),” La Rondine” (1917)  and “Il Trittico” (1918) in Torre del Lago.

 

The house, now known as Puccini Museum, is furnished in Art Nouveau style and contains musical and hunting mementos of the famous composer. Nowadays the house belongs to Simonetta Puccini, Giacomo Puccini’s only descendant.The statue in the small square overlooking the wonderful lake is dedicated to the composer.

Near the lake there is an open-air theatre where a festival, known as Puccini Festival, is held every summer. The festival hosts some of the most famous opera companies in the world, creating an unforgettable experience in the Tuscan countryside.

Leaving Torre del Lago , we head for Viareggio, a very popular  seaside resort in Versilia. The city, situated between the Tyrrhenian Sea and the Apuane Alps, is famous for its fishing port and long, sandy beaches.

Viareggio became famous in the 18th century when rich and noble families chose this seaside resort for their summer holidays. In the 19th century Paolina Bonaparte, Napoleon’s sister, and Maria Luisa di Borbone bought their summer residences here.The first bathing establishments, Bagno Nereo and Bagno Dori ,were opened in 1828;while Bagno Balena and Bagno Nettuno were opened at the end of the 19th century.In Viareggio there is a charming promenade, Viale Regina Margherita, lined with exclusive and elegant shops, cafés,restaurants, bathing establishments ,which date back to the first half of the 20th century, and Art Nouveau buildings, such as Grand Hotel Principe di Piemonte, Gran Caffe’ Margherita, Teatro Margherita , Palazzo delle Muse and Bagno Balena.

Palazzo delle Muse dates back to the 19th century and is located in Piazza Mazzini. It houses the Civic Archeological Museum and the GAMC, Gallery of Modern and Contemporary Art, which is an exhibition area of 1,500 square metres , inaugurated by Lorenzo Viani in 2008,containing modern and contemporary paintings and sculptures by famous artists such as Moses Levy and Umberto Bonetti.

Walking down the promenade you reach the port featuring many shipyards where boats and ships are built and then exported all over the world. It was inaugurated by King Vittorio Emanuele III in 1913.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

From here it is easy to reach  Matilde Tower, an example of architecture, built for the defence of the port in 1541. Its name comes from Matilde of Canossa  because it was believed the countess ,who lived  in Viareggio in the 12th century, had built it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Viareggio is famous for its Pineta di Ponente and Pineta di Levante dating back to the 18th century; here you can find recreational areas, bike paths, sports facilities, as well as footpaths and lanes. In summer you can hire bikes and go cycling through the lovely paths of the pinewood.

Viareggio is also famous for its Carnival, which takes place in February every year. Huge floats parade along the promenade. The Carnival celebrations with masked pageants, fireworks, parades and music are very famous in Italy and attract many tourists.

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The allegorical floats, which are  made in “papier-mâché”  and parade along Viareggio promenade ,are inspired by Italian and international politics and other current events .Viareggio Carnival dates back to 1873, when a group of young men sitting around the tables of “Caffè del Casinò” had the idea of organizing a parade. They asked the best artisans and sculptors to build astonishing carriages and soon it was a popular event, a  moment of joy in the city during the glorious days of the “Belle Époque” in Europe. Then World War I broke out and there was an interruption of the event until 1921 when Viareggio parade returned even more beautiful than before.In 2001 the new Cittadella del Carnevale was inaugurated; it is a great structure where floats are created. Since 2002 Viareggio Carnival has been named Italian and European Carnival.The symbol of Carnival is Burlamacco. Its name comes from the Burlamacca Canal that flows through Viareggio.

We next head off to Marina di Pietrasanta, which is a lovely area divided into four charming seaside resorts: Focette, Motrone, Tonfano and Fiumetto, each with its own picturesque centre. This area attracts lots of tourists in summer thanks to its long, sandy beaches, bathing establishments, elegant tree-lined avenues, lovely promenades ,shady pine woods, sports facilities, luxury hotels, wonderful villas, restaurants , cafés, pubs and
discos.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In Marina di Pietrasanta you can visit La Versiliana, a  famous public park , surrounded by a huge pinewood, where Gabriele D’Annunzio‘s villa is located. La Versiliana Festival is held here every summer. It offers tourists a large variety of plays, ballets and concerts in its open–air theatre. La Versiliana is also famous for the meetings at Il Caffe’della Versiliana , where famous artists and politicians express their opinions about literature , culture ,art, society and politics.

From here it is easy to reach Pietrasanta ,the most important historical city in Versilia, located between Viareggio and Forte dei Marmi and nestled between the Apuane Alps and the Tyrrhenian Sea.

 

Pietrasanta developed near the famous Via Francigena on a castrum plan and it was founded by Guiscardo  Pietrasanta, Podesta’ of Lucca, in 1255.

It is often called “the City of the Artists “ or “Small Athens” for its excellent cultural and artistic heritage, marble works of art, marble and bronze foundries and workshops.Many artists live or visit this city every year; even Michelangelo visited it and appreciated its marble and the local artisans’ works of art.

The city is famous for its International Park of Contemporay Sculpture, which offers an open-air exhibition of contemporary and modern works of art set in the public spaces of the historical centre .

People who wish to cycle to Pietrasanta can get there thanks to the lovely Viale Apua,  which  is flanked by the  pinewood and links Marina di Pietrasanta, and in particular Fiumetto, to this city .You can reach it also by car or by coach.

Our walking tour starts in Piazza Carducci,where Porta a PisaRocchetta Arrighina  is located.

Porta a Pisa is the most picturesque access to the historical centre. This gate was built in the 15th century and remodelled during the Renaissance. It preserves a 16th- century chalk sketch, “Annunciation” by Astolfo Petrazzi.

In this square you can see Propulsione (2003), a bronze sculpture by Franco Miozzo, and Arlecchino (2011), a bronze sculpture by Joseph Sheppard.

From here you can also see Myomu-Chiave del Sogno (2004),a white marble sculpture by Kan Yasuda, located in Piazza Stazione.

Near the gate there is Piazza Giordano Bruno, where you can admire Giordano Bruno ‘s  marble bust by Antonio Bozzano and  Il Cavalletto (2006), a bronze sculpture by Romano Cosci.

We next head off to Piazza del Duomo, where you can admire St. Martin’s Cathedral with its Bell Tower.

The Cathedral dominates the centre of this rectangular square. It was built in the 14th century on the site of the ancient Church of St. Martin. Its marble faҫade with three portals is adorned with a beautiful rose window, some bas-reliefs and coats of arms of the city’s rulers.

Inside there is a nave with two aisles divided by columns. You can admire 19th-century frescoes by Luigi Ademollo , the marble holy water  stoup by the sculptor Stagio Stagi, the 16th-century pulpit by Lorenzo Stagi and two wonderful paintings “La Madonna del Rosario” by Matteo Rosselli and “La Nativita’ ” by Piero Dandini. You can also visit “the Chapel of the Virgin”, where you can admire a late Gothic painting , “La Madonna del Sole” – “the Virgin with Child and Saints John the Baptist and John the Apostole” by an unknown 15th- century painter.

Next to the Cathedral  there is the Bell Tower ,a 15th-16th -century building by Donato Benti. It is about 36 metres tall and contains a helicoidal  staircase.

  The Baptistery ,which  is located near the Cathedral, dates back to the 17th century and contains two magnificent baptismal fonts by the sculptors Donato Benti , Nicolao di Matteo Civitali, Filippo Pelliccia and Orazio Bergamini .

In Piazza del Duomo you can also admire the Clock Tower , which was built in the 16th century and restored in 1860. It is in the German Gothic style.

From here it is easy to reach Palazzo Moroni and “Bruno Antonucci” Versilia Archeological  Museum. The Palace  dates back to the 17th century and it was Pietrasanta City Hall till the 1940s.

This building contains many Etruscan, Roman and Medieval objects and documents and a collection of Renaissance ceramics.

After the visit to this building we head off to the Church and the Convent of St . Augustine.  The Church , which was built  by the Augustinian monks in the 14th century ,has a marble faҫade with three round arches and a Gothic loggia. It is in  the Romanesque style and it houses beautiful 14th-century and 15th-century frescoes. Inside you can see  the tomb inscriptions of noble families from Pietrasanta on the floor and Padre Eugenio Barsanti ’s cenotaph . The church has a single nave and a fine trussed timber roof.

The Convent was completed in the 15th century . You can see lunettes with episodes from the life of  St. Augustine by Astolfo Petrazzi from Siena in its lovely loggia.

The complex now houses “Luigi Russo” Cultural Centre, ”Giosue’ Carducci” Civic Library and “ “Pierluigi Gherardi” Museo dei Bozzetti (The Museum of Sketches)  containing  models and sketches by Henri Georges Adam, André Bloc, Fernando Botero, Antonio Bozzano, , César, Pietro Consagra, Niki De Saint Phalle,  Jean Robert Ipousteguy, Igor Mitoraj, Costantino Nivola, Isamu Nogui, Alicia Penalba, Beverly Pepper, Gio’ Pomodoro, Edoardo Rubino,  Ivan Theimer,  Leone Tommasi, Kan Yasuda and many others.

In Piazza del Duomo you can also see other buildings such as Palazzo Pretorio housing The Civic Theatre and Palazzo Panichi Carli, where Padre Eugenio Barsanti Museum is located.

You can also  admire  the Liberty Column or Marzocco,  a 16th- century  column by Donato Benti with its Marzocco Lion, heraldic symbol of the Florentine dominion and the 19th-century Monument to Leopoldo II, Grand Duke of Tuscany, by Vincenzo Santini. Near the column you can see a fountain created in the 17th  century by the sculptor Giovanni Battista Stagi.

In Piazza del Duomo you can also see plaques, which witness Michelangelo’s visits to Pietrasanta and the contract signed by the artist for the marble he needed for the faҫade of the Church of San Lorenzo in Florence. You can also admire Royal Ancestors ,a sculpture by Dashi Namdakov, placed here in December 2013.

From this square, you can see the ancient Rocca di Sala and Palazzo Guinigi, which are located on top of a hill behind the city centre .The Rocca was a  Lombard fortress ,which was later connected to the city walls. Palazzo Gunigi was built by Paolo Guinigi in the 14th century. From here you can get a splendid view of Pietrasanta.

You can also pay a visit to the Church of St. Anthony and St. Blaise (The Church of the Divine Mercy) in Via  Mazzini. This is the oldest church in Pietrasanta. Inside the church you can admire the statue of  St. Anthony ,the statue of St. Blaise, attributed to Jacopo della Quercia, and the 1993 frescoes “La Porta del Paradiso “ and” La Porta dell’Inferno” by  Fernando Botero .

 

 

Walking down Via del Marzocco or Via Mazzini, two lovely streets lined with ancient buildings, art galleries, wineries, cafès, restaurants and exclusive shops, we reach Piazza dello Statuto, used as a football field in the 1800s, and Piazza Matteotti, where the Town Hall is located.

 

In Piazza dell Statuto there are three bronze sculptures: San Giovanni by Rosario Murabito ,Il Cavallino,by Ferruccio Vezzoni and Danzatore by Anna Cromy and a Carrara white marble sculpture :Il Cerchio del Vento by Junkyu Muto.

In Piazza Matteotti you can admire two white marble sculptures : Memoria di Pietrasanta by Pietro Cascella and San Martino by Franco Miozzo, and two bronze sculptures : Il Guerriero by Fernando Botero and L’Eredita’ by Stanley Bleifeld.

 

Before you leave the city you can also visit the Church of San Nicola di Sala ,located near the cathedral, and the 16th- century Church and Convent of  St. Francis. Inside you can admire paintings and frescoes by Luigi Ademollo.

The Convent houses The Visual Arts Centre Foundation of Pietrasanta. In front of the Church there is San Francesco, a bronze sculpture by Harry Marinsky.

While wandering through the cobbled streets of this Medieval city you can admire a lot of  marble sculptures such as Il Viandante  and Riflessione by Michele Benedetto, Senza Titolo by Tadensz Koper, L’Oiseau by Jean Michel Folon, Serenata by Rinaldo Bigi, Il Pugilatore by Francesco Messina  and bronze sculptures such as La Campagna va al Mercato by Marcello Tommasi , Il Centauro by Igor Mitoraj ,Monumento al Soldato and Alleato by Marcello Tommasi.

We next visit the MuSA, Museo Virtuale della Scultura e Architettura di Pietrasanta (Virtual Museum of Sculpture and Architecture in Pietrasanta) ,which offers visitors spectacular and interactive presentations of the artistic, cultural, craft and industrial panorama of the local area.

Leaving  Pietrasanta we head for Forte dei Marmi, which was built by Archduke Leopold I in 1788 and  is one of the most elegant seaside resorts in Versilia. It is famous for its wonderful pier , lovely bathing establishments, exclusive shops, luxury villas, expensive hotels, charming restaurants, discos and pubs. Today the area is a popular destination for businessmen, managers, politicians, show-men, movie and sports stars such as Zucchero, Bocelli, Panatta, Totti, Armani  and many others.