Posts in Places to Visit
Perugia

approx 45 mins, 50km

Home to the National Museum of Umbria, one of the great painting museums of Italy, and is a wonderful town for walking, shopping and eating in. It also has a good archaeological museum with (among other things) fine Etruscan artifacts. Etruscan tombs at the Ipogeo dei Volumni are on the southern edge of the city, just off the motorway/raccordo (SS75) towards Tuscany. Notable international Jazz Festival during summer and winter, and (thanks to Perugina) a very large chocolate festival.

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Cortona

approx 50 mins, 40km

Cortona lies just to the west of the Niccone valley and is an elegant walled city with several fine museums and numerous Etruscan tombs in the surrounding countryside.

It is a famous centre for antiques, with some shops also open on Sundays in the summer. Besides hosting an antique furniture fair at the end of August, Cortona has regular monthly antique fairs on the third Sunday of every month (and the Saturday before it).

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Gubbio

approx 1 hour, 50 km

A great medieval town with good restaurants and a wonderful funicular (funivia) ride uphill to a church overlooking the city and its valley. Its museum boasts the Eugubine tablets, a trilingual bronze text in Umbrian, Etruscan and Latin.

The town is also home to the annual Festa dei Ceri in May, which sees people race up the hilltop town while carrying statues.

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Lago Trasimeno

approx 1 hour, 50km (to Tuoro)

Italy’s 4th largest lake sits on the border between Umbria and Tuscany, and makes for a lovely reminder of the Italian Lake district. The lake shore boasts medieval castle-topped towns, olive groves and cypress trees, but to best appreciate the lake, we recommend a lake crossing from Tuoro to Isola Maggiore.

Despite its name (Maggiore means larger), this island is still reasonably small, and yet incredibly picturesque. It has chapels visited by St Francis of Assisi and a couple of good lakefront fish restaurants. Park your car for the boat crossing in Tuoro, where you will also find a tour of the battle sites where Hannibal defeated the Romans.

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Florence

approx 2 hours, 125km

Take a day out and visit the incredible Tuscan capital, famous worldwide for its art and culture. We suggest you book online for visits to the Uffizi Galleries because queues for tickets are long, and would also recommend a walking tour of the city to delve into its history - and that of the Medici who called it their home.

Visit the official site for Florence museums and galleries for more.

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Orvieto

approx 2 hours, 125km

The Duomo has an extraordinary façade and important Signorelli frescoes. The Etruscan necropolis is likewise well worth visiting. The Pozzo di San Patrizio (on the eastern end of Corso Cavour) is a spectacular medieval well with double spiral stairways 62 metres down to the water designed to deconflict the donkey traffic. The stairways are lit by 72 windows. Nice shopping and quite good eating. Take the funicular up to the city from the vast (free) parking near the train station.

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