True, Umbria doesn’t have the big set pieces of Florence and Siena, but it has a coronet of far more intimate and easily visited hill-towns Perugia, Assisi, Orvieto, Gubbio, Todi, Spoleto……
When you’ve exhausted these towns there’s a second tier of charming and even more intimate smaller centres, such as Montefalco, Bevagna, Spello, Trevi, Bettona, Città di Castello, Città della Pieve, Montone, Monte Santa Maria Tiberina and more.
Monte Santa Maria Tiberina is my favorite. A hilltop medieval villages enclosed by powerful medieval walls.
If you love art, you can admire wonderful works without spending a cent.
Almost every Umbrian church is free to enter. And we are not talking bit-part, consolation-prize art either: some of central Italy’s finest paintings decorate the churches of Umbria.
In Assisi, St. Francesco’s Basilica is a place of pilgrimage for Christians and art historians.
Painters who worked in Assisi in the 1200s and 1300s include Cimabue, Pietro Lorenzetti, Simone Martini, and Giotto – the latter’s iconic Story of Saint Francis fresco cycle is in the Gothic Upper Church.
However, for just €10, you can buy the Perugia Città Museo pass; it gets you into the Galleria Nazionale dell’Umbria (one of Italy’s premier painting collections, including Piero della Francesca, Perugino and a lot more), as well as into four more art sites in Perugia.
There’s also the same glorious pastoral scenery as Tuscany: the olive groves, vineyards and cypress-topped hills as well as high mountain landscapes such as the Sibillini Mountains.
Finally, there are qualities to Umbria beyond towns, truffles or cypresses.
Umbria mistica, mystical Umbria some have called it, or the Land of Saints, after the hundreds of saints born here, including St. Valentino and the two fathers of Western monasticism, St. Francesco and St. Benedetto.
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Daniela was extremely helpful during our stay. She also cooked for a group of 8 one evening and we had a lovely and delicious meal. We’d certainly ask Daniela for her help again to make our holiday so special. Thank you!
Umbria captured my heart when we visited 5 years ago. We stayed in an apartment in Perugia for 6 days and did day trips to all of the hilltop towns throughout Umbria. Spoleto and Montefalco being two of our favorites. We loved Umbria so much that we came back to live and explore for about 5 months. We have found some hidden gems like Castello de Montegiove and Civita de Bagnorigeo….and some crowning jewels like Orvieto and Assisi. We have now traveled through a good portion of Italy, but Umbria is the place that truly calls to my heart and says “HOME”.