Pitigliano is a city in Tuscany. Pitigliano is included in the list of the most beautiful villages in Italy sponsored by the National Association of Italian Municipalities.
Understand
editThe town is perched on a steep tuff rock, 313 metres above sea-level. The area of Pitigliano and far to the south of Rome is characterised by tuff stone, a hardened type of volcanic magma.
The characteristic historical centre is known as the little Jerusalem due to the historical presence of a Jewish community that has always been well integrated into the social context that has its own synagogue here.
Get in
editBy plane
edit- Florence airport
- Rome airports
By car
editFrom Rome, Orte, or Viterbo: A1 northbound Exit Orte - Raccordo Orte / Viterbo Exit SS2 / Siena - SS2 Cassia Nord to exit the city of Viterbo towards Siena / Montefiascone for a few km until the junction for Marta / Capodimeonte / Valentano - continue up to Valentano then turn right onto SS 312 Strada Statale Castrense in the direction of Latera - in Latera SS 74 up to Pitigliano.
From Florence, or Siena: Autopalio to Siena exit Siena Sud / Porta Tufi - take the SS2 Cassia southbound - after about 70 km turn right towards Piancastagnaio / Sovana / Sorano - immediately after one km turn left towards Sorano / Sovana / Castell'Azzara on SP 20 - when you reach the town of Sordino, turn left towards Sorano - in Sorano follow the signs for Pitigliano.
From Genoa, Pisa, or Grosseto: A12 to Rosignano M.mo - take the SS1 Aurelia and follow it for about 140 km towards Grosseto / Rome until the junction for Albinia / Porto S. Stefano / Manciano / Pitigliano - from Albinia follow the SS74 for Pitigliano.
From Orvieto: SS71 towards Bolsena for about 10 km - turn right on SS74 towards Castel Giorgio / San Lorenzo Nuovo / Grotte di Castro - follow it up to Pitigliano.
By train
editThe main railway stations from which direct bus connections with Pitigliano depart are those of Grosseto (trains from Florence-Siena, Rome, Pisa), Orbetello (trains from Florence-Siena, Rome, Pisa) and Viterbo P.ta Fiorentina (Trains from Rome).
Please refer to the Trenitalia website for exact timetables.
By bus
editRAMA bus lines[dead link]: From Rome (departure from Roma Ostiense) and from Florence (departure from the Santa Maria Novella terminal) to Albinia, continue with the connection for Pitigliano - Sorano.
Autolinee SIRA[dead link] has direct connections with Viterbo .
Get around
editSee
edit- 1 Pitigliano Cathedral, Piazza San Gregorio. 18th-century Catholic church dedicated to Saints Peter and Paul.
- Medici aqueduct, built starting from the middle of the 16th century, was completed only in the following century when Pitigliano had already passed under the domination of the Medici.
- Fontana delle Sette cannelle, a characteristic fountain built around the middle of the 16th century, closes the southern side of Piazza della Repubblica.
- 2 Palazzo Orsini, Piazza Fortezza Orsini, 25, ☏ +39 338 913 4979. An imposing fortified palace, built as a fortress by the Aldobrandeschi (11th-12th century) and then the seat of the Orsini county. The complex houses the homonymous diocesan museum, rich in works of art that cover a period of time from the Middle Ages to the modern age, and the archaeological civic museum, where various finds from the nearby archaeological areas are kept.
Do
edit- Vie Cave (Cavoni, or excavated roads). An Etruscan road network that partly link an Etruscan necropolis and several settlements in the area between Sovana, Sorano and Pitigliano. They consist mainly of trenches of variable width and length, excavated as nearly vertical cliffs in different types of bedrock, sometimes over 20 m high. The purpose of the cuts is not known: the main theories are that they were defense system against invaders, roads, quarries, or water conveyance schemes. Around Sovana, the Vie Cave wind around and towards the archaeological area of that town, then reconnecting with those from Sorano and Pitigliano. The main Vie Cave are Il Cavone, the Via Cava di San Sebastiano and the Via Cava of Poggio Prisca.
Buy
editEat
editTry the Sfratto (Eviction in English) is a traditional Jewish dessert, typical of Pitigliano area, made with walnuts and honey. Its name originates from the history of the Jewish community of Pitigliano which recalls the local custom of knocking on the door of the Jews with a stick, a custom that dates back to the seventeenth century, when the Grand Duke of Tuscany Cosimo II de 'Medici had an edict with which he ordered the Jews of the Pitigliano, Sovana, and Sorano areas to leave their homes to move to the Pitigliano ghetto.
A century later, the Jews of Pitigliano created this dessert to commemorate the event of the messengers who, knocking on the doors of the Jews, had ordered them to leave them. In fact, the eviction has an elongated shape, similar to a stick, and contains a filling consisting of honey, orange peel, walnuts, anise and nutmeg, which give it a sweet flavor and an intense aroma. Since these ingredients were also used in previous centuries by indigenous peoples, it is possible that the eviction draws on an ancient Etruscan recipe.
Drink
editTry the local white wine, Bianco di Pitigliano.
Sleep
editGo next
edit- Not far from Pitigliano is Lake Bolsena, a huge water-filled crater and the largest Italian lake.
- On the way to Siena there is the Mount Amiata, an isolated volcano 1738 m high, and a favourite skiing area in winter.
- The Maremma coast 50 km from Pitigliano has beautiful beaches that are hardly developed.