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The town of Assisi evokes emotion and charm in all seasons. Its light, atmospheres and silence envelope the traveller in the intact medieval landscape that saw the birth of Franciscanism.  Even the stones of its buildings, full of history, emanate indefinable suggestions and make us 
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Florence (Firenze in Italian), founded in 59 BC as the Roman colony of Florentia on the site of an Etruscan settlement is widely, and rightfully, regarded as the cradle of of the Renaissance. And indeed, during the early days of the Medici rule (between the 
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The monumental complex of Piazza del Duomo, the Cathedral’s square of Pisa, includes four buildings of outstanding artistic, cultural, religious and historical value: the Cathedral, the Bell Tower, the Baptistery, and the Monumental Cemetery, shining with the white beauty of marble over a vast lawn 
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Villa d’Este at Tivoli, with the palace and its gardens, is among the most important and remarkable testimonies of Renaissance culture. The architectural and decorative elements of these extraordinary gardens, including fountains, basins, grottos, boulevards and pavilions, are a unique and extraordinary example of XVI century 
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Villa Adriana in Tivoli is a unique and exceptional monumental complex dating back to the second century AD, built by Emperor Hadrian. This archeological site is a testimony of the values ​​of the Roman civilisation and its shape, structure and components are a perfect example 
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The Historic Centre of Urbino is a remarkable and nearly intact testimony of the Italian Renaissance civilisation; its monumental and artistic excellence was built between the fifteenth and the sixteenth century, the golden age of Urbino, which turned from a medieval town safely encroached by 
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Not far from Piazza Armerina, Villa Romana del Casale is an outstanding example of a late Imperial villa, its uniqueness lying in the vast, magnificent mosaics (IV cent. AD) of unrivalled artistic quality, which decorate lots of its rooms. With its wealth of mosaics, the 
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The landscape of the Val d’Orcia (the valley of the river Orcia) took form starting from the Middle Ages, when little country churches, villages and farms started to be built around that territory. These old settlements still exist today to a rather large extent and 
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The Lombards were a Germanic people of Scandinavian origin settled on Christian and land; after their conversion to Christianity, they absorbed material and cultural values inherited from the Romans. They also came in contact with Byzantine, Hellenic and Middle-eastern culture and stand as a unique 
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Roma Caput Mundi. This simple sentence summarises the greatness of the Eternal City. Rome has been the centre of one of the greatest empires of the ancient world, the heart of Christian spirituality and a crossroads for artists and intellectuals from the Classical age to 
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