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Discover the Tuscany region

Latoscane.net accompanies your exploration of the famous Italian region, from its immense cultural, architectural and agricultural heritage to the less travelled trails in search of its hidden treasures and all nature …

Tuscany offers a whole range of charms: from art cities to medieval towns, from the countryside to the sea, from castles to abbeys, from thermal baths to wine cellars, and whose gastronomy is world-renowned.

It was the historical heart of the Renaissance, artistic and cultural movement started in the fourteenth century in Florence which then radiated throughout Europe. Its cities are rich in testimonies of this era, with the incomparable Florence and then Lucca, Arezzo, Pistoia, or the small “ideal town” of Pienza.
The Middle Ages also have beautiful remains in Tuscany, such as Volterra, San Gimignano, Pisa of course with its famous leaning tower, and especially Siena. This was a critical time for the region, when cities organized as independent municipalities flourished.

Outside the cities, by car, bike or on foot, the Tuscan countryside is a charming and vast garden, from the rolling hills covered with crops of Val d’Orcia to the vineyards of the Chianti valleys, with its hedges of olive trees or characteristic alleys of cypresses.
The coastline of the region is pleasant with seaside resorts and large sandy beaches, the preserved coast of the Maremma or the charming Elba Island its beautiful coves and paths.
Ancient remains are common in Tuscany. Before the Romans, the region was the territory of the Etruscans, a highly developed civilization that dominated this part of Italy, linked to the Greek and Italic world of the south, and to the Celts of the north. The Romans then founded beautiful settlements that developed into cities.

Tuscany also has an important gastronomic and wine culture, one of the most renowned in Italy and appreciated all over the world.
The other side of its abundant generosity is the sometimes excessive tourist traffic during sunny days.

Latoscane.net takes you through the whole region, from the marble quarries of Carrara in the north to the green Maremma in the south; from the Island of Elba to the mountains of the Apennines and the heights of the backcountry; from its generous valleys to the rolling hills to its valleys of vineyards; from its castles to its great art cities rich in museums; from natural spas to Roman and Etruscan sites.

Etruscan Coast

Photo of a tumulus in the necropolis of Populonia
The Etruscan Coast is a part of the Tuscan coastline, north of the Maremma, from Livorno to the promontory of Piombino, which is characterized by its large beaches. Its history was marked before the Romans by the Etruscan presence. […]

Castiglione della Pescaia in Tuscany

Panorama on Castiglione della Pescaia in Tuscany

Castiglione della Pescaia is one of the most beautiful villages in Tuscany and enjoys a privileged position on the coast between large sandy beaches preceded by beautiful pine forests. The medieval historic centre is located on a hill overlooking […]

Val di Chiana

Photo of Montecchio Vesponi

The Val di Chiana or Valdichiana is a vast region straddling Tuscany and Umbria, including the provinces of Arezzo and Siena.
The Valdichiana aretina is its part in the province of the first, with for example the municipalities Cortona, Castiglion […]

Monte Argentario

Photo de Porto Ercole avec la Marina sur l'Argentario

The Monte Argentario is a very beautiful site to the south of the Tuscan coast, in the province of Grosseto. It attracts visitors for its various features: the marine environment, the mild climate, the beautiful rugged coast with its […]

Versilia region

View of the Piazza Giosue Carducci in Pietrasanta

The Versilia is a coastal portion of northern Tuscany, almost 20 km long, between its long sandy beaches on the seaside coast, and the relief of the Apuan Alps suitable for hiking and mountain biking, as well as hills […]

Populonia in Tuscany

Photo of the Rocca of Populonia

Populonia was one of the 12 city-states of the Etruscan Dodecapolis, and the only major coastal city of this civilization, called Pupluna or Fufluna in antiquity.
On the acropolis a beautiful medieval fortress protects today the small fortified village, just […]

Val di Cornia

View of the belvedere of Castagneto Carducci

The Val di Cornia is a hilly area to the southwest of the Metalliferous Hills and south of the Cecina valley. Rather unknown to tourists, it is however a beautiful region with multiple charms, its varied coast to the wooded hills, or its small villages to the remarkable archaeological remains of Populonia or the mining park San Silvestro. To the north lie the long sandy beaches and their pine forests, further south the Gulf of Baratti and the rocky promontory of Piombino. The most charming villages in the hills are Suvereto and Campiglia Marittima, and beautiful vineyards are the source of good wines.