“A garden in central Italy, brought to life by green hills and olive groves, by lush valleys and brimming streams.” Thus Ferdinand Gregorovius (Walks in Italy, 1906) described Umbria. Before him, Dante Alighieri, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Percy Bysshe Shelley. This region was not merely crossed: it was written. From the immortal verses of the Divine Comedy to the pages of the Italian Journey, from landscapes described by Pliny the Elder to the silent meditations of poets, Umbria has for centuries been a geography of the imagination.
In 1462, the future Pope Pius II, traveling through it, captured its natural grace with words that still evoke a vivid image of this land:
“Wherever you turn your eyes, all is most beautiful… The noble Tiber, like a serpent with a thousand curves, separates Tuscia from Umbria.”
— Enea Silvio Piccolomini, Commentaries (1462)
It is a learned and poetic gaze that summarizes the essence of Umbria: a deep harmony between human work and the slow rhythm of nature. An equilibrium that, transformed into an itinerary through the words of those who described it, can turn a simple journey into a cultural and poetic experience.







