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A Gazetteer of Umbria


[image ALT: A region of Italy: 8,456 square kilometers. 2001 population: 835,000. Capital: Perugia.]
If this is a link, it leads to a dry-bones summary of the region, with map references, bibliographies etc.

[image ALT: The deeply shaded small courtyard of a farm, with two stone benches and a pair of chickens.]
A farmyard near Todi.

For a clickmap of all 92 comuni (i.e., 92 summary pages on each of the main towns in the region, with at least one large photo, plus systematic collections of further links) see the map page.


[image ALT: Assisi seen from above from 1 km away on the road up Mt. Subasio]

Assisi and its surroundings: for now mostly Roman stuff, but also St. Francis's hermitage in the woods 4 km away at Eremo delle Carceri
[ 6/10/99: 10 pages, 24 photos ]


[image ALT: The great rose of the cathedral of Orvieto]

Orvieto: one of the great Gothic cathedrals of Italy; but also a stunning location, a major Etruscan necropolis that is also a beautiful place (the two don't necessarily run in harness), many smaller medieval churches, and several rather unusual old structures make the town a must-see for any visitor to Umbria.


[image ALT: small town on a hill, set in olive groves: sunrise]

Spello: the old Roman town of Hispellum, with 26 medieval churches in addition to its 6 Roman gates and a particularly beautiful stretch of Roman wall. This will eventually grow to a very large website in its own right: for now just the Roman amphitheatre, some of the gates, 4 churches, a page on heraldry, a local resources page and a bibliography.
[ 5/4/98: 28 pages, 71 photos ]


[image ALT: A park with some modern sculpture; behind it, a church]

Terni: the capital of the southern province of Umbria strikes one as a new town, mostly because it is one of the more industrial places in the region, having long been the Italian railroads repair center. As a result also, it was badly bombed in the last war. Yet it has a Roman amphitheatre and its share of medieval churches, and is a pleasant, lively place.


[image ALT: A small building half overgrown by vegetation. It is the church of San Simeone near Stroncone.]

The church of S. Simeone near Stroncone: a beautiful building damaged by earthquake, vandalism and art theft.
[ 2 pages, 9 photos ]


[image ALT: Dusk over the ridge of Todi; hills and backlit clouds]

Todi and its surroundings: I walked hundreds of miles and visited and photographed almost every town and village within a 30‑mile radius of Todi: most are interesting; some are stunningly beautiful.


[image ALT: A small city on a tall steep hill, covering the top and dribbling down the slope. It is Trevi, in Umbria.]

Trevi: another old town with Roman walls and an assortment of medieval churches. I've started with some of the churches: S. Donato S. Emiliano S. Francesco S. Martino
[ 6/23/99: 12 pages, 17 photos ]


[image ALT: An old stone road pavement]

The Via Flaminia was a major factor in the development of some of the cities of Umbria and is the quintessential Roman road of the region, traversing it from south to north as it connects Rome to the Adriatic at Rimini.
[ 6/10/99: some potholes still, but approx. 25 pages, 50 photos
— plus Rome and Rimini ]


[image ALT: City neighborhood seen from an overlook; in the midground, a large Romanesque church; in the distance, another.]

Perugia and the Ipogeo dei Volumni: The city is celebrated for its museum of Umbrian art and several beautiful late medieval palazzi; but there is no shortage of Etruscan and Roman remains, and some of its churches are splendid. My favorite is the 5c church of Sant' Angelo. For now, the website covers just the Etruscan hypogeum of the Volumni.
[ 1/23/98: 2 pages, 5 photos ]


[image ALT: a church with a tall steeple on a slight rise amid wheat fields]

San Brizio: this massive early medieval church, built in part of Roman stone with inscriptions and pieces of ancient altars everywhere, is a gem of Romanesque art. It also has an attractive and extremely rare cosmatesque pavement made of brick and some particularly fine Renaissance stonework: but it needs a spot of fixing rather soon — not only surface work on its beautiful frescoes fissured in the recent earthquakes, but major structural repairs.
[ 2/22/98: 6 pages, 17 photos ]

My text is minimal for the moment, and the site is generally under construction, but the state of the church needs to be given wider publicity.


[image ALT: a Roman altar being used as a faucet]

The little town of S. Giovanni Profiamma near Foligno runs quietly along a single street, parallel to the modern highway that bypasses it: the driver in a hurry heading north to the Adriatic will miss it entirely. That little street was once the Via Flaminia, the superhighway from Rome to the same sea; and the town was the important center of Forum Flaminii, where the Flaminia Vetus and the Flaminia Nova met again after branching out over Umbria. Even now though, you really shouldn't miss the town: there's a wonderful ancient church with chunks of Roman stone, a crypt, and an 8c ciborium (baldacchino if you prefer) covered with sculptures. . .
[ 1/24/98: 2 pages, 14 photos ]

Site updated: 29 Dec 04