Volterra: Tuscany’s Top Hill Town

Volterra offers the best sightseeing of all of Italy's small hill towns.

By Rick Steves
Volterra
Beautifully preserved, Volterra is small enough to be mostly traffic-free, yet big enough to have good sightseeing and plenty of restaurants. (photo: Cameron Hewitt)
Porta all'Arco, Volterra, Italy
On Volterra's Etruscan arch, three seriously eroded heads show what happens when you leave something outside for more than 2,000 years. (photo: Rick Steves)

Just a two-hour drive from jammed-with-tourists Florence, you'll find what is perhaps Italy's most underrated hill town: Volterra. With both rustic vitality and surprising depth, its out-of-the-way location keeps it from being trampled by visitors.

Unlike other famous Tuscan towns, Volterra feels real, vibrant, and almost oblivious to the allure of the tourist dollar. Millennia past its prime, Volterra seems to have settled into a well-worn groove; locals are resistant to change. At a town meeting about whether to run high-speed Internet cable to the town, a resident grumbled, "The Etruscans didn't need it — why do we?"

Embracing the past (along with all that Tuscan sunshine), Volterra offers the best sightseeing of all of Italy's small hill towns. Follow me with your traveler's imagination on a walk through this stony wonder, and you'll marvel — like me — at why there are almost no tourists here.

Its Etruscan Museum is filled top to bottom with rare artifacts of the mysterious people whose mix of Greek-style art with Roman-style customs created a foundation for the rise of the Roman Empire. And Porta all'Arco, the Etruscan arch built of massive stones in the fourth century BC, serves as a stately reminder of Volterra's time as a key trading center.

Through the arch lies Via Porta all'Arco, a steep, atmospheric lane lined with shops featuring the work of artisans and producers. Volterra has a tradition of craftsmanship, and the storefronts here show off a rich variety of handiwork, including alabaster, jewelry, etchings, and bronze work.

At the top of Via Porta all'Arco lies Volterra's main square, Piazza dei Priori. It's dominated by the Palazzo dei Priori (City Hall), said to be the oldest of any Tuscan city-state, built in about 1200. A horizontal "cane" cut into its wall served as the local yardstick for the town market, which was held on the square for a thousand years. Facing City Hall is the Duomo, a church whose simple 13th-century facade conceals a more intricate interior (rebuilt in the late 16th and 19th centuries).

Nearby, the town's main drag, Via Matteotti, illustrates centuries of retrofitting. At #12 is a line of doorbells that's typical on walls of palaces like this one; it was once the home of a single rich family and is now occupied by many middle-class families. After the social revolution in the 18th century and the rise of the middle class, former palaces were condominium-ized. Even so, the original family still lives here.

A block off the main drag behind stone walls, Palazzo Viti's interior shows how the wealthy lived — in this case, rich from 19th-century alabaster trade. With 12 rooms on one floor open to the public, Palazzo Viti feels remarkably lived in — because it is. Drop by and you're likely to find Signora Viti herself checking on things; behind the ropes you'll see intimate family photos.

Past Palazzo Viti are the Pinacoteca and Alabaster Museum, filling a 15th-century palace with fine Florentine-esque paintings and alabaster sculptures. Next to the museums, a tunnel-like passage leads you to a place where you can access the city wall. Walk along the 13th-century wall for a fine aerial view of the Roman theater. Around the third century AD, the town began to use the theater stones to build fancy baths instead. You can see the scant remains of the baths behind the theater, including the little round sauna in the far corner with brick supports that raised the heated floor.

More ruins — the remains of an acropolis — can be seen from Volterra's Archaeological Park. The acropolis stood here from 1500 BC until AD 1472, when Florence conquered the pesky city. The Florentines burned Volterra's political and historic center, turning it into a grassy commons and building the adjacent Medici Fortress. A symbol of Florentine dominance, it now keeps people in rather than out — it's a prison for maximum-security inmates. The park sprawling next to the fortress (toward the town center) is a rare, grassy meadow at the top of a rustic hill town — a favorite place for locals to relax and picnic on a sunny day.

At night, Volterra is pretty quiet. As they have for generations, Volterrans young and old stroll during the cool of early evening. Join in, or head to an enoteca for a glass of Tuscan wine. For a little excitement in summer, you can venture just outside the wall to a Tuscan family-friendly, beer-garden kind of hangout that includes a DJ on weekends.

Volterra might be short on famous paintings and fast-paced nightlife, but Italy's hill towns are best enjoyed by noticing the little things and adapting to the pace of the countryside. So, slow…down...and savor the delights of the region — there are plenty in my favorite Tuscan hill town.

This article is used with the permission of Rick Steves' Europe (www.ricksteves.com). Rick Steves writes European guidebooks, hosts travel shows on public TV and radio, and organizes European tours.