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Tuscany: An Introduction to the History and Geography

Tuscany: An Introduction to the History and Geography

Tuscany During the last thirty-five years of exploring the world, I’ve come to appreciate the perspective of one of my geography professors. "There is no such thing as an uninteresting place," he observed, "there are just ‘uninquisitive’ geographers." As true as this is, though, there is no question that some places are more interesting than others. These are the places we go back to time and again, trying to understand them, trying to get to know them, and trying to become a part of them insofar as that is possible.

 

Tuscany is such a place. Indeed, if you begin to make a list of historic regions in the history of Western European Civilization where events converge, Tuscany looms large. That list would most certainly include Minoan Crete, Attica of Classical Athens, Rome and Latium, even the maritime empires of Phoenicia and Carthage. It might include the 12th century monasteries of Burgundy and the Medieval markets of Burgundy and Champagne and certainly the Hansa towns of Flanders and the Netherlands and Swabia of the Hohenzollerns. Venice would have a place on that list with its long reign over the Adriatic and the Eastern Mediterranean. But when you get to Tuscany, the list is longer than anywhere.

 

The Etruscan and Roman Contribution to the Human Geography of Tuscany

 

Tuscany was the gateway for classical civilization into Italy by way of the Etruscans or "Tusci," as the Romans called them, who made "Etruria" their homeland and eventually gave us "Toscana," the Italian, and "Tuscany," the English term for the region. The grapevines and olive groves of Tuscany that we so admire came from the eastern Mediterranean with the Etruscans. And no, we still don’t know where they came from, but we are learning more and more about how much they contributed to Roman culture and civilization. As John Noble Wilford writes in the April 15, 2003 New York Times, not only did the Etruscans introduce Greek culture and its pantheon of gods to the Romans, but "their influence shows up in later Roman works of architecture and engineering." So the Etruscans provided the foundation but the Romans built upon it.

 

Rome took over where the Etruscans left off and by 100 BC Rome controlled Etruria, had built a complete network of roads and had founded settlements on the sites of modern Florence, Lucca, Arezzo, Pisa, Pistoia, and more. The Roman imprint on these towns was so complete and long lasting that even today as you look at a map you can see the square form of the original Roman town in the city center. For an example, take a look at this map of Florence. Lucca is another good example of a modern city grown up around the square grid of a Roman town.

 

The rural settlement, including field patterns, road network and drainage ditches in the Arno River Valley west of Florence, around Pistoia and Prato and in the Val di Chiana, in southern Tuscany (which you’ll see from the train between Arezzo and Cortona), were part of this same settlement initiative. Under Rome, Tuscany and all of Central Italy flourished until the fall of the empire and the barbarian invasions in the 5th century AD.

 

Tuscany in the Middle Ages

 

As we know so well this classical heritage was only the beginning of Tuscany’s important role in western history. The region was eclipsed during the five or six hundred years from 450 AD until the rise of Pisa, Genoa, Amalfi, and Venice as major maritime trading powers. Commerce and security motivated these coastal cities to take control of the adjacent seas, push the Moors to North Africa, and begin trading with others throughout the Mediterranean basin. Among these powerhouses, only Pisa was in Tuscany, but the entire group of maritime powers gave rise to a period of commerce that lay the foundation for the rise of the city-state throughout Italy but especially in Tuscany.

 

Tuscany is very hilly, has some good soil in a few small parts, but has never been a rich agricultural region. Indeed, it grows a wide mix of crops based on the traditional Mediterranean crops of wheat, olives and grapes. Yet it has never been a great exporter of any of these. Even Chianti wine, now famous, has become a major export only in the last century (compared to the "clarets" of Bordeaux, the "sherrys" of southern Spain, and the "port wines" of Portugal which go back hundreds of years, Chianti is a relative newcomer on the international wine scene).

 

Tuscany’s wealth came, not from the land, but from commerce and from its unique position at the center of trade routes within the Mediterranean basin. The resurgence of the former Roman cities of Florence, Lucca, Pisa, and Arezzo, and the creation of the new city-states of Siena, Pistoia, Prato, and other smaller towns such as San Gimignano, Colle val d’Elsa, Volterra, Livorno, and Grosseto is due to this massive trade. It developed and flourished from about 1000 AD until the discovery of the new-world trade routes across the Atlantic and around Africa.

 

During this period, Florence, Lucca, Pisa and Siena, in particular, flourished. The Florentines became the bankers of southern Europe, the Sienese became rich growing and shipping wool, the "Lucchesi" specialized in silk and the Pisans continued to trade across the seas. The wealth that they generated translated into richly adorned cities with 12th and 13th century walls and cathedrals that eventually gave way to more expansive 14th and 15th century walls and the Renaissance.

 

The Renaissance in Tuscany

 

I hardly have time here to even begin to discuss the Renaissance in Tuscany, but let me say that by about mid-fifteenth century the area we now call Tuscany was consolidated under the Republican communes of Florence, Siena, Lucca, and Pisa. Though rivalry was intense, a relative peace reigned and allowed these cities to become embellished with the art and architecture which draw us like a magnet to Tuscany. But this period set the scene for another important phenomenon: the creation of the rural Tuscan landscape which we find so fascinating today.

 

 

Tuscany’s Rural Landscape

 

The raw material was there since Etruscan times – that is the olive and the grape. The Romans added infrastructure and cities, the 11th through the 14th century resurrected those cities and embellished them with substantial city walls and architecture and the relative peace in the 16th and 17th centuries gave rise to expansive rural settlement. This latter period, combined with the soft hills of Tuscany covered in vines, olives and wheat is one of the major attractions to Tuscany today.

 

The Medici villas are, perhaps, the best known of the wealthy villas dotting the Tuscan landscape. At least a dozen rural villas from this period are identified in one way or another with Florence’s first family, including the one in Cerreto Guidi that we visit on our Tuscan tours.

 

North of Lucca, the Lucchesi built their rural villas in the foothills of the Apennines. This settlement of the countryside in Italy was not limited to Tuscany. At this same time, in northern Italy, Andrea Palladio was constructing villas in the hinterland of Venice around Vicenza and Castelfranco Veneto.

 

The hilltop villa in Tuscany is often surrounded by its own feudal village and it is framed by cypress trees, almost certainly brought by the Etruscans from the eastern Mediterranean three thousand years ago. A purely decorative tree, the role of the cypress in the Tuscan landscape is to accentuate these noble villas and to mark the solemn entrances to cemeteries on the edge of towns. That lone cypress or row of cypresses standing on the ridgeline in southern Tuscany marks the last remnant of an approach to a now bygone villa or farmhouse on that hillside.

 

The landscape that we now admire in Tuscany is like the accumulation of family collectibles in Grandma’s attic. Tuscany has collected the heirlooms of western Civilization for three millennia. No other region can make that claim and no other region displays that memorabilia quite as well as Tuscany.

 

Traveling to Tuscany

 

There are degrees of "Mediterraneanness" in Italy. During many times of the year if you cross the Alps by train, car or bicycle you’ll feel as if you’ve crawled from under a cloud and come upon a truly "Mediterranean" scene, sunny Italy. Indeed, Italy’s Lake District hints of a Mediterranean "flavor" but travel away from the lakes and into the Po River Valley and you quickly leave the olives and the Mediterranean feel behind. It is not until you cross another mountain barrier, the Apennines, into Liguria or Tuscany, that you find the true Mediterranean in Italy.

 

Our bicycle tours from Venice to Florence, and Venice to Pisa, truly show you Tuscany as a traveler might have seen it four hundred years ago. We travel over the Apennine Mountains on the ancient Roman route from Faenza to Florence: Faventia to Florentia. As you crest the last range of hills north of Florence and begin to glide down toward Fiesole you begin to see olives, grapes, and wheat fields. Cypress trees line the ridges, patrician villas punctuate the hilltops, and, in the distance, the Renaissance clock tower of Fiesole is built on the ruins of the Etruscan and Roman settlement. Tuscany literally takes center stage and unfolds before you.

 

Reading List & Other Resources for the History and Geography of Tuscany

 

This is but a small start to what could become a massive reading project for anyone interested in pursuing it!

 

The Etruscans

  • Stanislawski, Dan. "Seeds for the flowers of Tuscany." The Geographical Review, 67(4), 1977. A major influence on my thinking about the geography of the Mediterranean region and a wonderful, brief introduction to Etruria, even for the modern traveler. You’ll probably need access to a major university library or interlibrary loan to find this. 
  • Guide to the Etruscan and Roman Worlds at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology; by University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Donald White, Ann Blair Brownlee, Irene Bald Romano, Jean Macintosh Turfa, Lee Horne (Editor)
  • Torelli, Mario (editor). The Etruscans. Rizzoli International Publications, New York, 2001. This is a massive catalog of an exhibition about the Etruscans held at the Palazzo Grassi in Venice from November 2000 through June of 2001. This is likely the most comprehensive exhibit of Etruscan artifacts ever displayed anywhere.
  • Lawrence, D.H. Etruscan Places. No reading about the Etruscans would be complete without sitting down with a map of Tuscany and D.H. Lawrence. Lawrence was fascinated with Italy in general, Florence in particular. He returned over and over and visited the Etruscans sites described in this short book in 1927. (Lawrence used to stay at the Hotel Balestri in Florence, the family run hotel we use for many of our tours. He has a rather unflattering description of the proprietress, the grandmother of the present owners, in his novel Aaron’s Rod, which was published in 1923.)

     

  • Hamilton, Lyn. The Etruscan Chimera (An Archaeology Mystery). Berkeley Publishing Group, 2002. Here’s your chance to learn about the Etruscans and be entertained by a skilled mystery writer in the process!

     

 

Roman Tuscany

 

I have yet to run across a book about "Roman Tuscany" since Tuscany is so hard to separate from the Romans throughout Italy, the Etruscans and the medieval and Renaissance periods. But for a thorough guidebook to history and art try this one:

 

     

  • MacAdam, Alta. The Blue Guide to Tuscany. The "Blue Guide" series of guidebooks has its lineage directly from the famous 19th century German guidebook publisher, Baedeker. Findlay Muirhead, the English-language editor for Baedeker launched this series after World War I made it politically incorrect to continue to published a German guidebook. Muirhead came up with the "blue" part of this series to distinguish it from the red-covered Baedeker and its English competitor, Murray’s Handbooks for Travelers (which also had a red cover). To this day the Blue Guide continues to be almost encyclopedic in its coverage. Carry it at your peril, though, it has 575 pages! (There is a separate Blue Guide to Florence).

     

 

Medieval Tuscany to the Present: Geography and History

 

There is very little written in English to help the traveler understand the human geography and history of Tuscany. But here are a few suggestions that combine geography and history.

 

     

  • Brucker, Gene Adam. Florence, The Golden Age, 1183 – 1737. Wonderfully illustrated, this book weaves history, art and geography, including the development and urban geography of Florence together into an informative and entertaining study. You probably won’t want to take it traveling with you but it makes for great armchair reading both before and after your trip.

     

  • Masters, Roger D. Fortune Is a River : Leonardo Da Vinci and Niccolo Machiavelli’s Magnificent Dream to Change the Course of Florentine History. The story of a presumed collaboration between these two historic giants to divert the Arno River away from Florence’s rival Pisa at the beginning of the 16th century.

     

  • Nabhan, Gary Paul, Songbirds, Truffles, and Wolves (An American Naturalist in Italy)

    (Pantheon Books, New York, 1993). An American naturalist describes geography and new world plant introductions into Italy. A wonderful guide to understanding the Italian landscape. See my review.

     

 

 

Tuscany in General

 

There is so much to list. Try some of these:

 

 

These books can be ordered from our web site. (Thanks to Tom Behr, ExperiencePlus! tour leader and Dr. Judith Brown, Provost at Wesleyan University for their suggestions for this reading list. The list is far from comprehensive and has a definite bias to help the traveler interpret what they see in Tuscany. It certainly is not an academic list and neither Dr. Behr, nor Dr. Brown would endorse it as such.)