Skip to main content

ARMCHAIR TRAVELS – MONTE SANTA MARIA TIBERINA


The House of Bourbon in Italy started out French, but through an alliance with Spain, became Spanish in what is today Southern Italy, culminating in the Kingdoms of Naples and the Two Sicilies.  Wading through the Britannica entry  on the House of Bourbon alone makes it crystal clear why there have been so many wars in Europe, why democratic elections are more secure than monarchical successions, and—in short—why Europeans fight so hard to keep the EU in one piece. The history of the House of Bourbon, one of the most illustrious and important dynasties of Europe, is as tortuous as the roads leading to Monte Santa Maria Tiberina, a former Bourbon outpost and our destination in this armchair travel.
The patron saint of Monte Santa Maria Tiberina, as you may have guessed, is the Virgin Mary, and August 15, Assumption Day, is the town’s festival day.   

Thanks to Peter Paul Rubens for this lovely depiction of the ascension of the Virgin.
The town, as the “Monte” in its name suggests and these photos illustrate, is built on an outcropping of rock.  To be more specific for you budding geologists out there:  “The Monte Santa Maria Tiberina ridge consists of a stack of Late Oligocene-Middle Miocene siliciclastic turbidite successions belonging to the Tuscan and Umbria domains," according to Umbrian Preapennines.  (Whew!  Maybe my brother-in-law can translate that for me.)  In any event, the mountain has been incorporated into the town, or vice versa, depending on your point of view. 

Monte Santa Maria Tiberina sits on the border between the provinces of Arezzo (in Tuscany) and Perugia (in Umbria), overlooking the Tiber Valley.  The town now lies squarely (actually, its shape is more oval than square, as this town plan reveals) in Umbria.   
Commanding pride of place, not to mention defensive advantage, is the Bourbon Palace, built in the 1500’s and now home to the municipal museum.


The views from the palace summit are commanding too.  We’ve visited Monte Santa Maria Tiberina several times over the years, but never on a day as clear as this one.  You felt as if you could reach out and touch the distant mountain tops and run your fingers through the sun-drenched fields of grain.






Strolling through Monte Santa Maria Tiberina (estimated travel time, about 10 minutes), we noted Venetian Gothic doorways like this one,
a stunningly shaded private garden,
three brightly painted taverna chairs serving as planters (thanks to my husband for this wide-angle photo), 
the town hall with its red Coronavirus notice,
and a street where the houses’ utility service doors were whimsically decorated.




Summer in Italy extols the charms of Monte Santa Maria Tiberina and claims it’s close to the motorway, but—trust me—it’s not.  You will drive up, up, up and still further up before you reach the town walls and the main gate,
but it will be well worth your while to make the ascent.   Fortunately, we’ve done the driving for you, so sit back, dream of toasting your fur in the heat of the afternoon sun like this cat, and relax!
Keep it real!  And wear your damn mask!
Marilyn
 

Comments

  1. We never visited this charmer; but now I'm up for it.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Fantastic bottom seat traveling! I can almost feel the heat from autumnal Essex - almost :-) . Photos great and really gives a feel for the essence of Monte Santa Maria. Thank you! Now more than ever, I am looking forward to Naples in early Oct! x

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Great expression, bottom seat traveling! We'll circumnavigate Naples next week, on our way south to Calabria and then on to Palermo. Some day, we may actually stop in Naples.

      Delete
  3. Marilyn con le tue incantevoli descrizioni e fotografie ci fai vivere i luoghi come se fossimo lì presenti. Grazie e a rivederci presto.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sei troppo gentile! L'arrivo nostro previsto a Palermo e' settembre 18. Non vedo l'ora di revedervi tutti!!!

      Delete
  4. Dear Marilyn &Steve,your gift of writing combined with pictures,I feel as though I was walking next to you. Love this beautiful town as much as all the places we have traveled together. Thanks so much for taking me along. Safe travels. Love, Lynn &Hank

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

I FEEL THE EARTH MOVE UNDER MY FEET

  I feel the earth move under my feet I feel the sky tumbling down, tumbling down I just lose control Down to my very soul.                                     Carole King, 1971 This is a very personal post--about a very personal apocalypse, one quite different from the Biblical one imaged above. Carole King's words come to mind because they describe how I feel about this upside down, ass-backwards moment in time.   While there are good things happening in the world, their scale when compared to the bad things that are happening seems to me pitifully dwarfed.  When you look at this short list of events and trends, can you tell me what's right with this picture?  Do these items upset your even keel and threaten to drown you in pessimism?  Consider... Russia and Israel are killin...

THE BROLIGARCHS V. DEMOCRACY

Although not elected by the American people, the world’s wealthiest person, a South African businessman, is running the United States government with the blessing of its chief executive and without meaningful opposition from the legislature or definitive censure by the judiciary.   What is going on?   Has business trumped politics, and if so, doesn’t that raise an interesting question:        Is capitalism compatible with democracy? In pondering this, my research led me to an American billionaire; a German emeritus professor of political science at the Berlin Social Sciences Center; and a Dutch former member of the European Parliament, now a Fellow at the Stanford Cyber Policy Center, all of whom had quite a lot to say.     First, Peter Thiel, the billionaire. Peter Thiel’s Wiki bio says he co-founded PayPal with Elon Musk; he was the initial outside investor in Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook; and he co-founded Palantir, the big-d...

NEW GAME, NEW RULES

Let me set the stage.   I am a U.S. citizen and a permanent resident of Germany.   In other words, I am an immigrant.   That status didn’t happen overnight and it didn’t come easily.   When we moved to Italy, it took me five years to convert my visa to a Permesso di Soggiorno.   When we subsequently moved to Germany, I had to surrender my Italian residency permit, and it took me another five years to obtain my Daueraufenthaltstitel .   In each country, I jumped through the hoops, produced the necessary documents, fulfilled the language requirements, attended the obligatory immigration appointments, paid my fees, didn’t attempt to work until I could do so legally, and counted the days.   In short, I respected the process and the law.   It has always been crystal clear to me that I live here at the discretion of the German government.   If I screw up, they can “ask” me to leave.   Therefore, I don’t have much sympathy for people who ju...