The region of Lazio is located between Tuscany
and Umbria to the North, Abruzzo to the East and Campania (the
region of Naples) to the south, along the Tyrrhenian coast of
Central Italy.
The northern part was the cradle of the Etruscans and, after the
Roman domination, land of origin of some Popes that let significant
signs of their power and magnificence.
The South, in large part swampy till the beginning of the 20th
Century, was inhabited only on the hills close to Rome, the so
called Castelli Romani (Roman Castles), all remaining lands being
very poor and insalubrious, except the immediate coast. In general
the whole Lazio was in the past time a poor land scarcely productive
except the extreme Northern part, but Rome, the Aeternal city
let the whole Region being the centre of the Roman Empire.
Today the Vatican and Rome make of Lazio a favourite first destination
of the tourists that, after visiting Rome, move to Tuscany and
other destinations in Italy.
The largest part of the population of the whole region live in
Rome, or works there living in the mild country, in a ray of 40
km from the centre.
The whole Region is rich of surprises and well kept secrets, a
land "off the beaten tracks".
A great surprices for the wayfarer will be the green territory
North of Rome, mostly plain and hilly, with 5 beautiful and umpolluted
lakes of volcanic origins. In the district of Viterbo, splendid
exemples of Medieval towns and villages such as Sutri, Caprarola,
Ronciglione and, close to Rome, Trevignano and Anguillara on the
coat of the Bracciano lake; Renaissance Palaces with beautiful
Italian gardens such as the Farnese palace of Caprarola and villa
Lante of Bagnaia; The mountainous district of Rieti, land of imposing
Abbeys and finally the splendid sandy and bare rocky beaches running
in the South from Terracina to the border of Campania (the Region
of Naples).