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Roman Roads and Renaissance Castles: Touring Le Marche in Italy By Vera Marie Badertscher Whichever road you choose leads to fortified towns on hilltops and dignified stone farmhouses presiding over hillsides planted in grape vines or olive trees.
Le Marche stretches down the eastern edge of the Italian boot between the Apennine Mountains and the Adriatic Sea. We could find few guidebooks on this region, which underlined the fact that Le Marche remains relatively undiscovered. So, we said, let us go discover it. Highway A14, a limited-access toll road, zips down the Adriatic coast. Renting a car in Venice, my husband and I headed south for Le Marche. A Thousand Humming Bees
Agritourism hotels and inns convert rural properties into tourist havens set in the midst of still productive fields. We wandered around through lawns edged by brilliant flower and herb gardens and shared the aroma of acacia with a thousand humming bees. Our hostess helped us plot a circle of exploration and the next morning we headed north for San Leo Castle, which seems to hang by its fingernails from a steep crag. Inside San Leo’s appropriately gloomy rooms, we wandered through prison cells and ogled the artistic designs decorating instruments of torture. Along our route, we drove through a succession of medieval towns. A few electric wires and cars small enough to navigate the swept-clean narrow streets hint at modern life within the five-century-old walls.
Our two full days of exploration of the lands of the family Montefeltro’s 15th century reign included Sassocavaro where the turtle-shaped castle reflects the alchemy interests of the original owner. During World War II, art lovers hid masterpieces from museums in Venice and other cities in this bomb-proof fortress. Today full-size reproductions of the rescued art hang on the castle’s walls. Exploring Urbino In Urbino, a university town since 1564, signs still advertise student apartments along cobblestone, pedestrian-only streets. The castle sits on top of a hill, and the city rises even higher above the castle. Somehow, these streets look much less steep and the distances decrease on our flat city map. Exploring the byways, we walk off the effects of luncheon pasta.
Having returned to the fifteenth century in Urbino, we keep going back until we reach the first century A.D. We travel part of the Via Flamina, a Roman road leading from the coast inland through one of Italy’s most dramatic sites. Heading South
The dramatic cypress-lined driveway leads to a sophisticated small hotel that has grown around two magnificent restaurants in a 15th century convent. Antique furniture adorns the rooms whose wooden shutters open on views of the surrounding agricultural fields. Nearby Castelfidardo produces more than 80 percent of the accordions made in the world and sponsors an annual accordion festival which features folk, jazz, and classical music. World War II buffs will want to visit this town and the neighboring Recanati where General George Patton located his headquarters. Tiny Jewel Boxes
In the Le Marche region, historic restoration continues on most of the 71 theaters built in city plazas or in castles, mostly built in the ornate Baroque or neo-classical styles of the 18th and early 19th centuries. A visit to Le Marche could be considered a tasting menu for all of Italy -- Roman ruins, Medieval villages, Renaissance art works, natural wonders, the seaside, music and theater, not to mention the endless varieties of wine, olive oil, cheese, seafood and other culinary temptations that make eating another artistic experience.
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