The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Travel

‘Everything that goes to make the good life is here’

As one of Europe’s most beautiful countries comes back to life after lockdown, Tim Jepson offers 20 reasons why so many of us can’t wait to return to Italy

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No other country has Italy’s riches; its peerless combinatio­n of art, culture, food and wine, of fashion, opera, people and landscapes; its vivid blend of the old and new, the beguiling and the beautiful. On Wednesday, this glorious country reopened its borders to European travellers. Its countless pleasures have been coming back to life: beaches and pools, hotels and museums, bars and restaurant­s. Star attraction­s – Pisa’s Tower, Rome’s Colosseum, Florence’s Duomo – are welcoming visitors again. Currently the FCO still advises against all but essential travel, but from July 1 all airlines intend to resume flights from the UK. So with Italy’s wonders almost within our grasp again, here are 20 reasons we can’t wait to return.

1 REDISCOVER TUSCANY

Of course it’s a cliché, but what a cliché. Everything that goes to make the good life is here: towns and cities filled with art and culture – Florence, Siena and Lucca and smaller gems such as Pienza, Sovana and Cortona; fine food; excellent wine; and a variety of exquisite landscapes, from the vineyards of Chianti and the pastoral hills of the Val d’Orcia to the islands of Elba and Capraia and the mountains of the Orecchiell­a and Alpi Apuane.

2 FALL IN LOVE WITH THE LAKES

Poets and painters have celebrated the Italian Lakes for centuries, and no wonder, for they represent some of Europe’s loveliest landscapes. Luxuriant gardens and idyllic villages scatter their mild-weathered shores, with the wooded slopes and snowcapped peaks of the Alps as backdrop. Maggiore and Garda are the most visited, Iseo and Orta the quietest – but if you have to settle for one, make it Como, which is the most beautiful.

3 HEAR OPERA IN ITS BIRTHPLACE

Opera’s roots are Italian, as are most of its greatest composers – Verdi, Rossini, Puccini, Monteverdi, Bellini, Donizetti. Italy also has two of the world’s best-known opera houses – La Scala and La Fenice – but beautiful theatres are also found in Bologna, Palermo, Treviso, Prato and Ferrara. Seasonal festivals proliferat­e, notably the Festival dell’Arena in Verona (arena.it), the Festival Verdi in Parma (teatroregi­oparma.it); the Festival Puccini (puccinifes­tival.it) near Lucca; the Macerata Opera Festival (sferisteri­o.it) in the Marche; and the Rossini Opera Festival (rossiniope­rafestival.it) in Pesaro.

4 DINE OUT

It’s impossible to pick one location for a gastronomi­c odyssey – you might go for Bologna, or Norcia in Umbria – but let’s plump for wealthy Parma, home to Parma ham and parmesan; a fine mix of simple trattorias and Michelinst­arred restaurant­s; and plenty of exceptiona­l food shops, not least Silvano Romani (silvanorom­aniparma. it) for hams and salamis.

5 VISIT THE DRAMATIC DOLOMITES

Plenty of countries have mountains, but only Italy has the Dolomites, Europe’s most dramatic upland region.

Hiking is superb – and easy, if you use the cable cars to do the hard work – with the Brenta massif (and Madonna di Campiglio as a base) a good choice for first-time visitors. Or take a driving tour – the roads are excellent – starting with the 68-mile Grande Strada delle Dolomiti, a designated scenic route, and the SS49 road along the Val Pusteria or SS242 in the Val Gardena.

6 SEE VENICE WITHOUT THE CROWDS

The world would be an infinitely poorer place without Rome or Florence, but a world without Venice? Of course it’s a city with problems, but you can easily escape its more troubling elements. Venice casts its spell year-round, so visit in winter; walk to the fringes, far from St Mark’s, to San Nicolò dei Mendicoli in the west, Madonna dell’Orto in the north; explore the empty, echoing alleys at night; and spend a week here, more if you can, to uncover a sense of the living city beyond its superficia­l image.

7 FIND FINE ART

Italy has more than its share of world-class art galleries – the Uffizi in Florence, the Accademia in Venice, the Vatican’s collection­s in Rome. But even modest Italian towns have masterpiec­es. Perugia’s Galleria Nazionale, for example, full of Umbrian masterpiec­es; or the Carrara in Bergamo; the Palazzo Ducale in Urbino; the Galleria Regionale in Palermo; the Pinacoteca in Siena; the Museo Civico in Vicenza. And in Italy, more than any other European country, exceptiona­l art is still found in the places for which it was commission­ed.

8 ESCAPE TO AN ISLAND

Italy’s mainland is such a patchwork of fine landscapes that it’s easy to overlook its islands. Not the obvious ones like Capri, but those such as the Isole Tremiti off Puglia, still little known to outsiders; and Ponza, a beautiful bolt hole for Romans in the know; or Capraia and Elba, close to the Tuscan mainland; and the Aeolian and Egadi islands – Lipari and Marettimo in particular – off Sicily.

9 BE SWEPT AWAY BY THE GREATEST COASTS

Italy’s beaches – save in Sardinia – may not be superlativ­e, but there are sublime stretches of coastline. Amalfi and the Cinque Terre are the most celebrated but there are quieter alternativ­es, especially in the south. In Puglia, make for the Gargano and Salento, two peninsulas of cliffs, crescent sands and turquoise seas; and in Campania, south of Naples, head for the Cilento, a wild, rocky enclave scattered with lovely villages such as Acciaroli, Agropoli and Santa Maria di Castellaba­te.

10 FIND PEACE IN GLORIOUS GARDENS

Gardens are everywhere in Italy, from the villas of the Veneto and the Italian Lakes in the north to the cypresssha­ded estates of Tuscany and the lemon-scented courtyards of Sicily in the south. Personal favourites include Ninfa (frcaetani.it), south of Rome; Hanbury (giardiniha­nbury.com) near Ventimigli­a; the Villa Carlotta (villacarlo­tta.it) on Lake Como; La Mortella (lamortella.org) on Ischia; and the weird and wonderful Tarot Gardens (ilgiardino­deitarocch­i.it) in northern Lazio.

11 EXPLORE TINY TOWNS

Cities might seem Italy’s thing – Rome, Florence and Venice, with Milan and Naples close behind – but it’s the surfeit of beautiful small towns that make up much of the country’s appeal. Tuscany and Umbria have them in abundance, but every region has its star turns: favourites include Sulmona in the Abruzzo; Enna, Erice and Noto in Sicily; Matera in Basilicata; Tropea in Calabria; Ostuni in Puglia; Ascoli Piceno in the Marche; Ravenna in Emilia-Romagna; Camogli in Liguria.

12 GO WILD IN THE GREAT OUTDOORS

Italy’s ski resorts are world-class –

The mood is lightening in Nicky Swallow’s home city, but life isn’t back to normal yet

Along with the rest of Italy, my home city of Florence has been easing itself out of one of Europe’s most restrictiv­e lockdown regimes. On May 18, bars and restaurant­s were permitted to reopen, followed by museums and other sights: the Duomo on May 22, the Accademia (with its brand new air-con system) on June 2 and the Uffizi on June 3.

Beach bums are already flocking to the coast, many people have returned to work, and some kind of social life is creeping back into our lives. It all sounds like reason to celebrate, but the reality is not quite so simple.

I ventured into the centre the other day and found it, if not the deserted, ghostly place of lockdown, still remarkably empty. What is missing, of course, are the tourists, and while we residents are revelling in having the city to ourselves, there is no denying the devastatin­g economic fallout. Shops are open, staff are ready with thermomete­rs and hand sanitiser, but customers are few. Most of the restaurant­s in the tourist hotspots around the Duomo and Piazza della Signoria have remained closed, their principal source of income vanished. And at a taxi rank, I saw at least 10 cars sitting idle; one driver told me she had earned €46 (£41) in the past three days.

Things are more upbeat in my Oltrarno neighbourh­ood, where there is a quasi-celebrator­y air despite the face masks. The bustling daily market in Piazza Santo Spirito has

resumed and the café terraces are doing decent business. Neighbours are smiling behind their masks, exchanging greetings rather than avoiding eye contact.

There is still a certain underlying anxiety, but the mood is shifting.

The piazza has reclaimed its top slot status for the summer movida, with droves of ecstatic young Florentine­s converging for their evening Campari spritz staying on for food and chat well into the night, masks and distancing ignored in many cases. But as reports come in of similar scenes from Turin to Palermo during this first weekend of “freedom”, there is a growing sense of unease; a “second wave” looms large in the public imaginatio­n.

Now that Italy’s regional and European borders are open to tourists, it remains to be seen whether the city centre will also come back to life. The first signs are positive; there has been a rush on bookings for museums and galleries. We will be holding our collective breaths. think Alta Badia, Courmayeur and Cervinia. You can canoe, sail and kayak on the Lakes, go walking or cycling in Tuscany and Umbria or take multi-day treks and circuits on long-distance trails in the Alps and beyond. And how about paraglidin­g in Umbria (sarnanotur­ismo.it), white-water rafting in Calabria (raftingfiu­melao.com) or tracking wolves in the Abruzzo (wildlifead­ventures.it)?

13 TIME TRAVEL TO THE ANCIENT WORLD

Other countries can lay claim to the odd Roman ruin and Greece has no shortage of monuments to its ancient past. But Italy combines Greek ruins – notably Sicily’s 2,000-year-old temples and theatres – with countless remains from 1,000 years of Roman history. Pompeii stands alone among the latter, followed by the greatest monuments of Rome itself, the Colosseum and Pantheon.

14 SEE EUROPE’S FINEST MEDIEVAL TOWN

Making this claim is asking for trouble in a country with so many exceptiona­l examples, but if you wanted one place you would happily spend months or years of your life, it is hard to think of anywhere more tempting than hilltop Siena. Not too big, not too small; urbane and easy-going; still ringed by walls; crammed with art and architectu­re; easier on the eye, with its soft brick, than Florence, its dark-stoned rival – and with all the temptation­s of Tuscany on its doorstep.

15 LOSE YOURSELF IN THE ABRUZZO

Italy is a country dominated by mountains, notably the Alps in the north and the long spine of the Apennines in the south and centre, where the immense wilderness of the Abruzzo, east of Rome, is the most starkly beautiful. Make for the great massifs of the Maiella and Gran Sasso, still the haunt of wolves and bears, and for timeless little towns and villages such as Castel del Monte, Scanno, Caramanico Terme and Santo Stefano Sessanio.

16 ON THE TRAIL OF THE BAROQUE

The extravagan­ce of the baroque is not to all tastes – if it is for you, then you will probably already relish the interiors of Rome and Naples’ many sumptuousl­y decorated churches. But there is another side to the Italian baroque, namely the Spanishinf­luenced architectu­re distinctiv­e to Sicily. Palermo, the island’s capital, has the richest heritage, but the little towns of Noto, Ragusa and Modica have an intimate, honey-stoned beauty you will find nowhere else in Italy.

17 THE PLACE WHERE NOBODY GOES

It’s a mystery, Mantua. I have visited this town between Milan and Venice for 20 years and in this time the number of overseas visitors has remained more or less the same: virtually zero. Who knows why, for it

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Alpe di Siusi in the Dolomites; Teatro Massimo, Palermo, inset
ROLLING FIELDS Alpe di Siusi in the Dolomites; Teatro Massimo, Palermo, inset
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A near-deserted Piazza del Duomo, in Florence, Italy last week
EERILY QUIET A near-deserted Piazza del Duomo, in Florence, Italy last week
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