BY: Lorenzo Villa & Tommaso Serra & Bartolomeo Sala
There’s a place that’s rarely shown on travel guides, tucked away as it is between the rugged Ligurian Levante and the Tosco-Emilian Apennines, more a crossing point on the way to somewhere else than a destination in itself.
Lunigiana has always been a liminal place, a land straddling multiple identities and histories. Its strategic importance as a gateway to Europe was understood as early as 177 BC when the Romans founded the city of Luni, then a military outpost on the river Magra. During the Middle Ages and through the Renaissance, it was the preferred route for millions of pilgrims traveling along the Via Francigena to Rome.
SOURCE: https://italysegreta.com
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