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Volterra is situated in the province of Pisa and lies between the
valley of Era and Cecina. Built on a hilly pliocene ridge 545 metres
a.s.l. surrounded by two defensive walls, one Etruscan and the other
Medieval, it is one of the most important centres
of Tuscany, for its monuments which testify 3,000 years of
civilisation and for its traditional craftsmanship in alabaster
whose products are one of Italy's leading crafts.
Volterra is not yet touched by the stress of contemporary life and
visitors who come to Volterra have the immediate impression of stepping
into the past, of being in a particular place with its narrow Medieval
streets and the enigma of its Etruscan origins.
Volterra is prevalently Medieval and yet cherishes abundant evidence
of the Etruscan period: the Porta
all'Arco (the Etruscan gate) which date from the 4th century
B.C., the Acropolis, the defensive walls
which are still visible in parts of the town. The
Roman period is attested by the important remains of the
Teatro di Vallebona which date back
to the Augustan period, the Baths and
an enormous rectangular water cistern.
The Middle Ages are not only visible in its urban structure but
in its buildings too, its house-towers and churches: the Palazzo
dei Priori, a 13th century building, the Palazzo
Pretorio, with its crenellated Tower
of the Little Pig, the pair of towers
of Buonparenti and Bonaguidi family, the house-towers of
Toscano family, the Cathedral (12th
century), the Baptistry (13th century)
streaked with Volterran stone, the conventual Church of San Francesco
with its adjacent chapel of the Croce di Giorno, the Church of San
Michele) and of San Alessandro.
Apart from its monuments, its art and history, Volterra also offers
a magnificent view of the gentle undulating
hills of the surrounding landscape abruptly interrupted in the
West by the Baize (crags).
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