Agriturismo Casentino

Agriturismo Casentino

In the middle of a 160 acre farm lies the restored Ventrina House, once a convent of Camaldolesi nuns.
Traces of the building were already evident in 1006; some documents indicate Ventrina House as a meeting point and location for drafting documents. More than a thousand years of history infuse the charm of this farmhouse, where even today one can appreciate the simplicity of life, the respect for the natural surroundings and the authentic traditions of the region. Situated on a sunny hillside near the Monastery of Camaldoli, close to the Casentino National Forest, Agriturismo Casentino is surrounded by the most beautiful flora and fauna, including deer, wild swine, and pheasants. Whether for a single night, a few days, or an entire holiday, Agriturismo Casentino provides rooms or complete apartments throughout the seasons in an atmosphere of beauty and tranquility.

Agriturismo Casentino is located in northern Tuscany between Arezzo and Florence, on the border of the Casentino National Forest. Easily accessible by car are the lovely destinations of Camaldoli, Poppi, Bibbiena and LaVerna. On warm days, visitors may enjoy the swimming pool and lawn chairs, in the midst of a flower garden and breathtaking views of the valley and woods. The farm is just 300m from the road, yet distant enough to provide a sense of peace and quiet.

Our cook prepares a wide variety of delicious dishes using ingredients primarily sourced locally and from the farm itself, including wild boar, deer, and porcini mushrooms. If you choose half-board, we will also serve you a delicious breakfast of fresh, local products, including homemade jam and cakes and plenty of fresh fruit.

dove mangiare

Services

  • Bicycles
  • Garden
  • Pool
  • Restaurant
  • Region
  • Toscana
  • Province
  • Arezzo
  • Town
  • Bibbiena
  • Address
  • Loc. ventrina km.186,600 52010 partina di bibbiena

HOW TO REACH AGRITURISMO CASENTINO:


BY CAR
FROM THE NORTH
Take the A14 towards Ancona and exit at Cesena North to follow the E45 towards Roma.
Take the exit Bagno di Romagna and follow the SS71 towards Bibbiena until Km 186.600.
The entrance sign at the dirt road leading to the Agriturismo Casentino is on the right just after a curve.
If you arrive at Partina, you’ve gone too far.

FROM THE WEST
From the A1, take the exit Firenze Sud to follow the SS70 towards Pontassieve and then the road towards the Passo della Consuma.
From the A1, take the exit Firenze Sud to follow the SS70 towards Pontassieve and then the road towards the Passo della Consuma.
Just after Partina, the sign to the Agriturismo Casentino will be on your left.

FROM THE SOUTH
From the A1, take the exit to Arezzo and then follow the SS71 towards Bibbiena.
Continue in the direction of Cesena.
Just after Partina, the sign to the Agriturismo Casentino will be on your left.

BY TRAIN
Change at Arezzo for the train to Casentino and get off at Bibbiena.
BY BUS
From the Santa Maria Novella station in Firenze, take the SITA bus to Bibbiena.

DISTANCES

Bibbiena  Km. 8
Poppi  Km. 10
Camaldoli  Km. 10
Chiusi della Verna     Km. 22
Arezzo  Km. 34
Firenze  Km. 60
Siena  Km. 80

LA GINESTRA
LA GINESTRA
Prezzi:
€ 400 - € 500
Located on the ground floor, La Ginestra consists of a living room/kitchen with sofa bed, a spacious bedroom with queen bed, and a bathroom with shower. Directly outside the door is a private terrace with table, chairs and sunshade.
Almost 50 square meters.
Sleeps 4

Informations:

All the apartments have been optimized with new modern kitchen and bathroom always maintaining the rustic atmosphere using terracotta floors and ceilings with wood beams.
  • Bed lines and towel are included
  • Towels are changed every three days
  • Bed lines are changed one time per week
  • Bed lines can be changed daily for € 10

IL FALCO
IL FALCO
Prezzi:
€ 500 - € 650
Located on the second floor, Il Falco consists of a living room/kitchen with sofa bed, a large bedroom with queen bed, a smaller bedroom with single bed, and a bathroom. The living room offers a lovely view of the valley below.
Sleeps 4

Informations:

All the apartments have been optimized with new modern kitchen and bathroom always maintaining the rustic atmosphere using terracotta floors and ceilings with wood beams.
  • Bed lines and towel are included
  • Towels are changed every three days
  • Bed lines are changed one time per week
  • Bed lines can be changed daily for € 10

IL CAPRIOLO
IL CAPRIOLO
Prezzi:
€ 500 - € 650
Located on the first floor, Il Capriolo consists of a living room/kitchen with sofa bed, a large bedroom with queen bed, a small bedroom with single bed, and a bathroom with shower. The living room offers a lovely view of the valley below.
Almost 70 square meters.
Sleeps 4

Informations:

All the apartments have been optimized with new modern kitchen and bathroom always maintaining the rustic atmosphere using terracotta floors and ceilings with wood beams.
  • Bed lines and towel are included
  • Towels are changed every three days
  • Bed lines are changed one time per week
  • Bed lines can be changed daily for € 10

LA CASA DI BEPPE
LA CASA DI BEPPE
Prezzi:
€ 700 - € 900
The largest of the apartments, located on the first floor, la Casa di Beppe includes a covered terrace with a long trestle table and fabulous view of the entire valley.
It consists of a spacious living room/kitchen and two bedrooms with queen beds, each with its own bathroom.
This apartment may be rented in its entirety or each bedroom separately with common use of the kitchen/living room.
Almost 100 square meters.
Sleeps 4

Informations:

All the apartments have been optimized with new modern kitchen and bathroom always maintaining the rustic atmosphere using terracotta floors and ceilings with wood beams.
  • Bed lines and towel are included
  • Towels are changed every three days
  • Bed lines are changed one time per week
  • Bed lines can be changed daily for € 10

STANZE DEL FATTORE
STANZE DEL FATTORE
Prezzi:
€ 700 - € 900
Located on the second floor, with a magnificent view of the valley, this apartment consists of a spacious living room/kitchen with a sofa bed, and two bedrooms with queen beds, each with its own bathroom. One of the bedrooms also has a single bed.
This apartment may be rented in its entirety or each bedroom separately with common use of the kitchen/living room.
Sleeps 5

Informations:

All the apartments have been optimized with new modern kitchen and bathroom always maintaining the rustic atmosphere using terracotta floors and ceilings with wood beams.
  • Bed lines and towel are included
  • Towels are changed every three days
  • Bed lines are changed one time per week
  • Bed lines can be changed daily for € 10

CAMERE MATRIMONIALI
CAMERE MATRIMONIALI
Prezzi:
€ 50 - € 100
Wide double rooms with bathroom/shower.
Sleeps 2

Informations:

All the apartments have been optimized with new modern kitchen and bathroom always maintaining the rustic atmosphere using terracotta floors and ceilings with wood beams.
  • Bed lines and towel are included
  • Towels are changed every three days
  • Bed lines are changed one time per week
  • Bed lines can be changed daily for € 10

Agriturismo Casentino Agriturismo Casentino Agriturismo Casentino Agriturismo Casentino Agriturismo Casentino Agriturismo Casentino Agriturismo Casentino Agriturismo Casentino

Arezzo

The town of Arezzo, which lies on a low hill of the Poti Alps, opens out fanwise onto the broad, fertile depression in the Apennine mountains, where the upper Arno and Tiber valley, the Casentino, and the Valdichiana meet. The town is the administrative and economic capital of the large province of the same name., and has over the last fifty years been transformed. Growth has been rapid, enabling Arezzo to become, amongst other things, a major goldsmiths center. The town's other vocation as a leading tourist attraction, and its ability to combine a long and great cultural tradition with its modern entrepreneurial identity, make it a major point of reference for the whole of eastern Tuscany. Down the ages no fewer than eight defense walls, each one larger than the previous system, have encircled the area around the top of the hill on which the ancient town was built: the last walls, built in the 16th century, effectively curbed urban expansion until modern times. Each time the town pushed its boundaries further and further outward a new Arezzo emerged but succeeded in blending into the town that existed before it. This is indeed the key to historical Arezzo identity: a sum total of very different parts medieval Arezzo, the town of the grand-dukes, the town under Medici and Lorraine rule. This fundamental aspect of the town's character, tastes and lifestyles, also helps us to appreciate how a "new" town, inspired by late 19th century principles of town-planning, could so readily bond onto the "old" town.

Up at the top of the hill, Piazza Grande is, and always has been, the town's pulsating heart. The forum of the Roman city was in or near this square. Like the walled Etruscan settlement before it (6th - 5th century BC), perched between the hills of San Pietro (where the cathedral now stands) and San Donato ( today occupied by the Fortress), Arezzo used to be a major center for farming ( celebrated for its spelt wheat) and industry, and is indeed believed to have been one of the most important in the ancient word, together with Rome and Capua. It was famed for its bronze statues and terracotta items, and the works that have come down to us (including the bronze Chimera, now in Florence) show the level of technical and aesthetic sophistication the local school had achieved. In Augustan times, items made of "sealed Arezzo earth", a high-quality ceramic, were much sought-after items.

"Alas! Now is the season of great woe", sang the great 13th-century poet Guittone d'Arezzo who, after a political career amid the Guelphs of his town, turned to literature as a vehicle of peace. Toward the end of the century, the defeat of Arezzo by the Guelphs of Florence at Campaldino (1289), was a severe blow to the pride of the rich and powerful Ghibelline commune which had adorned its " acropolis" with churches and public buildings. The walls built in 1194 (the fifth system, along what is now Via Garibaldi) enclosed a town of 20000 inhabitants, organized into the four quarters that compete in Saracen Tournament to this day. The Studio Generale, or university (the successor to the episcopal school whose illustrious pupils included Guido Monaco), added cultural luster: Arezzo yielded such geniuses as Guittone and the eclectic Ristoro. Between the 13th century-medieval Arezzo's golden age- and the 14th century, the town spread out in a fan-like formation still evident on the town map, with main thoroughfares leading out toward the Chiana river and toward Florence, confirmation of the common interests and destinies of the two cities. Before Florentine expansion overwhelmed Arezzo's independence for ever, the town enjoyed one further period of splendor, during the years of the pro-imperial bishop Guido Tarlati (1319-27). With the economic and cultural rebirth Tarlati helped to bring about, art and architecture flourished, and work began on the new walls that were to form the biggest defence system the town had ever seen. When Guido died his brother Pier Saccone was unable to continue the work. In 1384 the town of Arezzo and the surrounding territory were swallowed up by the Florentine state. The 15th century brought both decline (in the population and in the social life) and economic recovery. All the town's main architects were of course frome Florence: Bernardo Rossellino, Benedetto and Giuliano da Maiano, Antonio da Sangallo the Elder and his brother Giuliano. But it was an architect Aretine origin, Piero della Francesca (from Sansepolcro) who created a work that is a fundamental to early Renaissance art: the fresco cicle of the Legend of the True Cross one the apse walls of the church of St. Francis. Florentine gran-duke Cosimo I demolished the towers, churches and all other private buildings that smacked of political autonomy. The town lost its most cherished landmarks (including the old cathedral built by Pionta). In their place appeared new walls (1538) and a star-shaped fortress, the ponderous metaphor of Medici might. Arezzo began to take on its present form in the second half of the 18th century, but it was not until a century later, with the arrival of the railroad (1866), that urban redevelopment really began in earnest. The "new town" grew up alongside Arezzo's ancient core, without impinging upon it. The town that greets visitors today is remarkable in the sheer abundance of its art, architecture, culture and local traditions. This rich heritage ranging from awe-inspiring monuments to the lesser but no less fascinating treasures offers a unique insight into a town and the civilization it has spawned down the ages.


Dominio:
http://www.lifeinitaly.com/tourism/tuscany/arezzo-history.asp

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