Agriturismo Poggiacolle

Agriturismo Poggiacolle

Poggiacolle farmhouse is only 2 kms from San Gimignano, in Tuscany.
It extends over 2 hills which overlook San Gimignano ancient medieval centre providing a truiy magnificent panoramˇc view of the area.

The holiday villa is a Tuscany eighteenth century farm house only 2 Kms from San Gimignano.

Poggiacolle farmhouse is in the heart of Tuscany, Volterra is 20 Kms away, Siena is 35 Kms away, Florence is 55 Kms away, Pisa is 80 Kms away and Lucca is 90 Kms away.

Around the guest reception villa there are large green areas with chairs, tables, sun loungers and parasols.

Our farmhouse in Tuscany has a 7 x 14 metre swimming pool set in a highly panoramic position 20 metres away from the holiday villa, right opposite San Gimignano. The holiday farm offers guests the free use of mountain bikes, the use of ping-pong facilities and a bowls pitch. Just 500 metres away from the holiday villa, there is an accessorised picnic area in the woods.

There are trekking paths running through the estate, connected to a circuit of dirt tracks which wind for more than 30 km all around San Gimignano. Near the holiday farmhouse there are tennis courts (about 1.5 km away), a golf course (about 15 km away) and a five-a-side football pitch (about 2 km away).
Pets are allowed (dogs, cats).
We speak english fluently.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vg2BKq9YSOU&feature=youtu.be

dove dormire

Services

  • Animals
  • Bicycles
  • Credit card
  • Disabled
  • Garden
  • Internet
  • Parking
  • Pool
  • Television
  • Product sales
  • Region
  • Toscana
  • Province
  • Siena
  • Town
  • San gimignano
  • Address
  • Strada di montauto 58


Poggiacolle farm is only 2 kms from San Gimignano.
lt extends over 2 hills which overlook San Gimignano ancient medieval
centre
providing a truiy magnificent panoramic view of the area.

Travelling down from the north, leave the A1 motorway at the FIRENZE-IMPRUNETA exit and take the FIRENZE-SIENA link (the entry to the link is right by the motorway exit). Leave the link at POGGIBONSI-NORD and follow the signs for SAN GIMIGNANO. About 500 metres before the walls of the town there is a roundabout, from which you must head for VOLTERRA-CECINA and drive for about 700 metres until you come to the road for MONTAUTO on the left. Take this road and drive along it for about 700 metres, passing a small bridge made of bricks. The entrance to the holiday farm is on the right just after the bridge.

Travelling up from the south, leave the A1 motorway at the VALDICHIANA exit and head for SIENA. A few km before Siena you will come to the junction for the orbital road (Tangenziale) heading towards FIRENZE. Take this road and drive towards FIRENZE, taking the exit at POGGIBONSI-NORD. Head towards SAN GIMIGNANO. About 500 metres before the walls of the town there is a roundabout, from which you must head for VOLTERRA-CECINA and drive for about 700 metres until you come to the road for MONTAUTO on the left. Take this road and drive along it for about 700 metres, passing a small bridge made of bricks. The entrance to the holiday farm is on the right just after the bridge.

Lat (N) 43° 25' 45'' - Lon (E) 11° 1' 29''

Apartments and rooms
Apartments and rooms
Prezzi:
€ 100 - € 100
The guest accommodation is a recently renovated eighteenth century pavilioned house.
We can offer rooms with private bath or apartments for 2-4-8-10 persons. All the apartments are equipped with satellite television.

- The "Girasole" apartment (8 or 10 persons) has 4 double bedrooms, all with their own bathroom, and a large kitchen-living room with a large original century fireplace which dates back to 1700, the year in which the house was built. The apartment also has a TV lounge in the dovecote tower.
If necessary, a fifth bedroom can be added on the ground floor. This room has the same entrance as the other 4 rooms situated on the upper floor of the house. Two rooms enjoy a splendid view of San Gimignano. The apartment measures 140 m˛.

- The "Ginestra" apartment (6 persons) is on the ground floor of the farmhouse and has 3 double bedrooms, all with their own bathroom, and a kitchen-living room with fireplace. One of the rooms has a brick vault ceiling.
The apartment is characterised by old brick arches, restored to their original state using the sandblasting technique. The apartment measures 115 m˛.

- The "Lavanda" apartment (4 persons) is on the ground floor of the farmhouse and has 2 double bedrooms with bathroom and a kitchen-living room with fireplace. The rooms enjoy a splendid view of San Gimignano. The apartment measures 70 m˛.

- The "Rosa" apartment (2 persons) is on the ground floor of the farmhouse. It has one double bedroom, a bathroom and kitchen with fireplace.

Swimming-pool, archery and trekking ways are also available and we have a mountain bikes rental.

Our apartments are furnished in Tuscan country style. The ground floor apartments have brick vault ceilings while the upper floor apartments have typical Tuscan farmhouse ceilings made of terracotta and wooden beams.
Agriturismo Poggiacolle Agriturismo Poggiacolle Agriturismo Poggiacolle Agriturismo Poggiacolle Agriturismo Poggiacolle

Siena

The site of Siena was originally an Etruscan settlement that later became the Roman city of Sena Julia. This colony disappeared, but the new Siena that later developed flourished under the Lombard kings. In the 12th century it became a self-governing commune. Economic rivalry and territorial conflict with neighbouring Florence, which was anti-imperial, or Guelf, made Siena the centre of pro-imperial Ghibellinism in Tuscany. The Sienese reached the peak of political success on September 4, 1260, when their army crushed the Florentines at the Battle of Montaperti.

Siena became an important banking centre in the 13th century but was unable to compete with its rival, Florence. The imperial cause declined, and the popes imposed economic sanctions against Siena's Ghibelline merchants. Soon afterward, Siena itself turned Guelf, and the Ghibelline nobility lost its share of power. The city suffered from wars and famines and from the general economic decline that afflicted Italy in the early 14th century, and it was also devastated by outbreaks of the Black Death, which began in 1348.

Siena endured between 1355 and 1559 the two most troubled centuries in its history: a long period of economic and demographic decline, of social conflict, and of increasing. instability and tension in political life. Unstable régime followed unstable régime; in one disastrous year, 1368, the city's constitution was actually changed 4 times in an attempt to accommodate its contending power groups, while, even more remarkably, the government structures of Siena were actually reformed 10 times between 1525 and 1552.

Externally this was also a period of incessant, purposeless and profitless warfare, although foreign warfare was less damaging to the economy than were the numerous visitations of marauding mercenary companies throughout the 14th and 15th centuries. This was, in addition, a period in which the determination of the Florentines to conquer Siena became increasingly obvious. The Sienese attempted numerous solutions to their difficulties, and in 1399, despite the strength of the city's communal traditions, even resorted to the expedient of surrendering their city into the hands of Giangaleazzo Visconti of Milan. Visconti rule of the city lasted until 1404. A more positive solution was the development of the system of governement by a balia which, in Siena, became converted into a permanent magistracy and effectively replaced the traditional communal councils.

One feature of Siena's political life at this period has always provoked comment. This was the system of monti or ordini whose very existence seemed to institutionalize civic strife. Each member of the ruling élite of Siena was a member of one of the city's 5 "monti", and each "monte" competed with the others for a monopoly of power in Siena. Attempts were made to devise some form of power-sharing by which the monti could be brought to cooperate together, and these efforts were not always unsuccessful. Indeed, the periods of internal peace in Siena were ones when such coalitions worked well. This is the light in which we should see the period 1458-63, the pontificate of Pius II, when Siena effectively became a papal dependency. In 1487 an exiled aristocrat, Pandolfo Petrucci, seized power and ruled with brutal tyranny through a period of French and Spanish invasions until his death in 1512. His regime was continued by his family until 1524. This so-called "signoria of the Petrucci" can best be understood as the most successful power-sharing exercise of the period, in which the Petrucci acted as peculiarly effective chairmen of the various coalitions by which Siena was governed.

In the early 16th century, as the economic decline of Siena accelerated, and the position of her ruling élite weakened in consequence, the successful creation of such coalitions became difficult. Siena was constantly torn by party strife and civic turmoil and this turbulence created a kind of political vacuum in the centre of Italy from which the French hoped to profit. Charles V was forced to respond to this French threat by taking an interest in the city, and in in the 2nd quarter of the century Spanish influence in Siena became increasingly obvious. After 1530 a garrison of Spanish troops looked as if it would guarantee the city's loyalty, but to make certain Charles V decreed that a fortress should be built in Siena. This action forced the Sienese into open rebellion in 1552, and the Spanish were driven from the city.

With sporadic French assistance, the Sienese tried to preserve their independence for the next 3 years in what has become famous as an heroic struggle against the combined forces of Spain and Cosimo I de' Medici, but in 1555 Siena was starved into surrender, although fighting continued in the Sienese contado for another 4 years. Siena was governed directly by the Spanish until 1557, when it was sold to Cosimo, whose possession of the city was confirmed by the Peace of Cateau-Cambrésis. After 1559, therefore, the history of Siena followed that of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. In 1861 Siena, together with the rest of Tuscany, was absorbed into the new Kingdom of Italy.


Dominio:
http://www.wga.hu/tours/siena/history.html

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