The Quattrocento

Rome and Central Italy,

March 7 to 15, 2024

March 7 to 18, 2024 (with Florence add-on)

The Quattrocento, otherwise known as the early Renaissance of the 1400s, was a particularly rich period for Italian arts and aesthetics:  the age of the beautiful.  During our two days in Rome, we'll look at what remains of the 1400s in this otherwise Baroque city.  Then, with five nights in Perugia, we explore a handful of delightful Renaissance hill towns:  Arezzo, Spello, Montefalco, Assisi, Sansepolcro, Spoleto, and Orvieto.  Each with its own exquisitely beautiful frescoes and unique artistic traditions.

While the primary focus of the trip is historical, we also plan to look at Umbria today.  In Perugia, we will invite a variety of Italians from various walks of life to join us for what we call our evening "Cocktail Incontri."  Past guests have included a nun from Wisconsin, now based in Assisi,  a school teacher from Umbria, a college professor from Perugia, and a policeman from a nearby village.  These conversations with local Perugini add substance to our understanding of the region and help bridge the gap that keeps many tourists at arms’ length from the places they visit.  The trip also includes visits to local fabbriche where the traditional products of Umbria--linens, cashmeres, wines, ceramics, olive oils--are still being fabricated. 

I should add that Nancy and I both rank the Quattrocento tour among our very favorite trips. Indeed, we are always happy to return to these beautiful places. It is a comfortable trip, with a luxurious five-night stay in Perugia, a nice balance of art and other things, and a lovely time to be in Italy. Not to be missed!

The Itinerary, in brief:

Thursday, March 7:   Arrive in Rome.  Transfer to the Albergo Santa Chiara.  In the afternoon we have the perfect introduction to the Renaissance: Nancy’s highly original “Bankers and Whores” tour through Rome’s Centro Storico.

Friday, March 8:  Morning visit to the Biblioteca Angelica to see and even handle books and manuscripts from the 15th c.  Afternoon visit to the Farnesina, a beautiful palazzetto in Trastevere with frescoes by, among others, Raphael.  Group lunch or dinner.

Saturday, March 9:   Depart Rome.  Our first stop will be Spoleto, a town with interesting traces of Ancient Rome, a spectacular Renaissance Duomo, and a very good restaurant for lunch.   Finish the day in Perugia at the Brufani Palace Hotel. Group lunch.

Sunday, March 10:   Full day in Perugia with its deeply medieval city center, Perugino’s Collegio del Cambio (mid 15th c.) and the newly renovated local art museum with a remarkable collection of works by all the great Umbrian painters:  Piero della Francesca, Perugino, Raphael, and others. Group lunch.  Cocktail Incontro at our hotel in the early evening.

Monday, March 11:   Morning in Assisi.  The Basilica of San Francesco is a veritable treasure trove of works by the greatest of the great, including Giotto.  Delicious lunch (Enoteca Properzio) in Spello.  Pinturicchio’s Baglioni Chapel, next door to our restaurant, is one of the gems of the 15th c.   Afternoon visit to the weaving studio of Giuditta Brozzetti where Renaissance textiles are still woven by hand on wooden looms. Group lunch.  Group lunch. Cocktail Incontro.

Tuesday, March 12:   A day devoted to Piero della Francesca. In Arezzo, Borgo Sansepolcro, and Monterchi, we will see a handful of the most important works—including what Aldous Huxley dubbed the greatest painting in the world—by this fascinating Renaissance artist.  Group lunch.

Wednesday, March 13:   Umbria, particularly in the Quattrocento, was synonymous with textiles. It you owned a tablecloth, chances are it came from Here. Morning visit to the factory outlet of Pardi where exquisite linens are woven on gigantic industrial looms, followed by lunch at a restaurant in Montefalco, a town famous for its Sagrantino wine, and a viisit to the local museum where we enjoy a beautiful quattrocento fresco cycle:  Benozzo Gozzoli's life of St. Francis.  Afternoon visit to another weaving studio, of sorts: the factory store, adjacent to the actual factory, of the designer Fabiana Filippi, an important name in Italian couture. Group lunch.  

Thursday, March 14:  On our return to Rome, we stop in Orvieto with its striped duomo and stunning Last Judgment by Signorelli (mid 15th c.).  Lunch in Orvieto.  We end the day at the Rome Airport Hilton Hotel.

Friday, March 15:  The tour ends with breakfast.

A Weekend in Florence:

I confess. This excursion to Florence is designed to hit those special places I really need to see again: like the monumental complex of San Lorenzo, plus a handful of beautiful Last Suppers in Florentine monasteries, and of course the the Pazzi Chapel. If there’s a particular treasure you’re determined to see, let me know and I’ll see what we can do. Afternoons will be a chance to see important sites—such as the Uffizi and the Accademia—on your own.

Thursday, March 14: Visit Orvieto (see above), enjoy a group lunch, and then catch an afternoon train to Florence. From the Florence train station, we take taxis, (fares not included in the cost of the tour) to the 5-star Bernini Palace Hotel where we stay for the next three nights.

Friday, March 15: How Florentines lived in the Quattrocento: private family chapels, a Renaissance home, cloistered lives in beautiful places. Group lunch.

Saturday, March 16: A visit to the church of Santa Croce, with its former curator of arts. A rare treat as well as a chance to understand the complex relationship in Florence between commerce and faith. Also a visit to the leather school. Group lunch.

Sunday, March 17: Morning visit to San Lorenzo, a beautiful religious complex designed by Filippo Brunelleschi, a master architect of the Quattrocento, and completed by Michelangelo, a master of the Cinquecento. Afternoon train to Rome for an overnight at the Airport Hilton. Group lunch.

Monday, March 18: The trip ends with breakfast.

 
 
Photo by javarman3/iStock / Getty Images

Photo by javarman3/iStock / Getty Images

 

Hotels

The cost of the trip includes two nights in superior rooms at the 3-star Albergo Santa Chiara.  

In Perugia, we spend 5 nights at the 5-star Brufani Palace Hotel where everyone has superior rooms with views of the same landscape that artists have been painting for the past 600 years.

And in Florence, for those who choose to join us, we will be at the very centrally located 5-star Bernini Palace Hotel for three nights. For me, this is a perfect hotel

The final night of the trip is at the Rome Airport Hilton.

 

Rates:

Without three days in Florence

$4800 in double occupancy

$5000 in single occupancy.

Cost of Florence add-on:

$1550 in double occupancy

$ 1800 in classic room single occupancy

$1700 in standard single

Included:  8 or 11 nights in hotels, breakfast each morning, one additional meal each day with wine and coffee, private bus transportation throughout the trip, all entrance fees and tips.

Not included:  air and airport transportation, taxis as needed for Florence portion, unscheduled meals, room service, items of a personal nature

Group size:  no more than 16 people

We will offer an optional Rome tour the afternoon of March 6. Details forthcoming.

 
 

I never thought I would join a group tour to Italy, a country I've visited many times on my own.  That was until a friend showed me an Italian Journey’s itinerary.  Several years and four trips later, I realize that I have learned so much more than I would have traveling on my own. I now can "read" a Renaissance fresco . . . and so much else.

Martha Farnsworth Riche, Trumansburg, NY