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CHAPTER VI - CIVITA CASTELLANA.—FALERII (VETERES.)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

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Summary

Faliscis,

Mœnia contigimus victa, Camille, tibi.

—Ovid. Amor.

Poi giunsi in una valle incolta e fiera,

Di ripe cinta e spaventose tane;

Che nel mezzo sù un sasso havea un castello,

Forte, e ben posto, e a maraviglia bello.

—Ariosto.

From Nepi, which is thirty miles from Rome, the high road runs direct to Civita Castellana, a distance of nearly eight miles; but to the traveller on horse or foot I would recommend a route, by which he will save two miles. On passing the bridge of Nepi, let him turn immediately to the right; a mile of lane-scenery with fine views of Nepi will carry him to Castel di Santa Elia, a small village, which looks much like an Etruscan site, and was perhaps a castellum dependent on Nepete. The road to it and beyond it seems in some parts to have been ancient, cut through the tufo; there are few tombs by its side, but here and there portions of masonry, serving as fences to the road, may be observed, which are of ancient blocks, often found in such situations. He then enters on a bare green down, rich in the peculiar beauties of the Campagna. A ravine yawns on either hand. That on the right, dark with wood, is more than usually deep, gloomy, and grand. Beyond the other runs the high road to Civita; and in that direction the plain—in winter an uniform sheet of dark rich brown from the oak-woods which cover it, studded here and there with some tower or spire shooting up from the foliage—stretches to the foot of the Ciminian Mount.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1848

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