
Italy is an extraordinary feast of heart-thumping,  soul-stirring art, food and landscapes rivalled by few and coveted by  millions.
Luscious Landscapes
Italy's fortes extend beyond its galleries, plates and  wardrobes. The country is one of Mother Nature's masterpieces, its geography  offering extraordinary natural diversity. From the north's icy Alps and glacial  lakes to the south's volcanic craters and turquoise grottoes, this is a place  for doing as well as seeing. One day you're tearing down Courmayeur's powdery  slopes, the next you could be riding cowboy-style across the marshes of the  Maremma, or diving in coral-studded Campanian waters. Not bad for a country not  much bigger than Arizona. 
Bella Vita
In few places do art and life intermingle so effortlessly.  This may be the land of Dante, Titian and Verdi, but it's also the home of  Prada, Gualtiero Marchesi and Renzo Piano. Beauty, style and flair furnish every  aspect of daily life, from those immaculately knotted ties and perfect  espressos, to the flirtatious smiles of striking strangers. The root of Italian  psychology is a dedication to living life well and, effortless as it may seem,  driving that dedication is a reverence for the finer things. So slow down, take  note and indulge in a little bella vita.
Buon Appetito
It might look like a boot, but food-obsessed Italy feels  more like a decadently stuffed Christmas stocking. From delicate 
tagliatelle  al ragù to velvety 
cannoli, every bite feels like a revelation.  The secret: superlative ingredients and strictly seasonal produce. And while  Italy's culinary soul might be earthy and rustic, it's equally ingenious and  sophisticated. Expect some of the world's top fine-dining destinations, from San  Pellegrino 'World's Best 50' hotspots to Michelin-starred musts. So whether  you're on a degustation odyssey in 
Modena,  truffle hunting in 
Piedmont or swilling powerhouse reds in the 
Valpolicella wine region,  prepare to swoon.
Cultural Riches
Epicentre of the Roman Empire and birthplace of the  Renaissance, this sun-kissed virtuoso groans under the weight of its cultural  cachet: it's here that you'll stand in the presence of Michelangelo's  
David and 
Sistine  Chapel frescoes, Botticelli's 
Birth of Venus and 
Primavera and da Vinci's 
The Last Supper. In fact, Italy has more Unesco World  Heritage cultural sites than any other country on Earth. Should you walk in the  footsteps of saints and emperors in 
Rome,  revel in 
Ravenna's  glittering Byzantine treasures or get breathless over Giotto's revolutionary  frescoes in 
Padua?  It's a cultural conundrum as thrilling as it is overwhelming.
 
 
 
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