A Brief Travel Guide for Holidays in Pisa



How many steps do you have to climb to reach the top of the Leaning Tower?
Which are the events that enliven the town in May, June and July?
Which are the "must-eats" of the local traditional cuisine you should taste in a restaurant in Pisa?

This short tourist guide to Pisa will help you answer these and many other questions: twenty-five quick-and-easy-reference chapters where you will find plenty of information about this charming town in western Tuscany.

Our tour obviously begins with a page on Pisa`s origins. Both the Etruscans and the Romans have left plenty of evidence of their settlements in the province of Pisa. Then, you will have a page dedicated to Galileo Galilei, one of Pisa`s most illustrious "children", who was born in the Tramontana district and taught at the local University. And here you have the most famous Leaning Tower in the world and the other beauties - that is, the Duomo, the Baptistery and the Monumental Cemetery - that stand in Piazza dei Miracoli (if you are looking for a villa in Pisa for your next holidays, why do not you look at the ads for houses to rent in this part of the town?). In the last chapters you will find plenty of tips on where to go shopping, on the (summer) nightlife, and so on.

In the very last page of this tourist guide you will find useful travel information on how to get to your holiday villa in Pisa by car or by bus, by train or by plane.

And now, we owe you some answers: the steps are 293; the events that are held in Pisa between May and July are the Luminara di San Ranieri, the Palio, the Gioco del Ponte and, every four years, the Regatta of the Ancient Maritime Republics; as far as the many traditional Pisan dishes are concerned, we suggest you to taste the "cecina" and the "torta co` bischeri", also known as "torta del 28".