Artena 2026: The Medieval Hill Town With No Cars, No Modern Buildings Inside the Walls, and No Tourists — 50km From Rome
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
Artena (a comune of approximately 14,000 inhabitants in the Lepini hills, Metropolitan City of Rome — 50km southeast of the capital, between the Via Casilina and the Via Appia, at 500m altitude on a tufo spur that dominates the Sacco valley) has the specific distinction of possessing the most completely intact medieval urban fabric of any small town within the Roman day-trip radius: the historic center of Artena (the upper town on the tufo spur, inhabited from at least the Iron Age and continuously occupied through the Volscian, Roman, medieval, and modern periods) has no post-17th century buildings within its walls, no cars permitted on its internal streets (the road system serves the perimeter only), and a residential population of approximately 800 people who continue to inhabit houses that have not been structurally modified since the 16th-17th century in most cases. This is not a museum restoration: it is a living community in an unchanged medieval physical environment.
The Artena historic center streets (the vicoli — the narrow paved lanes between the stone houses, wide enough for a loaded mule but not a car, stepped where the gradient requires it, with the specific scale of a medieval pedestrian environment that the modern city has everywhere erased) are the primary attraction: walking the Artena historic center is walking through a physical environment whose proportions, materials, and spatial sequences have been unchanged for 400 years. The tufo (the volcanic stone from which the Artena buildings are constructed) is the same material as the spur on which the town stands — the buildings are literally extensions of the geological substrate.
Artena: Ancient Volscian History
Artena as Ecetra/Artena in Livy
Ancient Artena (identified by scholars with the Volscian city of Artena mentioned in Livy's histories of the early Roman Republic — the city taken by the Romans in 404 BC during the Volscian wars that expanded Roman control through the Lepini hills) was an important Volscian stronghold before its destruction and Roman colonization. The Artena position (the tufo spur with natural defensive advantage on three sides, the Sacco valley access controlled from the summit) made it strategically important in the Volscian resistance to Roman expansion — the same strategic logic that had made Cori, Norma, and Segni important in the same period.
The Medieval Quarter: How to Visit
The Artena historic center is best approached from the Porta Romana (the main gate on the east side of the spur, accessible from the parking area at the base of the spur). From the gate, the main street (the Via Roma) climbs to the Piazza del Comune and the church of Santa Maria Maddalena; from the piazza, the secondary vicoli radiate outward through the historic quarter. The walk from the gate to the furthest point of the spur and back takes approximately 90 minutes at a leisurely pace with stops to examine the building fabric and the views from the outer wall terraces.
Q&A: Artena
Does Artena have restaurants and accommodation?
The Artena lower town (outside the medieval walls, along the Via Casilina) has the standard services of a 14,000-person Italian comune: bars, grocery stores, a few restaurants serving local cuisine. Within the historic center: limited, typically the local bar/café that serves the residential population. Accommodation: none within the historic center; the nearest hotels are in Colleferro (8km west) and Valmontone (12km north). Artena is most practically visited as a half-day from Rome or as part of the Lepini hills circuit (Artena + Segni + Cori in a single day).