Canale Monterano 2026: Bernini's Church, an Abandoned Medieval Town Swallowed by Forest, and Hot Springs Below — All Within 50km of Rome

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: April 2026.

Canale Monterano (the modern village in the Tolfa mountains, Metropolitan City of Rome — 55km northwest of Rome) is the living settlement adjacent to the Borgo di Monterano, the medieval ghost town that the malaria epidemic of the late 18th century depopulated completely: the inhabitants of old Monterano abandoned their town between 1799 and 1812 (the specific date of the final abandonment varies in the sources, coinciding with the Napoleonic-era disruptions and the malaria-related population collapse that affected many Tyrrhenian coastal and hill zones), leaving intact the Baroque church, the Odescalchi castle, and the urban fabric of the medieval borgo to be slowly reclaimed by the Mediterranean scrub vegetation. Today the Borgo di Monterano (accessible by foot from the Canale Monterano parking area — 1km walk) is one of the most dramatically atmospheric ghost towns in Italy: the Baroque church facade (attributed to Gian Lorenzo Bernini's workshop, built for the Odescalchi family who owned the Monterano estate in the 17th century) rises above the dense vegetation, the castle walls are wrapped in climbing plants, and the roofless stone houses of the medieval borgata are being progressively broken down by the fig tree roots and the winter freezing that constitute the specific geological digestion of abandoned Mediterranean stone buildings.

Canale Monterano: The Ghost Town and the Thermal Springs

The Borgo di Monterano

The walk into the Borgo di Monterano (from the Canale Monterano parking area, taking the marked path through the Regional Nature Reserve of Monterano — the scrub oak and Mediterranean maquis vegetation through which the path descends to the ruins) provides the specific cinematic experience of entering an abandoned medieval town that nature is actively reclaiming. The sequence: the first visible monument is the Lion Fountain (the 17th-century Odescalchi fountain with the lion head spout, still functioning, providing water from the hillside spring), then the church facade (the Baroque front with its pilasters and pediment in pale stone, the interior open to the sky, the fresco traces on the apse walls), then the castle (the Odescalchi fortification, its walls standing but the interior collapsed, the keep visible above the vegetation), and finally the borgata streets (the roofless houses, the medieval street pattern still legible in the stone paths). Filming location note: the Borgo di Monterano has been used as a film location for several Italian movies and television productions requiring an atmospheric abandoned medieval setting.

The Thermal Springs of Stigliano

The Terme di Stigliano (the thermal springs 3km from Canale Monterano on the Stigliano road — sulfurous hot springs at approximately 35-38°C, with free access to some outdoor sections and a paid organized thermal park) complete the Canale Monterano experience: the specific Tolfa mountain thermal tradition (the volcanic geology of the Tolfa area produces multiple spring systems) makes this one of the closest free thermal bathing options to Rome. The free section (the natural pools in the Stigliano stream where the hot spring water mixes with the cold stream) is accessible year-round; the organized thermal park (the Terme di Stigliano facility with pools, showers, and changing rooms) charges approximately €15-25 for day access.

Q&A: Canale Monterano

Is the Monterano ghost town safe to explore?

The marked path to the Borgo di Monterano and the main monuments (the church, the fountain, the castle exterior) are safe for normal walking. The castle interior and the roofless buildings are not safe for entry (structural instability, collapsing floors) — the Regional Reserve markers indicate which areas are accessible and which are restricted. The path is not strenuous (1km each way, minor elevation change) but requires good walking shoes as the surface is unpaved and rocky in sections. The visit takes 1.5-2 hours; bring water (the Lion Fountain water is drinkable but test at your own judgment).

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