Cesenatico's Porto Canale (canal port) was designed by Leonardo da Vinci in 1502, when Leonardo was serving as military engineer for Cesare Borgia and was assigned to survey and improve the port infrastructure of the Romagna coastal towns that Borgia had recently conquered. Leonardo's drawings of the Cesenatico canal port survive in the Codex Madrid I (Windsor Collection); the specific angle of the canal's exit to the sea and the arrangement of the berths are attributed to his survey. The canal today is lined with historic fishing vessels — the Museo della Marineria, one of the finest maritime folk museums in Italy, has 10 traditional Adriatic fishing vessels (brazzera, bragozzo, trabaccolo, leudo) moored in the canal with their original painted sails and rigging, forming what may be the finest open-air maritime folk museum in Italy. Cesenatico was also the birthplace of Marco Pantani (1970–2004), the most celebrated Italian cyclist of the 1990s, and is 25 km from Rimini. Emilia-Romagna guide
Plan my Italy trip →Region: Emilia-Romagna, province of Forlì-Cesena | Population: ~25,000 | Famous for: Leonardo da Vinci canal (1502), Museo della Marineria, Marco Pantani birthplace | Distance from Rimini: 25 km | Distance from Bologna: 90 km | Train: Bologna to Cesenatico approximately 1 hour 15 minutes
In 1502, Leonardo da Vinci was employed as military engineer and surveyor by Cesare Borgia — the illegitimate son of Pope Alexander VI who was systematically conquering the Romagna and central Italian territories in the years 1499–1504, using both military force and political manipulation to create a new dynastic state. Leonardo's role in this campaign: surveying the military and hydraulic infrastructure of the conquered territories, improving fortifications, and designing port facilities. His visit to Cesenatico in August 1502 resulted in a precise survey drawing (now in the Windsor Collection, part of the Codex Madrid I studies) showing the canal port from above with the specific arrangement of berths, the angle of the sea exit, and the proportions that would allow the canal to be deepened for larger vessels. The drawing is one of the most technically precise port engineering documents of the Italian Renaissance — Leonardo's approach to hydraulic engineering (documented in his extensive notes on water movement) is applied directly to the Cesenatico canal geometry.
The relationship between Leonardo and Borgia provides the context: Machiavelli was also employed by the Florentine Republic as an envoy to Borgia in the same period, and their overlapping presence in the Romagna in 1502 has been extensively documented. Leonardo's role was technical; Machiavelli's was diplomatic. Both are using Borgia as the paradigm of the new Italian prince — Leonardo for the model patron of technical expertise, Machiavelli for the model of political ruthlessness that becomes The Prince.
The Museo della Marineria of Cesenatico is one of the finest maritime folk museums in Italy — its specific form: approximately 10 historic Adriatic fishing vessels moored in the Porto Canale (the Leonardo-designed canal) in sailing condition with original painted sails and rigging, forming an open-air museum that can be viewed from the canal banks at any hour and entered for a €5 museum fee. The vessel types: the bragozzo (a flat-bottomed wide-beam Adriatic fishing boat characteristic of the Venetian lagoon fisheries); the trabaccolo (a larger two-masted Adriatic cargo and fishing vessel); the brazzera (the typical Cesenatico coast fishing boat); the leudo (the Ligurian single-masted fishing boat that operated on the Adriatic as well); and other traditional types. The painted sails — geometric patterns in ochre, red, and blue on the traditional undyed canvas — are the characteristic visual element; each fishing family had its own sail design as an identification system at sea. The indoor section of the museum (on the canal bank) documents the fishing traditions of the Romagna coast with tools, photographs, and oral history recordings.
Marco Pantani (1970–2004) was born in Cesenatico and became the most celebrated Italian road cyclist of the 1990s — his victories in the 1998 Tour de France and the 1998 Giro d'Italia in the same year (a double only achieved 7 times in cycling history) made him the most popular Italian athlete of that period. Known as Il Pirata (The Pirate) for his shaved head, bandana, and earring — and for his specific climbing style (attack on the steepest gradients, extreme acceleration on the high mountain passes). His positive doping test at the 1999 Giro d'Italia (EPO, the blood doping agent common throughout 1990s cycling) ended his career effectively; he died alone in a Rimini hotel room in February 2004, officially from an accidental cocaine overdose. A museum in Cesenatico (the Museo Marco Pantani) documents his career; memorials throughout the town commemorate him. The annual Nove Colli cycling sportive (a major Gran Fondo race through the Romagnol Apennines) passes through Cesenatico in his memory.
Cesenatico on the Romagna Riviera (province of Forlì-Cesena, 25 km from Rimini) is famous for: the Porto Canale designed by Leonardo da Vinci in 1502 while serving Cesare Borgia; the Museo della Marineria (10 historic Adriatic fishing vessels with painted sails moored in the canal, open-air museum, entry €5); and the birthplace of cyclist Marco Pantani (1970–2004), winner of the 1998 Tour de France and Giro d'Italia double, with a dedicated museum.
Yes. Leonardo da Vinci visited Cesenatico in August 1502 while serving as military engineer for Cesare Borgia and made a precise survey drawing of the canal port, preserved in the Windsor Collection (part of the Codex Madrid I studies). The drawing shows the canal from above with specific proportions and berth arrangements. The existing canal port follows the layout documented in this drawing; the attribution of the design to Leonardo's 1502 survey is accepted by the scholarship on Leonardo's hydraulic engineering work. This makes Cesenatico one of the few Italian places that can document a specific Leonardo da Vinci engineering contribution to existing infrastructure.
The Museo della Marineria di Cesenatico is an open-air and indoor maritime folk museum in the Porto Canale. The open-air section: approximately 10 historic Adriatic fishing vessels (bragozzo, trabaccolo, brazzera, leudo, and other types) moored in the canal with their original painted canvas sails and rigging. The painted sails — each fishing family's distinctive geometric pattern in ochre, red, and blue — are the museum's visual signature. The indoor section: tools, photographs, oral history, and documentation of the Romagna coastal fishing tradition. Entry €5; the canal bank walk past the moored vessels is free at all hours.
Marco Pantani (1970–2004), born in Cesenatico, was the most celebrated Italian cyclist of the 1990s — winner of the 1998 Tour de France and the 1998 Giro d'Italia in the same year. Known as Il Pirata (The Pirate) for his shaved head, bandana, and earring. A specialist climber, his attacks on Alpine and Apennine mountain stages were among the most dramatic in modern cycling. A positive EPO test at the 1999 Giro destroyed his career; he died in a Rimini hotel room in February 2004. The Museo Marco Pantani in Cesenatico documents his career; an annual Gran Fondo cycling event (Nove Colli) passes through the town in his memory.
Cesenatico Leonardo canal + Museo Marineria + Marco Pantani museum + Rimini + Brisighella olive oil — the real Romagna coast circuit.
Plan my Emilia-Romagna trip →Cesare Borgia (1475–1507), son of Pope Alexander VI, conducted his systematic conquest of the Romagna between 1499 and 1504, capturing Imola, Forlì, Pesaro, Rimini, Faenza, and Cesena (hence the name Cesenatico — the small port of the city of Cesena). Leonardo da Vinci served as Borgia's military engineer during the 1502 campaign specifically because Borgia needed technical expertise for the fortification and port improvements of his new territories. Machiavelli observed Borgia's methods as a Florentine diplomatic envoy in the same period and later used him as the paradigm of the new political prince in Il Principe (written 1513, published 1532). Borgia's state collapsed after his father's death in 1503; he died in Spain in 1507. The brief Borgia control of Romagna left the Leonardo canal survey as its most permanent trace in Cesenatico.
The Romagna Riviera is the 100+ km stretch of Adriatic coast from Cervia to Cattolica — the most intensive Italian beach resort development in the country. Rimini is the dominant city (approximately 15 million visitors per year, the most visited Italian seaside resort); Cesenatico, Cervia, Riccione, and Cattolica are the subsidiary towns. The Romagna Riviera model: paid beach concessions (stabilimenti balneari) with rows of identical sun loungers and parasols; large hotels offering beach-access packages; discotheques (Rimini pioneered the Italian beach disco tradition); and the specific Romagnol food (piadina flatbread with squacquerone cheese and rocket, grilled fish at seafront trattorias, Sangiovese Romagna DOC wine). The beach concession system (in which private operators lease public beach space) is politically controversial in Italy; EU pressure for competitive licensing has been resisted by the Italian government.
The Nove Colli (Nine Hills) is one of Italy's most important Gran Fondo cycling sportive events — held annually in late May/early June, starting and finishing in Cesenatico, covering approximately 200 km and 4,000 m elevation gain over nine Romagnol Apennine climbs. The event draws approximately 15,000 participants from Italy and internationally; it is one of the oldest Italian cycling sportive events (founded 1969 by Giancarlo Ferretti). The event specifically commemorates Marco Pantani (born in Cesenatico) and passes through the Romagnol hill towns he trained in. Registration opens approximately 6 months before the event at novecolli.it and fills quickly for the full distance. Shorter variant routes are available.
The Porto Canale of Cesenatico is fully walkable on both banks — the Lungocanale Armando Diaz on the east bank and the Lungocanale della Repubblica on the west bank, each approximately 500 metres from the inland basin to the sea exit, are the main pedestrian promenades of the town. The museum ships are moored along both banks; the walk from the inland basin to the Adriatic sea exit takes approximately 15 minutes at a walking pace but will take longer as the painted sails and vessel details stop you repeatedly. The canal exit into the Adriatic is flanked by the 16th-century lighthouse towers (reconstructed after World War II damage). At the sea entrance, the fishing boats still depart and return; the early morning fish unloading at the canal basin (approximately 6–8am) is the most direct experience of the continuing working fishing tradition that gives Cesenatico its specific character.
Cesenatico's beach is the standard Romagna Riviera format: paid beach concessions (stabilimenti balneari) with assigned sun lounger and parasol rentals at approximately €15–25/day per person. The beach is wide, flat, sandy, and extends north and south of the canal exit for several kilometres. The Adriatic at Cesenatico is shallow for a long distance from shore — typical water depth 1 m at 50 metres from the beach — making it specifically good for families with young children. The beach is crowded July–August; June and September are better. The free public beach sections (spiagge libere) are limited on the Romagna Riviera; the concession model dominates. The sea water quality is monitored by ARPA Emilia-Romagna and generally good in Cesenatico; blue flag beaches in the area are updated annually.