Italy has trees older than the Roman Empire. A Sardinian olive tree (Sa Reina, "The Queen") has been growing for over 3,000 years โ it was alive when Homer was writing the Odyssey. Italus, a Heldreich's pine in Calabria's Pollino National Park, is 1,230+ years old โ the oldest scientifically dated tree in Europe. Italy treats ancient trees as national monuments โ 22,000 are officially registered and protected.
1. Italus (Heldreich's pine, 1,230+ years). Pollino National Park, Calabria. The oldest scientifically dated tree in Europe (dendrochronology, University of Tuscia). Growing at 1,900m on a limestone ridge since ~789 AD. Accessible via hiking trail from Serra di Crispo (difficult, 5-6h round trip, guide recommended). 2. Sa Reina (wild olive, estimated 3,000-4,000 years). Luras, Sardinia. A massive trunk (12m circumference) that was already ancient when the Nuragic civilization was building its towers. Freely accessible. The oldest living thing in Italy โ possibly in Europe (dating is estimated, not confirmed by dendrochronology due to the hollow trunk).
3. Castagno dei Cento Cavalli (Chestnut of the 100 Horses). Sant'Alfio, Etna, Sicily. A chestnut tree with a trunk circumference of 57.9m (the largest in the world). Estimated 2,000-4,000 years old. The legend: Queen Joan of Aragon and her retinue of 100 knights sheltered under its canopy during a thunderstorm. Still alive, still producing chestnuts. Freely accessible. 4. The Cedars of God (Cedri del Libano), Botanical Garden of Naples. 18th-century planting of ancient Lebanese cedars โ not as old as the Sardinian olive, but symbolically powerful (the cedar of Lebanon features on the Lebanese flag). 5. Foresta Umbra, Gargano (Puglia) โ the last remnant of the ancient forest that covered all of Europe 10,000 years ago. Giant beech, oaks, and yews in a protected UNESCO biosphere. Hiking trails, free entry.