Italy Medieval Festivals 2026: The Living History Tradition That Never Stopped, From Tuscan Jousts to Umbrian Flag-Throwers
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Italy's medieval festival tradition is not re-enactment — it is continuation. The Giostra del Saracino in Arezzo has been held since at least 1593 with documentation, and almost certainly much earlier; the Palio d'Asti predates Siena's Palio by documented records; the crossbow competitions of Sansepolcro and Gubbio have been annual events since the 13th century. These are not staged historical performances created for tourism — they are civic rituals that the communities performing them would hold whether or not a single visitor attended. The medieval costume, the medieval competition format, the medieval neighborhood rivalry: these persist because the communities that hold them have chosen to maintain them as living identity markers rather than heritage attractions. The visitor who attends a Giostra del Saracino in Arezzo is watching a civic competition that the Aretini care about deeply and that has its own internal winners, losers, and passions completely independent of the tourist economy.
Giostra del Saracino, Arezzo — June and September
The Giostra del Saracino (Joust of the Saracen) in Arezzo (the city of Giorgio Vasari and Piero della Francesca, 80km from Florence) is the finest Italian medieval joust — a competition between four neighborhood contrade (Porta del Foro, Porta Sant'Andrea, Porta Crucifera, Porta Santo Spirito) in which mounted knights lance a target (the Saracen King, or Buratto) that rotates and swings a spiked ball back at the lancer. Points are scored by the precision of the lance strike; penalties are incurred if the rotating arm's spiked ball (the mazzafrusto) strikes the knight. The Piazza Grande — the same Piazza Grande that Vasari redesigned in the 16th century, one of the finest medieval-Renaissance squares in Italy — is converted into a sand jousting ground for the competition. The full event: the historical procession (corteo storico, approximately 300 participants in 13th–14th century Aretine costume), followed by the joust itself. Two editions annually: penultimate Saturday of June and first Sunday of September. Tickets (Piazza Grande stands): €25–60 depending on section and edition. The September edition is the more important (the annual championship); the June edition is slightly less attended. Book at giostradelSaracino.arezzo.it.
Palio d'Asti, Piedmont — Third Sunday of September
The Palio d'Asti (third Sunday of September) is Italy's oldest documented horse race — the first documented Asti Palio is from 1275, predating Siena's first documented Palio by several decades. Like Siena's Palio, the Asti race involves neighborhood contrade competing for a painted silk banner (the palio); unlike Siena, the Asti Palio lacks Siena's ferocious international tourist infrastructure and retains a more specifically local character. The race: 21 horses (one per neighborhood contrada of the historic city) competing in three heats and a final around the Campo del Palio — the central piazza of Asti converted for the event. The historical procession preceding the race: approximately 1,200 participants in medieval costume representing the noble families and guilds of 15th-century Asti. Free to watch the procession from the street; tickets required for the Campo del Palio racing stands (€10–35). The Asti wine context: Asti is the capital of the Moscato d'Asti and Barbera d'Asti wine regions — the September Palio coincides with the wine harvest festivals of the Monferrato and Langhe hills. A specific and underappreciated combination.
Giostra della Quintana, Foligno, Umbria — June and September
The Giostra della Quintana (Foligno, Umbria — 18km south of Assisi) is a mounted joust between ten neighborhood rioni (districts) of the medieval city — the horsemen at full gallop must lance a ring (the quintana — a pivoting target with an arm) of decreasing diameter through three heats. The event is held twice annually: second Sunday of June and third Sunday of September. The historical procession preceding the joust: approximately 800 participants in 17th-century Foligno costume (the historical period celebrated is specifically the reign of Trincio Trinci in the early 15th century). The Foligno event is one of the least internationally known of Italy's major medieval festivals — and therefore one of the most genuine in atmosphere. The Campo de' Giochi (the jousting field — a purpose-built oval within the city) provides specific spatial experience. Tickets: €15–40. Book at quintana.it.
Crossbow Competitions: Sansepolcro and Gubbio
Balestra del Palio, Sansepolcro (Arezzo province) — second Sunday of September: The crossbow competition between Sansepolcro and Gubbio — the two Umbrian crossbow guilds that have competed annually since at least 1461 — is one of the most specific and least touristically inflated of Italy's medieval events. Sansepolcro (birthplace of Piero della Francesca, 40km east of Arezzo) hosts the September competition; Gubbio hosts the May return match. The competing balestrieri (crossbowmen) use replica medieval crossbows (balestre) built to 15th-century specifications. Free to watch from the town's streets during the competition.
Palio della Balestra, Gubbio (Perugia province) — last Sunday of May: Gubbio's version of the annual Sansepolcro competition, held in the Piazza Grande of the extraordinary medieval hilltop city. The Gubbio Palio crossbow competition: archers from Gubbio and Sansepolcro compete with the medieval crossbow in the most visually specific setting of any Italian medieval competition — the 14th-century Palazzo dei Consoli as backdrop. Free to watch.
Flag-Throwing (Sbandieratori): The Competitive Art
The sbandieratori (flag-throwers) tradition — competitive flag-throwing and choreographed flag display, in medieval costume — is practiced throughout central Italy and forms part of the ceremonial programme of virtually every major medieval festival. The sbandieratori throw large silk flags to each other, in precisely choreographed sequences, catching them after complex aerial rotations. The most technically accomplished groups: the Sbandieratori di Arezzo (whose performance precedes every Giostra del Saracino), the Sbandieratori di Corciano (Umbria — a village 12km from Perugia whose sbandieratori group has competed internationally), and the Sbandieratori e Musici Città di Faenza (Emilia-Romagna). The sbandieratori tradition was catalogued and standardised by the Federazione Italiana Sbandieratori (Italian Flag-Throwing Federation, founded 1961) which organises national and international competitions.
12 Questions About Italian Medieval Festivals
Q1: What is the oldest medieval festival in Italy?
By documented record: the Palio d'Asti (first documented 1275) predates Siena's Palio in continuous documentation. However, the crossbow traditions of Sansepolcro and Gubbio have claimed competitions since the 13th century, and the Giostra del Saracino in Arezzo references are from the 14th century. The philosophical question of "oldest" depends on what counts as continuity — the Asti Palio has continuous documentation; many other events have documented medieval origins but with interrupted traditions subsequently restored. Asti's claim to Italy's oldest documented horse race is the most straightforwardly verifiable.
Q2: Is the Giostra del Saracino Arezzo free?
The historical procession through Arezzo's streets is free to watch from the pavement. The Piazza Grande joust requires a ticket (€25–60 depending on section). The same Piazza Grande is free to enter during the preceding days for the flag-throwing and drumming rehearsals. The September edition is more expensive and more attended than the June edition. For the most economical experience: watch the corteo storico (free) and find a street-level viewing position for the Piazza Grande perimeter.
Q3: How does the Giostra del Saracino differ from the Palio di Siena?
Both are neighborhood (contrada) competitions with historical processions and passionate local rivalry. Key differences: Siena's Palio is a horse race (the horse's placement determines the result — jockeys are secondary); the Giostra del Saracino is a mounted joust (the knight's lance precision determines the score). Siena's Palio is internationally famous and attracts enormous crowds; the Giostra del Saracino is less internationally known and retains more local atmosphere. Siena's Palio occurs in the Piazza del Campo (one of the world's great public spaces); the Giostra del Saracino occurs in Arezzo's Piazza Grande (also one of Italy's finest squares, but smaller and less well-known). The bribery, horse-swapping, and intrigue of the Siena contrade politics have no equivalent in Arezzo's more straightforward competition format.
Q4: What is the best Italian medieval festival for families?
The Giostra del Saracino in Arezzo (the joust visual is immediately exciting for children; the procession is spectacular; the Piazza Grande is compact enough for children to see clearly from standing positions). The Palio di Siena (the horse race is brief and thrilling, but the crowd density and the very early arrival required for good standing positions makes it difficult with young children). The Quintana in Foligno (the quieter atmosphere and the smaller crowds make it more manageable with children). For families with children over 8: the Calcio Storico Fiorentino (June 24, Florence — the medieval football-wrestling hybrid is visually spectacular and immediately comprehensible to children, though the violence level is high for very young children).
Q5: What costume period do Italian medieval festivals represent?
Most Italian medieval festivals represent a specific historical period relevant to the city's own history rather than generic "medieval" — the Giostra del Saracino represents 13th–14th century Arezzo; the Quintana di Foligno represents specifically the Trinci lordship of the early 15th century; the Palio d'Asti represents 15th-century Asti under the Visconti and then Sforza. The costume quality is taken seriously — the historical research committees of the major Italian festivals have academic consultants who verify that the fabrics, construction techniques, and heraldic devices used in the costumes correspond to documented historical practice for the specific period and place.
Q6: Are there medieval festivals in southern Italy?
Fewer and less institutionalised than in central Italy, but significant ones exist. The Palio di Taranto (June) includes a medieval historical procession and crossbow competition. The Festival Normando di Salerno (September) celebrates the Norman conquest of southern Italy in the 11th century with a historical pageant. In Sicily: the Palio del Normanni di Piazza Armerina (August 12–14) celebrates the Norman capture of the town from the Saracens in 1087 with a jousting tournament. The Norman heritage in southern Italy provides a different medieval narrative from the Tuscan-Umbrian rione competition tradition.
Q7: What is the corteo storico and how long does it last?
The corteo storico (historical procession) is the costume parade that precedes most major Italian medieval festival competitions. Participants: representatives of the competing neighborhoods in full medieval costume — knights, standard-bearers, drummers (tamburini), flag-throwers (sbandieratori), pages, and the representatives of the historical nobility and guilds. The Giostra del Saracino corteo: approximately 300 participants, duration 45–60 minutes for the full Piazza Grande entry. The Quintana di Foligno corteo: approximately 800 participants, 60–90 minutes. The corteo storico is often more visually impressive than the competition itself for the detail and quality of the costumes — the silk brocades, the gilded armour, the horses in medieval caparison (decorative horse covering).
Q8: Can I participate in an Italian medieval festival as a visitor?
Directly in the competition: no — the contrada membership is hereditary or long-term residency based; outsiders cannot simply join a competing neighborhood for a festival. As a spectator in costume: some festivals have specific "historical market" or "medieval village" components where visitors can rent or purchase period-appropriate clothing and participate in the surrounding events. The Mercato Medievale (medieval market) — a common addition to major Italian medieval festivals — provides a context where visitors in appropriate clothing feel more integrated into the event. The most direct visitor participation: taking part in the sbandieratori workshops that some Umbrian and Tuscan flag-throwing groups offer to visitors, or the drumming workshops (tamburini) available at some festival education programmes.
Q9: What is the Giostra dell'Orso in Pistoia?
The Giostra dell'Orso (Bear Joust) in Pistoia (Tuscany, 35km from Florence) — held on July 25, feast of San Jacopo, Pistoia's patron saint — is a mounted competition in which four neighborhood quartieri (Porta al Borgo, Porta Carratica, Porta Funambolica, Porta San Marco) compete by lancing a target in the shape of a bear. The event is smaller in scale than the Arezzo Giostra but has an equally serious local following. Pistoia's civic identity is strongly attached to the Giostra dell'Orso as a defining annual event. Free to watch from the Piazza del Duomo where the event takes place.
Q10: What is the Bravio delle Botti in Montepulciano?
The Bravio delle Botti (last Sunday of August, Montepulciano — the wine town of southern Tuscany, 120km from Florence) is a barrel-rolling race between eight neighborhood contrade — teams of two roll a heavy wine barrel (botte) up the main street of Montepulciano to the Piazza Grande at the top of the hill. The race is a specifically working-class medieval competition (the barrel-rolling imagery references the wine trade that built Montepulciano's wealth) embedded in the Vino Nobile di Montepulciano wine production context. Free to watch from the street. The combination of a steep hill, very heavy barrels, and fierce neighborhood competition produces genuine athletic drama.
Q11: Is the Palio di Siena a medieval festival?
The Palio di Siena (July 2 and August 16) meets most criteria for a medieval festival — neighborhood rivalry, historical costume (the corteo storico preceding each Palio is the most elaborate in Italy), and a competition format with medieval precedent. However, the Siena contrade system is sufficiently complex and the current Palio sufficiently managed by commercial and tourist interests that calling it simply "medieval" undersells its specific character. The Siena Palio is more accurately described as a living civic ritual — the competition is genuinely real, the neighborhood identity is lived daily (not performed only at the Palio), and the emotional stakes for the Sienesi are at a level that medieval festival re-enactment doesn't approach. See: Siena Palio in the patronal feast context.
Q12: Where can I find a complete calendar of Italian medieval festivals?
The Federazione Italiana dei Giochi Storici (fedegiochi.it — the Italian Federation of Historical Games) maintains a calendar of the affiliated competitions. The regional tourist boards publish local event calendars: Umbria (umbriatourism.it), Tuscany (visittuscany.com), Marche (turismo.marche.it). The most comprehensive single source: sagre.info lists medieval festivals alongside food festivals. For Tuscan medieval events specifically: the Comune di Arezzo (arezzo.it) website is the authoritative source for the Giostra del Saracino; the Comune di Foligno (comune.foligno.pg.it) for the Quintana.
What Others Don't Tell You
The emotional experience of an Italian medieval festival is entirely different depending on whether you understand the neighborhood rivalry involved. The Giostra del Saracino in Arezzo — viewed by someone who doesn't know which contrada has won or lost in recent years, who doesn't recognise the neighborhood colors, who doesn't understand that the winning neighborhood's captain will be carried through the streets on shoulders while the losing quarter's supporters weep — produces a pleasant spectacle. Viewed by someone who has spent an hour the day before talking to an Aretino about the inter-neighborhood politics of the last five years, the same event produces a completely different, much more intense experience. The Italian medieval festival tradition repays the small preparation investment of knowing the specific rivalry involved. Ask the hotel concierge; ask the restaurant waiter; ask anyone in Arezzo on Giostra weekend which contrada they support and why.
Curiosities About Italian Medieval Festivals
- The Giostra del Saracino's Buratto (the Saracen target) has traditionally depicted a dark-skinned figure representing the Saracen adversary of the Crusades. The specific iconography — the rotating figure whose spiked arm punishes the inaccurate lancer — is a medieval tournament tradition common throughout European jousting practice. Modern Arezzo has engaged with the question of whether this imagery is compatible with contemporary sensibilities; the tradition has been maintained with discussion rather than abolition, on the grounds that the specific Aretine identity attached to the ritual outweighs the discomfort of the imagery in its medieval context.
- The sbandieratori flag-throwing tradition was documented in Renaissance treatises on tournament practice and civic ceremony. Giorgio Vasari (born in Arezzo, the same city as the Giostra del Saracino) mentions flag-throwing displays in his accounts of Florentine civic celebrations under the Medici. The specific throwing and catching techniques — the "throw behind the back," the "double partner catch," the synchronized mass throws of the full company — were codified in the 16th century and are the techniques still taught by the major Italian sbandieratori groups today.
Useful Links
- Italy's great patronal feasts
- Italian religious procession tradition
- Arezzo day trip from Florence
- Reading about medieval Italy
Quick Reference: Italy Medieval Festivals 2026
| Giostra del Saracino Arezzo | June (penultimate Sat) + Sept (1st Sun) | Piazza Grande | tickets €25–60 | giostradelSaracino.arezzo.it |
|---|---|
| Palio d'Asti | 3rd Sunday September | oldest documented Italian horse race | €10–35 | local |
| Quintana Foligno | 2nd Sunday June + 3rd Sunday September | mounted ring joust | €15–40 | quintana.it |
| Balestra Sansepolcro–Gubbio | May (Gubbio) + September (Sansepolcro) | medieval crossbow | free |
| Calcio Storico Florence | June 24 | violent medieval football | tickets boxofficetoscana.it |
| Bravio delle Botti Montepulciano | Last Sunday August | barrel race up the hill | free | wine town context |