Ronciglione 2026: The Cimini Town That Throws the Best February Carnival in Northern Lazio, Has a Medieval Quarter Nobody Visits, and Sits at the Edge of a Volcanic Lake Reserve

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: April 2026.

Ronciglione (a town of approximately 9,000 inhabitants in the Viterbo province — 55km north of Rome, at 407m altitude at the base of the Bosco del Cimino on the northern shore of the Lago di Vico volcanic crater lake) is simultaneously the Lazio Carnival capital (the Carnevale di Ronciglione — the February carnival that has been documented continuously since 1645, making it one of the oldest in Lazio), the most intact medieval hill town in the Viterbo-Cimini zone (the Rione Castello — the upper historic quarter with the specific 16th-century urban expansion ordered by the Farnese family, the dominant architectural ensemble of the town), and the northern gateway to the Lago di Vico nature reserve (the volcanic crater lake 4km south of the town center, the deepest natural lake in Lazio at 50m maximum depth, protected as a nature reserve since 1982).

The Carnevale di Ronciglione (the February carnival — held annually on the three Sundays preceding Shrove Tuesday and on Shrove Tuesday itself, the "martedì grasso") is the most extensively documented historical carnival in the Viterbo province: the specific Ronciglione carnival traditions include the "ruzzica" (the rolling of wine barrels down the steep Corso Umberto I during the final carnival Sunday — the specific Ronciglione tradition that no other Lazio carnival replicates), the horse racing (the "Ruzzica a cavallo" — horse races through the historic center streets that the February carnival has maintained since the Farnese period), and the specific Ronciglione mask tradition (the "Rugantino" — the Roman traditional masked figure — used as the primary Ronciglione carnival character).

Ronciglione: Carnival, Medieval Center, and Lake

The Rione Castello

The Rione Castello (the upper historic quarter of Ronciglione — the medieval and Farnese-period urban core on the hill above the lower Borgo and the Via Cassia commercial strip) is the specific architectural reason to visit Ronciglione outside carnival season: the Porta Romana (the main gate to the historic center, with the Farnese lily carved above the archway — the heraldic symbol of the Farnese family that held Ronciglione from 1537 to 1649), the steeply descending Corso Umberto I (the main street of the historic center, flanked by the specific 16th-century palazzo facades of the Farnese-period urban expansion — the street down which the wine barrels roll in the February carnival), and the specific panoramic position of the upper Castello quarter over the Lago di Vico and the Bosco del Cimino provide the complete Ronciglione architectural and landscape experience.

The Lago di Vico

The Lago di Vico (the volcanic crater lake 4km south of Ronciglione — the Riserva Naturale Regionale Lago di Vico, established 1982, covering the lake and the surrounding Cimino forest slopes) is accessible from Ronciglione via the SP Cassia Cimina road (the road that circles the lake perimeter): the lakeside picnic areas and the fishing spots on the eastern shore are the summer destination; the lake circuit walk (approximately 14km total) is the most complete exploration. The Lago di Vico water (fresh, clear, the volcanic mineral composition producing the specific lake water character) supports the specific Vico hazel (the Nocciole del Lago di Vico — the hazelnuts grown on the Cimino slopes above the lake, protected by Slow Food Presidio designation as a specific variety superior to the standard Italian hazelnut).

Q&A: Ronciglione

Is the Ronciglione carnival worth attending?

Yes — if you are within 100km of Rome in February. The Ronciglione carnival (the three carnival Sundays and Shrove Tuesday in February) is the most consistently atmospheric of the Northern Lazio historical carnivals: the horse racing through the Corso Umberto I (the specific event where horses gallop down the steep medieval street — the medieval-tournament feel in a genuine 16th-century urban setting) and the barrel rolling (the wine barrels released from the top of the Corso and rolling to the Porta Romana — the most specifically Ronciglione carnival tradition) are the events worth seeing in person. The carnival crowds (10,000-20,000 on the main days) require early arrival for position on the Corso.

Internal Links

Book top-rated tours & skip-the-line tickets for this trip