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Villas Rental in Orvieto, Umbria
Just imagine that if you won’t get comfortable accommodation while you are on your holidays? It could be the worse experience you can have during your holidays. A large villas rental with fabulous gardens and private swimming pool in area of Umbria will be the dream accommodation for most of visitors familiar with Italy. We at Posarelli Villas can make your dream come true with our beautiful villa rental in Umbria.
We, at Posarelli Villas offer a vast and diversified range of accommodations for rental in Orvieto and across Umbria. Our range of accommodation is carefully selected for facilitating both cost conscious and luxury seeking travelers.
Our villas accommodations can be suitable for small group of 4-5 members to a fairly large group. Our villa accommodation rental option has been carefully selected so as to main our quality standards.
Most of the tourists plan for holidays just to get relaxed, have fun and get change from their routine tedious job and still if you are not getting comfortable accommodation during your tour then you just won’t be able to get relaxed during your holidays at all. So to get what you have plan book your holiday villa rental in Orvieto in advance and have piece of mind upon arrival of city.
We have cost effective as well as luxurious villas to rent taking in mind both cost conscious as well luxury seeking travelers. Some of our Orvieto accommodations also offer luxurious villas facilitating private swimming pools. Hurry up and book your choice of villas rental in Orvieto online.
With us, all your accommodation rental needs in Italy are covered.
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About Orvieto
Orvieto is a city in southwestern Umbria, in Italy, on the flat summit of a large butte of volcanic tuff. The city is among the most dramatic in Europe, rising above the vertical faces of tuff cliffs and completed by defensive walls made of the same stone.
Orvieto was certainly a major centre of Etruscan Civilisation. In fact, the Archaeological Museum houses some of the Etruscan handcrafts that have been recovered in the immediate neighborhood. An interesting survival that might show the complexity of ethnic relations in ancient Italy is the inscription on a tomb in the Orvieto Cannicella necropolis: mi aviles katacinas, "I am of Avile Katacina", with an Etruscan-Latin first name (Aulus) and a family name that is believed to be of Celtic origin.
Orvieto was annexed by Rome in the third century BC. After the collapse of the Roman Empire Orvieto gained new importance: the Episcopal see was transferred from Bolsena, and the city was held by Goths and by Lombards before its self governing commune was established in the 10th century, in which consuls governed under the bishop. Orvieto's relationship to the papacy has actually been a close one, in fact the territory of Orvieto was under papal control long before it was officially added to the Papal States and it remained a papal possession until 1860.
The long history of Orvieto has left us many monuments to visit: its Gothic Cathedral (the Duomo), the Miracle and Corporal of Bolsena, the Papal Residence, the Etruscan Ruins, the Palazzo del Capitano del Popolo, the Albornoz fortress and also the underground city: in fact the city of Orvieto is characterized by the secret of its labyrinth of caves and tunnels that lie beneath the surface. Dug deep into the tuff, these hidden and secret tunnels are only now open to visits with guided tours.
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