Umbria · Perugia
Massa Martana
Umbria's Via Flaminia BPB — a 3,613-resident borgo on the original Roman consular road between Rome and Rimini, with the intact 9th-c Abbazia dei Santi Fidenzio e Terenzio above town, a network of Roman-era catacombe Cristiane (Catacombe di Villa San Faustino, the only ones in Umbria), and the Borghi più belli inscription restored after the 1997 Marche-Umbria earthquake.
Known for
VIA FLAMINIA PASSAGE
The original Roman consular road (220 BC, Rome to Rimini) passes directly through. Sections of Roman paving visible in the surrounding countryside.
UMBRIA'S ONLY CATACOMBE
Catacombe di Villa San Faustino — the only Roman-era Christian catacombs in all of Umbria. 200+ tombs, original frescoes, 3rd-6th c AD.
BORGHI PIÙ BELLI (RESTORED)
Re-inscribed after the meticulous reconstruction following the 1997 Marche-Umbria earthquake.
ABBAZIA DEI SANTI FIDENZIO
9th-c Benedictine abbey on the hill — surviving Carolingian elements + 12th-c restorations. The major monastic survivor of the comune.
When to visit
Best · Apr–Jun, Sep–Oct
- J
- F
- M
- A
- M
- J
- J
- A
- S
- O
- N
- D
- Best
- Hot or crowded
- Quiet
- Mostly closed
The festa: Felice di Massa Martana, 30 October
Why come
Massa Martana is here for the Roman road. The Via Flaminia (the original 220 BC consular road from Rome north over the Apennines to Rimini, the spine of Roman Italian infrastructure for 500+ years) passes directly through the village — and Massa Martana sits at exactly the point where the road begins climbing into the Apennine pre-massif, with sections of the original Roman paving still visible in the surrounding countryside. This made the area an important late-antique Christian community: the Catacombe di Villa San Faustino (3-4 km north of the centro) are the only Roman-era Christian catacombs in all of Umbria — discovered 1968, in continuous use from the 3rd to the 6th c AD, with 200+ tombs, original frescoes, and Latin inscriptions.
The Abbazia dei Santi Fidenzio e Terenzio (9th-c Benedictine, on the hill above town, with surviving Carolingian elements + 12th-c restorations) is the other major monastic-era survivor. The town itself is 3,613 residents altitude in central Umbria, 17 km southeast of Todi, with a medieval-Renaissance centro that was severely damaged by the 26 September 1997 Marche-Umbria earthquake (the same event that brought down the vault of the Basilica di San Francesco in Assisi). The reconstruction was completed in stages through 2010, and the town was re-inscribed on the Borghi più belli d'Italia list after restoration.
Today the centro reads as a meticulously restored small medieval ensemble — the Porta Santa Maria, the Chiesa Madre di San Felice (rebuilt), the Palazzo Comunale, the Torre Civica. Surroundings: the Monti Martani limestone massif (the prehistoric source of the Martana name) rises immediately east, with marked hiking trails, the Lago di Corbara just south, and the Todi UNESCO-fortified town 17 km away. The food is Umbrian: strangozzi with truffle (Umbria's signature pasta), porchetta, salumi, Pecorino, the local Sagrantino di Montefalco 25 km west. The Festa di San Felice (25 January) and the Sagra del Tartufo (October) are the year's main events.
The Sunday letter
We haven’t written Massa Martana’s letter yet.
One town every Sunday, with the photo, the food, the festa. Be there when this one comes up. Free, by Peter & Sophia from Pietrasanta.
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What to see
Via Flaminia Roman road
Original 220 BC consular road from Rome to Rimini passes directly through. Sections of Roman paving visible in the surrounding countryside — the spine of Roman Italian infrastructure for 500+ years.
Catacombe di Villa San Faustino
The only Roman-era Christian catacombs in all of Umbria — 3-4 km north of the centro, in use 3rd-6th c AD, with 200+ tombs, original frescoes, Latin inscriptions. Guided tours.
Abbazia dei Santi Fidenzio e Terenzio
9th-c Benedictine abbey on the hill above town. Surviving Carolingian elements + 12th-c restorations. The most important monastic survivor in the comune.
Centro storico (restored after 1997 earthquake)
Meticulously restored medieval-Renaissance centro — Porta Santa Maria, Chiesa Madre di San Felice, Palazzo Comunale, Torre Civica. Re-inscribed BPB after reconstruction.
Monti Martani + Todi
Monti Martani limestone massif immediately east (the prehistoric source of the Martana name) — marked hiking trails. Todi UNESCO-fortified town 17 km away.
The slow-trip planner
Building a trip? Find where Massa Martana fits in a slow Italy circuit.
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Living here
- Population 3,613
- Commuter belti
- Pharmacy in town
- High school within a 30-minute drive
- Train station in the comune
- Nearest airport Rome, 2 h 15 min drive
- Regional capital Perugia, 52 min drive
Tags & datadesignations · numbers · sources
Recognised as
The numbers
- Elevation: 351 m
- Population: 3,613
- Surface area: 78.41 km²
These figures were compiled from public directories — ISTAT, OpenStreetMap, Wikidata — and from the official listings of the guides named on this page. Town details change; verify with official sources before you travel.
Close by
More towns near Massa Martana

Acquasparta
Province: Terni
A hill town at 350 meters above the Naia valley, where Federico Cesi convened the first Accademia dei Lincei in his Palazzo Cesi in 1603.

Todi
Province: Perugia
A walled hill town at 398 meters on the Tiber, with Etruscan, Roman, and medieval rings stacked up Colle Nidoli.

Giano dell'Umbria
Province: Perugia
A hill commune at 547 meters between Foligno, Spoleto and Todi, anchored by a Romanesque abbey founded over the tomb of a fourth-century martyr.

San Gemini
Province: Terni
A medieval borgo at 337 meters above the Via Flaminia, four kilometers below the ruins of Roman Carsulae.

Montefalco
Province: Perugia
The hilltop wine capital of Umbria at 472 meters, where Sagrantino is grown almost nowhere else and Benozzo Gozzoli painted Francis in 1452.
🎨 Borghi più belli d'Italia
More Borghi più belli d'Italia towns in Umbria

Allerona
Province: Terni
A stone borgo at 472 meters between the Paglia valley and the Valdichiana, an Orvieto outpost whose Monaldeschi castle fell to Charles V.

Arrone
Province: Terni
Medieval castle village on the left bank of the Nera at 243 meters, upstream from the largest man-made waterfall in the world.

Bettona
Province: Perugia
A hill town at 353 meters between the Topino and Chiascio rivers, the only Etruscan settlement ever built east of the Tiber.

Bevagna
Province: Perugia
Roman Mevania on the Umbrian plain at 225 meters, four medieval quarters that compete every June in a reconstructed market of the 13th century.

Castiglione del Lago
Province: Perugia
Trasimeno's western promontory, once the lake's fourth island, fortified by Federico II in 1247 and frescoed by Pomarancio for the Corgna marquises.
