Set out on the Tour Cássia e Assis, a six- to seven-hour pilgrimage through central Italy’s holy and historic heart, beginning near Riglione-Oratoio in Toscana. The route stitches two distinct traditions: the intimate, devotional spaces of Cássia and the monumental art and medieval streets of Assis. In Cássia, the day reads like a catalogue of devotion: a fifteenth‑century monastery now dedicated to Santa Rita preserves the urn that holds her incorrupt body, the tiny cell where she received her forehead wound, the weathered wooden coffin that first contained her remains and the ring carved as two joined hands. A low stone wall still shelters beehives that local lore says tended the saint, and a modest rose garden marks the place where miracles are said to have bloomed. Those tactile relics — a rosary, a ring, a faded portrait — make the spiritual tangible in a way a textbook cannot.
An hour or two away, Assis opens into high, frescoed vaulted rooms and narrow streets with Roman foundations. The Basilica of San Francesco displays the saint’s tomb and a cycle of frescoes by Giotto, Simone Martini and Pietro Lorenzetti; the paintings chart the life of Francis in saturated color and spare, deliberate gestures. Walk the principal thoroughfare to admire compact, medieval façades, then slip into the Templo Romano dedicated to Minerva, where classical architecture folds into medieval town planning. The Basilica of Santa Clara holds the tomb and relics of Saint Clare, completing a day that threads female and male contemplative traditions into a single itinerary.
Practical notes: the tour lasts roughly six to seven hours and the meeting point is provided after booking. Expect periods of standing, stairways inside basilicas and uneven cobbles in town centers; modest dress is required for all consecrated spaces. Language support and group size are not listed; check with the operator for accessibility concerns.
Why go: this tour pairs intimate devotional sites with world-class medieval art, letting visitors follow pilgrimage routes that have shaped local identity for centuries. It’s ideal for travelers who want context as well as spectacle — people who care about stones, stories and the way art and faith curl together in quiet chapels and sunlit piazzas. Bring comfortable shoes, curiosity and a readiness to move between silence and civic life in central Italy’s storied hill towns.
Plan for morning light in Assis to see frescoes with minimal shadows, and allow time for a short café stop to taste Umbrian olive oil and house-made pasta in a nearby trattoria. Wear layered clothing: churches can be cool, piazzas warm. If you travel by car, expect narrow lanes and limited parking; public transport links exist but verify seasonal schedules before you go and book.