Duomo di Lucca

Understanding Lucca: History, Mindset and Urban Identity

Photo/Map: Arne Müseler / arne-mueseler.com Lucca is often described as a “small Tuscan town,” usually mentioned in passing between Florence and Pisa.This definition is not only inaccurate — it is misleading. Lucca is a city with a very strong identity, shaped by centuries of independence, trade, religion, and a deep sense of civic pride. To …

Best Day Trips From Lucca With a Local Guide

Lucca is often visited for its beautiful Renaissance walls, quiet streets, and extraordinary churches. Yet one of the city’s greatest strengths is something many visitors initially overlook: its surrounding countryside. Within a short distance from the historic center, the landscape opens into a network of vineyards, olive groves, historic villas, and small hilltop villages that …

Lucca Beyond the Walls: Day Trips, Villas and Countryside Experiences

Lucca is often experienced as a self-contained city, enclosed within its perfectly preserved Renaissance walls.This perception is understandable — the walls are iconic, protective, and visually complete. But it is also incomplete. Historically, Lucca has never existed in isolation.Its identity was shaped just as much by what lies outside the walls: villas scattered across the …

Lucca's city center

Is Lucca Worth Visiting? Guide to a Lucca Walking Tour & Private Visit

Travelers planning a trip to Tuscany often ask the same question: is Lucca worth visiting? Surrounded by perfectly preserved Renaissance walls and filled with medieval streets, historic churches, and quiet piazzas, Lucca offers something that many other Tuscan destinations have gradually lost — balance. Unlike larger cities such as Florence or Pisa, Lucca has maintained …

Lucca's Cathedral

The Churches of Lucca Explained: Art, Faith and Civic Identity

Lucca is often described as “the city of one hundred churches.” The number is symbolic rather than exact, but the idea is correct: few cities of this size concentrate such a density of religious buildings. What makes Lucca unique, however, is not quantity — it is function. Lucca’s churches were not only built to impress …

Lucca's Amphitheater

How to Visit Lucca Properly: Time, Pace and Perspective

Lucca is often described as “easy to visit.”It is small, walkable, and free from the overwhelming scale of larger Tuscan cities. And yet, many visitors leave with the feeling that they missed something. This usually happens not because of lack of time, but because of pace and perspective. Lucca does not reward rushing, ticking boxes, …