Although we visited Perugia on past trips, we never stayed overnight. Spending eight days there allowed us to better understand Perugia’s character and take day trips to nearby towns in Umbria. (The next post talks about the day trips.)
We were pleasantly surprised by Perugia. Although it is a city of 140,000, the center is quite compact and adjacent to several student neighborhoods, although these require a climb on steep hills. The population in the center is quite mixed in age. Students sit alongside families with small kids and older folks as they socialize on the two parallel main streets. There are shops that have not forgotten the local residents. A supermarket and a butcher shop are on one of these main streets. You only need to step a block or two away from the city center to become immersed in local flavors and to get your cappuccino and cornetto marmalade for less cost.
Our wanderings around town included a tour of “underground Perugia”—excavations under the cathedral that where you can see Etruscan columns and walls as well as Roman roads and walls. We even made it to a weaving business and museum that uses looms from the 1850s and is operated today by the fourth generation of its founder. It is a combination of history, art, and commerce all rolled into one. Very interesting. Damask linen tablecloths from Perugia were famous for centuries. They were included in the dowry of Catherine de Medici and depicted by da Vinci in the Last Supper. This weaving business continues to produce the traditional patterns as well as new ones commissioned for interior design projects.