Felline
Felline is a small town in the Alliste area where there is no noise and everything is slow and calm, as if the time has stopped. The houses are all white with ochre friezes and many of them have been bought by foreigners, especially people from Great Britain fond calmness and tranquillity. Once in the heart of the town, the asphalt has been replaced by basalt paving stones and if you look above the roofs of the houses, you will see hundreds of chimneys which seem to protect the 1.600 inhabitants. You will not see enormous palaces, the preciousness of this little town lies just in its simplicity, in its narrow streets which lead into cosy little squares.
Felline has a long history: its Roman origins go side by side with the Greek tradition, as appeared in 1967 when the archeaologists found out underground passages, paved floors and remains of ancient furnaces for burning bricks. As the town had suffered attacks from the Turks, its inhabitants were about to abandon it; for this reason the Bonsecolo family ordered to build a strong Castle and some sighting towers along the Jonian coast. Still today you can admire the Castle, that was the residence of famous families (for example we know that Pia de’ Tolomei’s relatives lived here).
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