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Lake Bolsena

July 14, 2026
Lake Bolsena
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Introduction · Villages & places · Food & wine · Traditions · Planning · Real estate · Weddings · Itinerary · FAQ
Lake Bolsena — panoramic view

Lake Bolsena

Europe’s largest volcanic lake, between Lazio, Umbria and Tuscany

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Introduction

The crater that became a freshwater sea

Formed by the calderic collapse of the Volsini volcanic complex more than 300,000 years ago, Lake Bolsena is Europe’s largest volcanic lake and Italy’s fifth-largest lake, covering about 113.5 km² with a maximum depth of 151 metres. It lies entirely in the province of Viterbo, in the Alta Tuscia area, at 305 metres above sea level, close to where Lazio, Umbria and Tuscany meet. Source: Wikipedia

It is one of the few large Italian lakes that is entirely swimmable, with waters so clear that local fishermen say “this is the lake you can drink.” That quality led to its 2005 proposal as a site of Community interest for its biodiversity. Its shores, low-lying and partly covered in black volcanic sand, hold two islands, Bisentina and Martana, and three main lakeside towns: Bolsena, Marta and Capodimonte. Source: Wikipedia

📍
113.5 km²
Surface area
🌋
151 m
Maximum depth
🏝️
2
Islands: Bisentina and Martana
🚗
~120 km
Distance from Rome

Data verified on Wikipedia · and Expedia Explore

What makes it unique

Why Lake Bolsena stands apart

🌋 Europe’s largest volcanic lake

Born from the calderic collapse of the Volsini volcanic complex, the lake has a near-circular shape typical of its origin, with a shoreline of about 43 km that can be followed along a scenic road linking every lakeside town. Source: Global Geografia

⛪ The Eucharistic Miracle of 1263

In Bolsena’s Basilica of Santa Cristina, a consecrated host held by a Bohemian priest who doubted the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist is said to have bled. The event led Pope Urban IV to institute the feast of Corpus Christi for the whole Church in 1264. Source: Wikipedia

🍷 The home of Est! Est!! Est!!!

Montefiascone is the birthplace of one of Tuscia’s most famous white wines, whose curious name comes from a medieval legend involving the German bishop Johannes Defuk, buried in the church of San Flaviano. Source: Wikipedia

Places to see

The towns and wonders of Lake Bolsena

Bolsena

Bolsena

The town that gives the lake its name sits on the slopes of the Volsini hills and holds the Italian Touring Club’s Orange Flag certification. It is home to the Monaldeschi della Cervara fortress with the territorial museum and the Basilica of Santa Cristina, site of the Eucharistic Miracle. Italia.it

Marta

Marta

A picturesque fishing village on the southern shore, with medieval lanes, the Sanctuary of the Madonna del Monte, and a small harbour where traditional Etruscan-style fishing boats can still be seen. Italia Ignota

Capodimonte

Capodimonte

Perched on a headland jutting into the lake, it is dominated by the 16th-century Rocca Farnese; boats to Isola Bisentina depart from here, and the town also houses the Museum of Inland Water Navigation. Italia Ignota

Montefiascone

Montefiascone

Standing 600 metres above sea level, it is known as the “belvedere of Tuscia”: home to the Rocca dei Papi, the fortress built for Innocent III with the Museum of Architecture dedicated to Antonio da Sangallo the Younger, and the church of San Flaviano. Archeoares

Isola Bisentina

Isola Bisentina

The larger of the lake’s two islands (17 hectares), once owned by the Farnese family, holds seven churches — including one designed by Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola — an Italian-style garden, and the grim “Malta dei Papi” carved into the tuff. It can only be reached by boat from Capodimonte or Bolsena. SiViaggia

Isola Martana

Isola Martana

The smaller of the two islands, facing Marta, was the scene of the 535 AD murder of the Ostrogothic queen Amalasuntha. It is privately owned and uninhabited today, but can be circled by boat. Wikipedia

Beaches

The lake’s beaches

Free public beaches are found in Bolsena and Marta, while the Le Naiadi and Riva Verde bathing establishments are in Bolsena, with more in Capodimonte’s Sacro Cuore hamlet; Cavajano beach is the quietest and least crowded. Expedia Explore

Wildlife

Life in the lake

The waters are home to pike, tench, roach, mullet, freshwater crayfish, whitefish (the most commonly caught fish) and the famous eels, even mentioned by Dante in the Divine Comedy in connection with Pope Martin IV. Wikipedia

Vatican

The Mass at Bolsena, Raphael

The 1263 event was immortalised by Raphael in his fresco “The Mass at Bolsena” (1512), part of the decorative cycle in Julius II’s apartments in the Vatican Museums. Aleteia

Orvieto

Orvieto Cathedral

According to an old tradition, Orvieto Cathedral was built in connection with the Miracle of Bolsena, and it still houses the reliquary holding the blood-stained corporal, a 14th-century work by Ugolino di Vieri. Maria di Nazareth

Bolsena

Rocca Monaldeschi della Cervara

The 13th-century fortress overlooking Bolsena now houses the Territorial Museum of Lake Bolsena, with finds ranging from prehistoric settlements to the Etruscan and Roman civilisations. Italia.it

Food & wine

The flavours of Lake Bolsena

The cuisine of the Bolsena shores grows straight out of the lake itself: freshwater fish such as tench, pike, perch, eel and whitefish meet garden herbs — wild mint, onion, garlic — in age-old recipes once cooked by fishermen right on the sand of the shore. Source: Lago di Bolsena

🍲 Sbroscia, the queen of lake cuisine

This is the region’s signature fish soup, tied especially to the fishing village of Marta: born from off-cut fish (tench, pike, eel, whitefish, perch), slow-cooked with garlic, onion, wild mint, tomato and potatoes, and served over slices of toasted stale bread with a drizzle of local extra virgin olive oil. Source: CiboToday

🐟 Bolsena whitefish (coregone)

Introduced from northern Italian lakes at the end of the 19th century, whitefish (also called “lavarello” or “freshwater sea bass”) is today the most commonly caught fish in the lake and is listed among the traditional agri-food products of the province of Viterbo. It is enjoyed roasted “alla bolsenese,” grilled, or served with the local martana sauce. Source: Il Giornale del Cibo

Sbroscia

Mixed lake-fish soup with potatoes, tomato and wild mint, served over stale bread.

Whitefish alla bolsenese

Cleaned whitefish oven-baked with oil, garlic, vinegar, salt and pepper.

Fried lattarini

Small silvery fish fried whole, the stars of Marta’s Sagra del Lattarino festival.

Perch fillets

Golden-fried or served in sauce, among the lake’s most popular fish mains.

Martana sauce

A red sauce typical of Marta, traditionally served with boiled whitefish.

Est! Est!! Est!!! DOC

Montefiascone’s white wine from Trebbiano and Malvasia grapes, ideal with lake fish.

VisitLazio · Sapori

🍷 Local wines

Est! Est!! Est!!! di Montefiascone has held DOC status since 1966, made from Trebbiano Toscano, Trebbiano Giallo (Rossetto) and Malvasia bianca grapes grown on the volcanic soils around the lake, across the municipalities of Montefiascone, Bolsena, San Lorenzo Nuovo, Grotte di Castro, Gradoli, Capodimonte and Marta. Source: Wikipedia

Traditions

Traditions and festivals of Lake Bolsena

🎉 The 2026 events calendar

🐟 Sagra del Lattarino — Marta, 29-31 May

Now in its 49th edition since 1976, this is among Italy’s ten most important folk festivals and holds the Guinness World Record for the largest frying pan in the world (over 3 metres across), used to fry freshly caught lattarini. Source: Eventi della Tuscia

⛪ Corpus Christi and the Infiorata — Bolsena, June

The procession commemorating the 1263 Eucharistic Miracle winds through about 3 km of the old town, entirely carpeted with an artistic flower “infiorata” hand-made by local residents using petals, leaves and seeds. Source: Pro Loco Bolsena

🎣 Festa del Pescatore — Marta, 9 August 2026

Started in 1998, this festival serves a menu built around whitefish, perch and pike caught the same day, on the lakefront at the Borgo dei Pescatori. Source: Meteo Marta

🎭 Misteri di Santa Cristina — Bolsena, 23-24 July 2026

An ancient historical-religious tableau vivant recounting the martyrdom of Bolsena’s patron saint, recognised as one of Italy’s “Wonders.” Source: Visit Bolsena

⛪ The Eucharistic Miracle and the birth of Corpus Christi

In the summer of 1263, the Bohemian priest Pietro da Praga, doubting the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist, celebrated Mass in the church of Santa Cristina along the Via Cassia; at the consecration, the host is said to have begun to bleed. Pope Urban IV, informed while in Orvieto, declared the event supernatural and, with the 1264 bull “Transiturus de hoc mundo,” extended the feast of Corpus Christi to the whole Catholic Church, entrusting Saint Thomas Aquinas with writing its liturgical texts. Source: Wikipedia

🍇 The legend of Est! Est!! Est!!!

In 1111, travelling with Henry V of Germany on his way to Rome for his imperial coronation, was the wine-loving bishop Johannes Defuk. His servant Martino, sent ahead to mark the best inns by writing “Est” (“there is,” meaning good wine) on their doors, was so struck by the wine in Montefiascone that he wrote it three times. Defuk lingered so long that he reportedly died from excess, and is buried in the church of San Flaviano under an epitaph recalling the story. Source: Archeoares

Planning

Planning your stay

📍 Where it is

Lake Bolsena lies in northern Lazio, about 120 km from Rome and around 40 minutes by car from Viterbo, along the historic Via Cassia, not far from Monte Amiata and Orvieto. Source: Expedia Explore

🏨 Where to stay

Accommodation around the lake ranges from historic lakefront hotels such as Hotel Eden, Hotel Lido, Hotel Holiday and Hotel Columbus in Bolsena, to numerous farm stays, bed & breakfasts and campsites concentrated mainly along the eastern and southern shores. Source: lagodibolsena.org

🚴 What to do

Besides swimming, the lake offers canoeing, diving, mountain biking, horse riding, sport fishing and trekking along historic routes such as the Via Francigena, the Via Clodia and the Sentiero dei Briganti. Source: Bolsena.it

Real estate

The property market around Lake Bolsena

Property in the area ranges from small apartments in historic centres starting around €40,000-50,000 to restored farmhouses, lakeview villas and prized agricultural estates that can exceed a million euros; Bolsena, Marta, Capodimonte, Montefiascone and Grotte di Castro are among the most sought-after towns. Source: idealista.it

Bolsena’s Castello district, the medieval heart of the town overlooking the lake, is among the most in-demand areas for historic apartments and small palazzos in need of renovation, while Marta and Capodimonte offer options just steps from the lakefront. Source: Casa.it

Destination weddings

Getting married on the shores of Lake Bolsena

The lake is considered one of Lazio’s ideal romantic settings for a destination wedding, thanks to its historic residences, medieval fortresses and rolling hills straddling Lazio and Umbria. Source: Matrimonio.com

Popular venues include historic lakefront hotels in Bolsena such as Hotel Eden, Hotel Lido and Hotel Holiday, as well as lakeview estates like Villa Caviciana in Gradoli and La Carrozza d’Oro in Montefiascone, which can host up to 700 guests. Source: Matrimonio.com

For something more unusual, ceremonies can even be held aboard a boat, with stops at the Bisentina and Martana islands for photographs and a toast with local wine and produce. Source: Events and Locations

Detailed itinerary

A 3-day itinerary around the lake

Day 1

Bolsena

Start in the town that gives the lake its name: the Monaldeschi della Cervara fortress with its territorial museum, the Basilica of Santa Cristina, and the medieval lanes built of local peperino stone. Source: Italia Ignota

Day 2

Marta and Capodimonte

Follow the shore to Marta, a fishing village with the Sanctuary of the Madonna del Monte, then continue to Capodimonte and its Rocca Farnese, the departure point for boats to Isola Bisentina. Source: Italia Ignota

Day 3

Montefiascone

The final stop is Tuscia’s belvedere: the Rocca dei Papi, the church of San Flaviano with Bishop Defuk’s tomb, and a tasting of Est! Est!! Est!!! DOC with a view over the lake. Source: Archeoares

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Frequently asked questions

FAQ — Lake Bolsena

It covers about 113.5 km², making it Italy’s fifth-largest lake and Europe’s largest volcanic lake. Source: Wikipedia

Yes — it’s one of the few large Italian lakes that is entirely swimmable, with free beaches in Bolsena and Marta and bathing facilities in Bolsena and Capodimonte. Source: Wikipedia

They are the lake’s two islands: Bisentina, once owned by the Farnese family and open to boat tours, and Martana, smaller, privately owned, and linked to the story of Queen Amalasuntha. Source: SiViaggia

Sbroscia, a lake-fish soup (tench, pike, eel, whitefish) with potatoes, tomato and wild mint, born as an everyday meal for fishermen. Source: CiboToday

It is Montefiascone’s DOC white wine, made from Trebbiano and Malvasia grapes, named after a 1111 medieval legend involving Bishop Johannes Defuk. Source: Wikipedia

It refers to the 1263 event in which a consecrated host is said to have bled during Mass in Bolsena, leading to the institution of the Catholic feast of Corpus Christi by Pope Urban IV in 1264. Source: Wikipedia

About 120 km, roughly an hour and a half by car along the Via Cassia. Source: Expedia Explore

Among others, the Sagra del Lattarino in Marta (29-31 May), the Misteri di Santa Cristina in Bolsena (23-24 July), and the Festa del Pescatore in Marta (9 August). Source: Visit Bolsena

Conclusion

Embracing Italian culture at Lake Bolsena

Between extinct volcanoes, mysterious islands, lake flavours and a faith tradition spanning eight centuries, Lake Bolsena packs into a few dozen square kilometres a rare synthesis of Tuscia: untouched nature, Renaissance art, and a cuisine that grows straight out of its own waters. Source: Wikipedia

A lake you can drink, a wine with a story to tell, a miracle celebrated every year: this is Lake Bolsena.

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Editorial transparency

Who wrote this article? On what basis?

📋 Transparency and verifiability

Who wrote it: Giuseppe Baldassarri — ItalyTrade.org.
What it’s based on: Verified sources linked throughout the text (Wikipedia, travel and cultural outlets, official town and festival websites).
Are there other viewpoints: Yes, noted where relevant (for example, on the legendary — rather than historically confirmed — nature of the Est! Est!! Est!!! story).
Possible hidden interest: None. Independent editorial content.

Giuseppe Baldassarri – ItalyTrade.org

Giuseppe Baldassarri

Sales & Account Manager · Destination & Export Digital Marketing Manager · Travel Designer · TTO

Website: ItalyTrade.org — Travel & Business | Italy: Made in Italy

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