Montefegatesi - Credit: David Bonaventuri
In addition to being the gateway to the Orrido di Botri Nature Reserve, the typical medieval village offers significant points of interest. Among the best known is undoubtedly the monument dedicated to Dante Alighieri by the Lucchese sculptor Francesco Petroni circa 1908. Set on a pedestal of jasper blocks on the summit of the fortress, the austere bust of the great poet stands out in this location that boasts a breathtaking view of the most inredible peaks of the Tuscan-Emilian Apennines: Rondinaio, Tre Potenze and Mosca.
Legend has it that Dante passed through Montefegatesi to escape Florentine assassins and while he was crossing the Orrido di Botri, he got his inspiration for hell. In actual fact, the statue was commissioned by locals as a symbol of their thirst for knowledge and their dedication to reading the great classics.
Beyond the statue and the panorama, in the village you'll find the parish church dedicated to San Frediano Vescovo dating back to the 13th century, in whose sacristy there are two valuable 15th-century Florentine school panels.
Montefegatesi, except for a short period when it fell into the power of the Florentines, remained under the protection of Lucca and the Guinigi, annexed to the vicar of the Val di Lima. The village was located in a strategic area, the sentinel of the Lucca republic of the Modenese border. Even today, it dominates the valley that's crossed by the Fegana stream, into which flows the waters of the Pelago river, and what forms the Orrido di Botri.