The ancient village of CELLERE offers a spectacular view over Timone River Valley, a typical environment of the Lazial Maremma, rich in natural beauty still intact and mysterious. Along the valley is the Timone Park and nearby is the small and charming medieval village of Pianano, real sculpture made of tuff. Cellere has dedicated to the famous Maremma bandit Domenico Tiburzi, who lived in the second half of the 800, the Museum of banditry, a truly original museum. The museum aims to tell the story of banditry in Maremma, through an anthropological reading. Not to be missed the beautiful Renaissance church of Sant'Egidio, commissioned by Alessandro Farnese and built by the architect Antonio da Sangallo. A curiosity is the “Cellerese Code", historical document kept at the Pier Point Morgan Library in New York. Found in 1909 in the archives of the Counts Macchi of Cellere, the code is essentially the act of birth of New York; it is the diary written for the French king Francis I by Giovanni da Verrazzano, at anchor in the bay of New York, describing the indigenous population of the place. Among the many events that take place in Cellere during the summer, including parades in medieval costume, is the famous Palio dei Sapori. The Palio is a horse race that takes place in the valley of the Timone River, where each rider, dressed in the colors of his village, symbolizes the most typical food and wines of its territory. In recent years, Cellere distinguishes for its guinness through initiatives related to the local gastronomic traditions and folklore such as salami and bruschetta the longest in Italy.