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From the cycle path we can enjoy a beautiful view of Trevi, which is a village nestled on a hill at the foot of the Serano-Brunette massif. Trevi was a Roman centre built along the Flaminia Way, then perched after the end of the Roman era; it is now positioned close to the mountain passes between the Apennines and the Umbrian Valley, which once were important transit points for transhumance; the valley, crossed by the Clitunno and other waterways, once housed a lake, known as lacus Clitorius. Trevi is at the centre of the Assisi-Spoleto Olives Range, which is an extraordinary piedmont area of about 9,000 hectares characterized by olive groves mostly arranged on terraced slopes. This territory, recognized as a world agricultural heritage by FAO, is an extraordinary example of a living cultural landscape, the work of the slow and integrated relationship between man and nature where an exquisitely traditional production system is still preserved.