
The name of the large estate, which was once extremely large, is a reminder of the beautiful Marsilia, kidnapped by the Turkish pirate Barbarossa and given to the Sultan of Constantinople as a gift. It is a name that resembles the air you breathe there, which is like a sea breeze. You can reach Marsiliana by crossing a Mediterranean landscape which is still entirely intact. Woods, a village, vineyards, white roads combined in a timeless self-portrait, or to put it in a better way, with the right patina of time.
The reason for its charm is in the simple fact that the persons who owned and own this segment of Tuscany from the 18th century has left things as they were, has not looked for inspiration elsewhere, but instead concentrated on this territory.
Persons such as Tommaso Corsini, at the turn of the nineteenth century, as well as Duccio Corsini, a hundred years later, who identified its main characteristics, which are recounted in this wine, oil and untouched beauty.
A new perception, enhanced by hospitality and the hunting ritual.

A reserve of life, air and space
Marsiliana Estate extends over nearly three thousand hectares, and it includes woods, roads, sources, fields, olive groves and vineyards.
A wild and rural area which also stretches out in time, punctuated by Etruscan necropolis, which Tommaso Corsini dug at the end of the eighteenth century, the medieval village, a real geographic centre, the agricultural buildings and the farmhouses.
What we can define as the signs of mankind still have a virtuous relationship with an estate whose life, air and space, which can be seen in this segment of the Maremma.
It’s a destiny which does not happen by chance but which instead depends on the management of the territory, which in almost three centuries has coincided with the decisions and commitments of Prince Corsini.