Lago di Vagli
Lake · Lucca ·

Lago di Vagli

Lake · Lucca ·

Submerged medieval town visible when lake is drained

Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by Viaggio Routard on Flickr (Creative Commons)
Lago di Vagli by Robyfra1 on Wikipedia (Creative Commons)
Lago di Vagli by NH53 on Flickr (Creative Commons)
Lago di Vagli by Dr Alan P Newman (Atlas Obscura User)
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null
Lago di Vagli by null

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55030 Province of Lucca, Italy Get directions

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55030 Province of Lucca, Italy Get directions

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Last updated

Dec 6, 2025

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The Sunken World Hiding Under the Water's Surface

"While it isn’t quite Atlantis, at least the submerged medieval town of Fabbriche di Careggine is real. It remains largely intact beneath the waters of Tuscany’s Lago di Vagli and is still visible whenever the waters are drained for maintenance. Lago di Vagli is an artificial body of water created in 1953 when the Tuscan valley in which it sits was flooded with the building of a dam. However when the lake was created, the valley was far from empty. At the bottom of the geological depression sat the village of Fabbriche di Careggine, an ancient settlement that was barely clinging to survival. Originally settled in the 1200s by a group of blacksmiths, the tiny town managed to survive for hundreds of years, well into the 20th century with just over 30 buildings and around 146 inhabitants. Most still practiced ancient methods of farming, just to survive. When the plan to build the dam and flood the valley basin was realized, the remaining citizens of the village were relocated to the nearby town of Vagli Sotto. As the basin was slowly filled, the village was lost beneath the waters. But not forever. The village has reemerged four times since its drowning in the 1950s. It is revealed when the basin is completely drained for maintenance. There do not seem to be plans to drain the basin again, but hopefully Fabbriche di Careggine can come up for air some day soon. The lake had a new visitor attraction in 2017, a spectacular suspension footbridge spanning the lake at, more or less, the narrowest part. At the southern end of the bridge is an unusual sculpture park and, according to posters around the lake, the bridge is illuminated spectacularly at night." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/sunken-cities-flooded-drowned
Robyfra1 on Wikipedia (Creative Commons)
Lago di Vagli

John S.

Google
Beautiful surrounding at lago di vagli, nice walk to the bridge with in the middle glass, so you can look down.

Ornit S.

Google
Nice lake, seems good for fishing

davemotion89 (David K.

Google
Nice sea and a lot of Italian people but this can depends on current Covid 19 situation. I enjoyed looking around there.

Laurence W.

Google
Beuatiful but a lot of walking is on roads

Qaisar S.

Google
😉😎😘

Kai A.

Google
Beautiful!

stella C.

Google
Affascinante sapere che sotto questo bellissimo lago artificiale, all’altezza della diga, si trova il famoso paese sommerso, Fabbriche di Careggine. Purtroppo ancora non è dato sapere quando svuoteranno il lago per poterlo vedere. Io lo vidi nel 1994 e fu molto bello. Attualmente oltre al lago e il ponte sospeso si possono fare delle belle passeggiate, noi ci siamo stati in moto e vi consiglio di andarci anche solo per vedere la bellezza della natura sotto le Apuane e mangiare qualcosa nel borgo di Careggine dove la semplicità delle persone che vi abitano si aggiunge a quella della natura

emy N.

Google
Molto bello dall’alto. Purtroppo non è facile raggiungerlo, e le attività da fare sono tutte a pagamento, il parco dell’onore costa 2 euro, come il ponte sospeso, per non parlare della zipline. In ogni caso vale veramente la pena vederlo!!