MontautoMontauto
Ancient sunlit forest of the Maremma — 220 hectares of protected Tuscan wilderness
Active Custody · Maremma Toscana

Montauto
Life Runs Wild

220 hectares of ancient Tuscan forest where the Italian wolf, wild boar, and over 250 vertebrate species thrive — a vital ecological corridor protected through eight centuries of unbroken stewardship.

Discover the Reserve
La Roccaccia di Montauto — XI-XIII century fortress in the Tuscan Maremma
La Roccaccia · XI–XIII Century

800 Years of
Living History

Built by the Aldobrandeschi, contested by the Orsini, proposed as a Byzantine colony by Anna Paleologa in 1472 — La Roccaccia di Montauto carries the weight of Italian history in every ancient stone.

Explore the Castle
Red fox — native wildlife of the Maremma, Tuscany
Wildlife Sanctuary

Where Wild
Lives Free

The Italian wolf, cinghiale, daino, roe deer, pink flamingos at Orbetello and over 250 vertebrate species roam freely across our protected Maremma corridors. Our goal: 5,000 hectares — the largest privately-owned nature reserve in Italy.

Meet the Wildlife
01/03
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220 haProtected Land
800 yrsHistorical Legacy
250+Vertebrate Species
FAO HubRome Partner City
Join The Pack

Shape the Future
of Wild Italy

We are a community of researchers, naturalists, and passionate volunteers dedicated to protecting the ancient forests and wildlife corridors of the Maremma through our Active Custody model — a dynamic approach that rejects passive preservation in favour of living stewardship.

Whether you join us in the field at Montauto Castle, contribute to biodiversity research at Villa Drago's Scientific Hub, or help fund the Seed Bank and Fungarium, you become part of a legacy stretching across eight centuries of mountains, ruins, and rivers. Our goal is 5,000 hectares — the largest privately-owned nature reserve in Italy.

Volunteers working together in the Maremma forest
Ancient sunlit Maremma forest — Active Custody conservation in action
800 Yearsof Stewardship
La Roccaccia di Montauto today — active heritage preservation
Historic photograph of La Roccaccia di Montauto — XI-XIII century fortress
About Us

Preserving the Balance
of Nature and History

At the heart of the Maremma, La Roccaccia di Montauto and its surrounding nature reserve form a living archive of Tuscan biodiversity — 800 years of continuous stewardship woven into every stone and root. Human presence here traces back over half a million years, to Lower Paleolithic tools found on these very lands.

Our Active Custody model goes beyond passive preservation. Combining targeted forestry management, biodiversity research at Villa Drago's Scientific Hub, and a Botanical Garden, Fungarium, and Seed Bank — we ensure this ecosystem remains a robust carbon sink and thriving habitat for generations to come. Strategically based in Rome, steps from the FAO, WFP, IFAD, and Bioversity International.

Davide Giannitelli – Founder
Davide GiannitelliFounder, Montauto Association
Who We Are
What We Do

Six Pillars
of Conservation

01
Forest Management

Forest Management

Safeguarding ancient Maremma woodland through sustainable forestry care — optimising carbon sequestration, mitigating climate-intensified fire risks, and maintaining the ecosystem as a robust carbon sink across 220 hectares.

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02
Wildlife Sanctuary

Wildlife Sanctuary

Creating safe ecological corridors for the Italian wolf (lupo appenninico), cinghiale, daino, capriolo, volpe, and 250+ vertebrate species. Our goal: a 5,000-hectare corridor — Italy's largest private nature reserve.

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03
Botanical Legacy

Botanical Legacy

Preserving historic gardens and native plant species — holm oak (leccio), cork oak (sughera), strawberry tree (corbezzolo) — alongside a Seed Bank at Villa Drago for genetic preservation of indigenous Mediterranean flora.

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04
Heritage Preservation

Heritage Preservation

Stabilising and restoring La Roccaccia di Montauto — an XI–XIII century fortress built by the Aldobrandeschi, shaped by the Orsini, and proposed as a Byzantine colony by Anna Paleologa in 1472. Eight centuries, actively protected.

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05
Research & Science

Research & Science

Facilitating biodiversity research at Villa Drago's Scientific Hub and Fungarium — built atop 10–15 km of I–III century Roman tunnels — in partnership with Montauto University and Rome's international institutions (FAO, WFP, IFAD, Bioversity International).

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06
Community Awareness

Community Awareness

Sharing our Active Custody philosophy with volunteers, students, and all who value the deep connection between Italian nature and living history. True conservation requires a dedicated community committed to long-term environmental resilience.

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Our Projects

Three Major
Initiatives

From the ancient ruins of the Maremma to the Roman tunnels beneath Villa Drago — each initiative advances our mission of Active Custody.

01
Montauto Castle and the Nature Reserve Lands
Maremma Toscana

Montauto Castle &
Nature Reserve

Stabilising the Roccaccia's ruins while protecting 220 hectares of ancient woodland. Actively acquiring surrounding properties — including Castello del Pelagone — towards a 5,000-hectare ecological corridor: Italy's largest private nature reserve.

Discover the Reserve
02
Villa Drago di Montauto — Roman tunnels and Scientific Hub, Rome
Rome · Via Labico

Villa Drago
Scientific Hub

Built atop 10–15 km of I–III century AD Roman tunnels (latomie), Villa Drago houses Montauto University, a Botanical Garden of local and Roman flora, a Research Centre, a Scientific Fungarium reclaiming the ancient galleries, and a vital Seed Bank.

Explore Villa Drago
03
Environmental Research Centre — coming soon
Coming Soon
Future Vision

Environmental
Research Centre

Dedicated to building a future for environmental studies and biodiversity research — a hub connecting our Maremma field stations with Rome's international institutions: FAO, WFP, IFAD, and Bioversity International.

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Our Impact

A Legacy of
Active Stewardship

220 haProtected Land
800 yrsContinuous Heritage
250+Vertebrate Species
6Conservation Pillars
5,000 haTarget Reserve Size
RomeFAO Hub Partner City
500k yrsHuman Presence on Site
Commitment to Nature