Reggio Emilia is a province in the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy.
Reggio Emilia (or Reggio nell'Emilia) is one of the nine provinces of Emilia Romagna, with Parma west and Modena east. Like the others, it's bounded to the north by the River Po, with a broad tract of lowland, then stretches up into the Apennine mountains. The Romans colonised this area and built the Via Aemilia from Piacenza to Rimini in 187 BC, with Reggio city a staging post along the way. Several invaders held it in the dying years of the Roman Empire; in 1002 AD the area became part of the March of Tuscany, later ruled by Matilda of Canossa. A series of quarrelsome dynasties and factions held sway in the local towns until the area came under the Duchy of Modena in 1452. Thus it remained until in 1861 it joined the new state of Italy: the national Tricolore was created in Reggio.
Inhabitants of this area are called Reggiani, while those of Reggio di Calabria in the southwest are called Reggini.
By air use one of the Milan airports. Bologna is slightly closer but has few flights.
Two Frecciarossa trains run per hour from Milan Centrale, taking 60-75 min to Reggio and continuing to Bologna then south either to Naples and Salerno or to the other Reggio, di Calabria.
Regional trains from Milan may also stop at Piacenza, Parma and San Ilario d'Enza. Those from Bologna may also stop at Anzola, Samoggia, Modena, Castelfranco Emilia and Rubiera. A branch-line train plies from Reggio to Ciano d'Enza, Guastalla and Sassuolo.
Autostrada A1 (E45) follows the Po valley from Milan bypassing Piacenza, Parma, Reggio, Modena, Bologna then heading south beyond Rimini. The historic highway SS9 runs through the town centres.
The towns are compact and walkable. The outlying towns have buses from Reggio but slow and indirect, you could use a car.
Mi Muovo is an integrated public transport pass for the region. Short-stay visitors might use "Mi Muovo Multibus", a 12-trip bus ticket, see Emilia Romagna#Get around.
The main wines of this area are Malvasia (usually Bianca di Candia), and Barbera and Bonarda which are ruby red. You won't go wrong with any of them. Lambrusco is also produced locally but not everyone enjoys that.
Standard advice about traffic, care of valuables, and suitable clothing and footwear in the mountains where the weather can quickly turn bitter.
So many must-see destinations along the valley, on the main transport corridor so they're within a day-trip from Reggio. Choose from Bologna, Modena, Piacenza and buzzing Milan.
Primary administrative division