Pian Di Sco
Among the Tuscan landscapes, still uncontaminated is to Pian di Scò. The origin of the name of Pian Scò is full of debates: some derives from Pian di Resco, named after the river that flows near the country, while others from Aesculus, oak sacred to Jupiter. The story of Pian di Scò is connected to the Romanesque Pieve Santa Maria a Scò. By Peter Leopold in 1774, the country entered into the Community of Castelfranco, always maintaining their civil and religious documents separated only in the nineteenth century, following an adjustment of our Administrative Region for the Napoleonic occupation, being thus closed their desire to get its autonomy from the nearby town of Castelfranco.