Udine Rental Car with Hire Car Italy - Your best source for great value Car Rental in Italy!
We offer you 2 quotation engines to allow you to get the best price for your Hire Car in Italy. Just choose which one you want, and compare prices. Both of our engines offer many locations around Italy, and a full fleet of cars is available for hire, from 3 door economy models all the way up to Executive Sedans. We deal only with major, quality-assured hire car companies including Alamo, Budget, Europcar, National, Sixt and Thrifty.

We have 2 Udine Rental Car with Hire Car Italy Booking Systems for you to choose from! This will allow you to compare prices and choose the best deal! Simply Click the button for Engine #1 or Engine #2, and see which gives you the best deal!

PLEASE NOTE!
The rates shown are the special internet rates for self booking. There are no discounts available if you phone - you should use the booking form.
All Terms and Conditions, and inclusions are detailed in the engine - generate a quote, and you will be shown the details.
48 Hours Notice is REQUIRED for all bookings. We cannot book cars with less notice, or on the day. We at Hire Car Italy look forward to providing for all your car hire needs. We pride ourselves on an excellent level of service at a very competitive price. With a large variety of cars and locations to choose from, Hire Car Italy is an ideal choice for affordable car hire whether you are renting for business or pleasure. Our online services are quick and easy to use and will provide you with the best value Hire Car quotes from our suppliers. We have negotiated the best online prices from our suppliers.
To help you enjoy your hire car holiday we have some details about this area of Italy below and general Italian driving information is available on our Hire Car Italy Travel Information page.
Udine (Friulian Udin) is a town in the north-east of Italy, situated inland between Trieste and Venice, the second most important city (after Trieste), situated between the Gulf and the South-Eastern Alps, in the region Friuli-Venezia Giulia. Population was 94,600 in 2003. Geographical location 46.07° North, 13.24 ° East. Udine was the historical starting-point for a route over the Saifnitz or Pontebba Pass to Villach by way of Pontebba and Tarvisio. It lay on the Roman route of the Via Julia Augusta, but there is no sign of Roman occupation. In the 1230s the seat of the patriarchate of Aquileia was transferred to Udine. That gave its Romanesque cathedral new prominence. The old residence of the patriarchs of Aquileia was erected by Giovanni Fontana in 1517 in place of the older one destroyed by an earthquake in 1511. Under the Austrians it was used as a prison. In the cathedral archives was formerly preserved a recast of the Visigothic code of laws in a manuscript known as the Codex Utinensis, which was fortunately printed before it was lost. (See Breviary of Alaric). Udine has a University. The archbishop's palace and the Museo Civico have paintings. Piazza della Libertà, 16th. century Loggia di San Giovanni and the Torre dell’Orologio, Udine, Italy (2004)In 1420 Udine became part of Venetian territory. In the 1550s Andrea Palladio erected some buildings in Udine. The church of S.Maria della Purita has 18th-century frescoes by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo and his son Domenico. In the principal square (Piazza della Libertà) stands the town hall (Loggia di Lionello) built in 1448-1457 in the Venetian-Gothic style opposite a clock tower (Torre dell’Orologio) resembling that of the Piazza San Marco at Venice. In the center of Udine, is the Castello di Udine, built during the invasion of Attila the Hun. The Treaty of Campo Formio (1796) was signed in a village that lies about 5 miles west of Udine. The textile industry has been important for Udine.. See also Giovanni Martini da Udine, the High Renaissance architect who worked in Rome and was a pupil of Raphael.
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