Lucca

Lucca Tuscany

Lucca is a beautiful town in Tuscany protected by massively thick 16th-century walls, featuring some of Italy's finest medieval and Renaissance architecture, superb dining, antique markets, classical and rock music festivals, and has easy access to stunning nearby villas in the surrounding hills . Lucca is one of Tuscany's best-kept secrets.

http://www.italyguides.it/us/italy/tuscany/lucca/lucca.htm 

Florence

Florence Tuscany

Florence has museums, palaces, and churches with some of the greatest artistic treasures in the world. The most popular and important sites in Florence include the Cathedral, the Baptistery, the Uffizi, the Bargello, and the Accademia. The churches of Santa Maria Novella and Santa Croce are veritable art galleries, and the library of San Lorenzo is a magnificent exhibition of Michelangelo's architectural genius. Wander through some of the oldest streets in the city until you reach the Arno Rive and cross the Ponte Vecchio.

http://www.visitflorence.com/

Pisa

Pisa tuscany

Pisa, located in western Tuscany, is known throughout the world for its famous Leaning Tower, but there is so much more to Pisa than just this striking landmark. This ecclesiastical city began its life as a seaside settlement around 3,000 years ago and was first laid out in the mid-eleventh century.
Today, Pisa is crammed full of wonderful, historical monuments and buildings dating back many hundreds of years, and much of the city has managed to retain its medieval appearance. 

http://www.italyguides.it/us/pisa/pisa_italy.htm

San Gimignano

San Gimignano Tuscany

San Gimignano is in Tuscany, 56 km south of Florence. It served as an important relay point for pilgrims travelling to or from Rome on the Via Francigena. The patrician families who controlled the town built around 72 tower-houses (some as high as 50 m) as symbols of their wealth and power. Although only 14 have survived, San Gimignano has retained its feudal atmosphere and appearance. The town also has several masterpieces of 14th- and 15th-century Italian art.

Truly a little gem, it is so precious that UNESCO has declared it a “World Heritage Site.” Walking through the Old City means plunging into the Middle Ages and getting a taste of what the city must have been like more than seven hundred years ago

http://www.italyguides.it/us/italy/tuscany/san-gimignano/san-gimignano-italy.htm

Montecarlo

Monte Carlo Tuscany

Montecarlo is a small village in Tuscany famous for its wines. It is an unspoiled territory which preserves a strong link between man and nature and the Tuscan countryside, connected with the production of top quality wine, Montecarlo D.O.C. and extra virgin olive oil. 
The historic centre is set on a hilltop overlooking a 360° panorama of Tuscan vineyards, olive groves and green woods. The historic town of Montecarlo is well preserved and still surrounded by the fascinating medieval city walls. The village stands on an isolated hill.

Vinci

Leonardo da Vinci is one of Italy's most famous artists and Renaissance figures but people often aren't aware that his name comes from his place of birth, Vinci, a small town in Tuscany. Thus his name is Leonardo of Vinci where he was born in 1452. 

Leonardiano, the museum of Leonardo da Vinci, is easy to find in Vinci's small historic center. 

http://www.museoleonardiano.it/eng/

Montecatini terme

Montecatini Tuscany

Montecatiny Terme is located in Tuscany and the biggest spa-town in Italy. Its Roman baths have been the retreat for many  European monarch.  Now the spas offer not only the well-known healing waters but also all the modern relax treatments. The spas, the Golf Club, markets, theatres, many restaurants and night clubs make a glad vacation in Montecatini. 

You must not miss the tour to the carachterisctic village of Montecatini Alto, getting on the observation cars of the most ancient funicular of the world.

http://www.termemontecatini.it/

Beaches of Versilia

Versillia Tuscany

Versilia's extensive beaches are very well equipped to allow the visitors to pass there all the day, from morning to evening...sometimes even for the night. In fact, there are bars, restaurants, beach umbrellas, deckchairs, sunbeds, bathing–huts and showers in these bathing-establishments (some of these also offer the possibility to practice sports or other beach entertainments).
Most part of the bathing-establishments, mainly the biggest ones, use to stay open even for dinner, for those who decide to have a good fish supper; they often organize after-dinner parties with drinks and fashion music, open also to people from outside.
The beach restaurants offer a very good, fresh Mediterranean cooking

http://www.aboutversilia.com/beaches-in-versilia.html