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Tour Stops Description

Innizio
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Positano

 Positano is a small town with mythical ties and magical allure. Long known as a modest fishing area, Positano still bears evidence of its history and foreign occupancy but has managed to retain its unique heritage through the ages.Evidence of the first human inhabitants can be traced to the La Porta caves in 6000 B.C. Legend says that the town was founded by Poseiden, the Greek God of the Sea, in honor of Pasitea, a nymph the god fancied. It is believed that Greek vessels began to visit the town around 500 B.C. and used the town and environs as a resting place between missions.

By 100 B.C. the Romans established a foothold in Positano. Several villas were built but in 79 A.D. when the volcano Vesuvius erupted all the villas and most of the existing buildings were destroyed.

In 800 A.D. the Benedictine Friars arrived and set about establishing an independent community marked by the construction of the Abbey Santa Maria e San Vito. In 1000 A.D. the Abbey was included in the Congregation of Cava de Tireni.With the Norman invasions in 1131, the naval forces of Amalfi were destroyed. The significance of Positano’s naval presence expanded, but also attracted more attention than was desired. In 1137, the rebuilt naval forces of Amalfi and Positano were attacked and destroyed by the wartime force of Pisa.In 1332, Robert of Anjou built the Positano Guard Towers. In 1341, the town’s naval force helped Robert during his siege of Millazzo. When Robert died in 1343, Positano was freed of servitude but the town was soon caught up in territorial fights between Joan I, Louis The Great and Louis of Anjou. Finally in 1414, Positano became part of the Kingdom of Joan II of Naples.

Between 1450 and 1698, feudal barons controlled the territory and economies along the Amalfi coast. After two centuries of squabbles and economic unrest, Positano purchased its independence from the ruling barons in 1699.During the 16th and 17th centuries, the ships of Positano enjoyed profitable trade with the Middle East. With its independence, the 18th century was marked as a period of economic independence. During this period many of the Baroque houses with their spectacular terraces overlooking the sea were constructed. This era could well be considered the golden era for Positano and much of the construction still survives today.Positano now is specialized in clothes made from linen  , georgette an cotton , as well handmade shoes and sandals .The location, heaped up in a pyramid high above the water ,has inspired a thousand picture postcards an helped to make it moneyed resort  that runs a close second to Capri in the celebrity stakes

Highlights  to visit in the town

  • Positano cathedral  with black  Bizantin Virgin Mary Painting 

  • Archaeological  Roman Museum 

  • Sandals - Ceramics- and lines  boutiques 

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Sorrento
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Sorrento

The town is known worldwide for it's stupendous location on tufaceous cliffs which nose-dive down to the sea. Remembered and praised in famous neopolitan songs, the name of the town derives from the greek SORRENTUM:place where in ancient times, mermaids were worshipped. In roman times it became a place where many roman villas were built, imitating the already famous Isle of Capri,a small island very close to Tiberios heart. After the fall of the roman empire, the town was invaded by the dominating Byzantines,then by the Ducato Libero in 800,and then again by Anglo-normans in the XII century.
In 1558, the greek Sorrentum was invaded by the turks. After this tragedy, precisely in 1561, new towers were erected along the coast, and a great wall was erected around the town to protect the town from further invasions. Before any sort of economic revival,which came about thanks to Carlo di Borbone in 1700, we find that during the XVI and XVII centuries, religious cults set root in the town,giving birth to many religious orders. The revival of the economy came with a reformative action which garanteed an economy based on tourism, that spread throughout the region thanks to artists and carvers.
Unfortunately, the construction phenomena which spread across the entire territory, especially during the XX century, has somewhat damaged the extraordinary landscape. Although in the historical centre there is still a strong outline of antiquity that can be easily seen between Piazza Tasso and Viale degli Aranci. The town is famous for it's decuman gates,especially the Massimo, between via San Cesareo and Fuoro ( todays via Tasso.)

 

      Highlights to visit in town

  • Main Square  ( Piazza Tasso )

  • S. Cesareo street   ( Vicolo S.Cesareo ) 

  • Public Gardens 

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Amalfi

   Amalfi was originally a Roman colony, which gained more and more importance over the centuries, and after the fall of the empire it became a diocese (596 AD).

Amalfi, Maritime Republic from 1st of September 839, was one of the most important centres of Mediterranean in the Middle Ages, representing the meeting point between East and West thanks to warehouses that was able to build in various seaports. These contacts made it so big to join around itself a territory, Amalfi dukedom, which swept from Vietri sul Mare as far as Capri isle, and it intervened to defend southern Italy and Papacy against Saracenic attacks, excepting stipulating in a second moment diplomatic agreements with them to obtain trade facilities. With Maritime Republic decline the territory became feud of big families who carried on making both town and dukedom big from the architectonic point of view. At the end of the feudal period inhabitants decided to buy the whole dukedom and also in Amalfi rose the public University (the town hall).

In Edwardian  times  It's has been an established seaside resort , when the British upper classes found the town  pleasant spot to spend their winters .

Actually Amalfi is the largest town an perhaps the highlight of the coast .

Highlights to visit in town

  • the Duomo  with S.Andrew crypt  , cloister of paradise , episcopal museum 

  • Civil Museum

  • Test to the famous one Neapolitan pastry invented here   ( Sfogliatella )

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Ravello

  From immemorial time opposite to near Scala but also to the strongest Amalfi, Ravello, according to the tradition, would derive its name from a riot that local patricians organized against Amalfi which did not want to take part to the expedition against Alessio Comneno, imperator of Bisanzio, in 1081, riot which instead was wanted by Normans and supported by people from Ravello. In 1086, it became Episcopal centre independent from Amalfi always for Normans’will and Ravello gained a central role as trade power. It often had to defend itself by external attacks, the first time the town was able to resist, the second time because of the sudden arrival of the enemy it was not able to fight back and as a consequence the whole Amalfi Dukedom toppled and had a lot of human being and material losses. Along the centuries it was able to preserve a certain economic robustness even though there have been numerous plagues and also some earthquakes which hard put to the architectures of the town. Ravello is one of the towns belonging to the Amalfi Coast. It’s a small but lively town, home for 2.500 people and listed in the Unesco World Heritage Site since 1996. Ravello has also been a famous destination for artists, writers and musicians, like M.C Escher, Richard Wagner, Greta Garbo, Gore Vidal, Truman Capote, Leonard Bernstein and Virginia Woolf.

 

       Highlights to visit in the town

  • ​the Cathedral  ,  Museum 

  • Villa Rufolo

  • Villa Cimbrone 

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Paestum

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Paestum also known by its original Greek name as Poseidonia, was a Greek colony founded on the west coast of Italy, some 80 km south of modern-day Naples. Prospering as a trade centre it was conquered first by the Lucanians and then, with the new Latin name of Paestum, the city became an important Roman colony in the 3rd century BCE. Today it is one of the most visited archaeological sites in the world due to its three excellently preserved large Greek temples.  

In the 7th century BCE a second wave of Greek colonization occurred in Magna Graecia and, in c. 600 BCE, colonists from Sybaris in southern Italy founded the colony or city-state (polis) of Poseidonia (meaning sacred to Poseidon) at a spot chosen for its fertile plain, land access through the Lucanian hills, and sea port. According to the ancient historian Strabo, the colonists first built fortifications on the coast before later moving inland to build their city proper. The colony prospered so that by the 6th century BCE there was an important sanctuary (Foce del Sele) and monumental temples dedicated to the Greek goddesses Hera and Athena. The city was planned out in a precise grid pattern and surrounded by walls. The town benefitted from a large agora and became wealthy enough to mint its own coinage and expand its territorial control to the wider countryside. Eventually, Poseidonia administered the plain between the river Sele in the north and the Agropoli promontory to the south.

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Pompeii


 
 Pompeii is located on a plateau formed by the Vesuvius volcano's lava flow. The city dominated the valley around the Sarno River, the delta of which hosted a busy port. Information about the origins of the city are uncertain. The oldest available traces date back to the 7th-6th Centuries BC, when the first tuff walls, called pappamonte, were built to enclose an area of 63.5 hectares. A mixed population of Etruscans, Greeks and other Italic peoples led to the city's development. At the end of the 5th Century BC, the Samnites descended from the mountains of Irpinia and Sannio, settled in the plain of the Campania Region (Campania means "fertile plain") and conquered the cities near to Vesuvius and the coast.
With the conclusion of the 4th Century BC the Samnite tribes began to feel the pressure of a Rome that was spreading over Southern Italy, and that between 343 and 290 B.C. conquered all of Campania. Pompeii entered as a partner (ally) into the political organization of the Roman res publica. However, in 90-89 B.C., the city, along with other Italic peoples, rebelled, calling for social and political dignity equal to Rome. Pompeii was besieged by the troops of Publius Cornelius Sulla, and in 80 B.C. the city capitulated and became the Roman colony of Cornelia Veneria Pompeianorum.
In 62 A.D. a violent earthquake struck the Vesuvius area. In Pompeii, the reconstruction began immediately, but it took an unusually-long time due the extent of the damage. Seventeen years later, on August 24, 79 A.D., the sudden eruption of Vesuvius buried Pompeii with ashes and lapillus. 
The buried city was rediscovered in the 16th Century, but it was only in 1748 that the exploration phase began, under the King of Naples Charles III of Bourbon. It continued systematically throughout the 9th Century up to the most recent excavations, restorations and enhancements of the ancient city, with the rediscovering of its exceptional architecture, sculptures, paintings and mosaics. 

 

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Herculaneum

    Herculaneum an Oscan town, founded around the site of the cult of Hercules, Herculaneum’s greatest prosperity came after it became a Roman municipum 

Herculaneum was conquered by Sulla in 89BC. The town became a part of the Roman state, taking on the status of a municipum or provincial town. The conquest led to the most prosperous phase of town’s history. The Romans provided Herculaneum with paved streets, sewers, a theatre and basilica-all the trappings of a Roman town. 

With its excellent fishing, noted vineyards and breath taking sea views, the town became a tourist hot spot for wealthy Romans looking to escape Rome in the summer months. So important was the town that in 62AD when it sustained damage from an earthquake, its repairs were financed with subsides from the Roman government.

Herculaneum’s prosperity was abruptly ended by the eruption of Vesuvius in 79AD. Its destruction was very different to Pompeii. The city was not much affected by the eruption initially, suffering only a light sprinkling of ash. Then at midnight of the 24th August, everything changed. The first of six pyroclastic surges of hot gases and flows left the volcano and headed to Herculaneum.The pryroclastic blast hit the city within four minutes. The velocity of the cloud of hot gases was so great, it lifted statues from their pedestals, leaving their shattered remains some distance away. The city was then covered with 20 metres of ash that mixed with water to form mudslides. This slide into the harbour, extending the coastline. The mudslides hardened to form a tufa rock which encased and preserved Herculaneum until its rediscover centuries later.

The town was discovered in 1709 when a peasant came across some richly decorated marble debris. Local nobles, alerted by the find, recruited engineers to begin excavating the locality. Their motivation was greed rather than archaeology as they were searching for works of classical art for their palaces.

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Mount Vesuvius

The Vesuvius is a typical example of a volcano in a volcano made by an outer broken cone, Mount Somma, with a crateric belt most of which is destroyed, where a smaller cone represented by the Vesuvius can be found. The two cones are separated by a hollow called Valle del Gigante, a part of the ancient caldera, where the Gran Cono or Vesuvius later formed, probably during the eruption of 79 AD.

Valle del Gigante is divided into Atrio del Cavallo on the west and Valle dell'Inferno on the east. Mount Somma's ancient crater is well preserved as far as its entire northern part is concerned, because it was less exposed to the volcano's devastating violence in historic times and was well protected by the height of the internal wall that prevented the lava from outflowing on its slopes.

The slopes, which vary in their steepness, are furrowed by profound radial grooves produced by the erosion of meteoric water. The whole section is then characterized by dikes and fringes of dark volcanic rock. The old crater edge is a stream of summits called cognoli. While the height and shape of Mount Somma haven’t changed for centuries, the height and shape of Mount Vesuvius have undergone considerable variations due to the following eruptions, with rising and lowering movements.

Mount Vesuvius is a typical polygenic mixed volcano, i.e. it’s made of lava of different chemical composition (e.g. trachytes, tephrites, leucitites) and is formed either by lava flows or pyroclastic sediments. All the zones on the slopes of the mountain are made of land that has been transported by lava of mud and goes down from the steep slopes in the rainy seasons through deep and narrow grooves called channels or more commonly lagni. The high embankments are formed by piles of lavic scoriae, which precipitated in incandescent state and spread towards the low slopes, proving to be important for vegetation thanks to their fertile material, rich in silicon and potassium.

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Napoli

ANCIENT NAPLES

The city of Naples was founded by the Ancient Greeks, who settled in southern Italy. Soon Naples became a busy and important port. However, the Romans conquered Naples in 326 BC. Under Roman rule, the port of Naples continued to thrive and rich Romans built holiday villas on the nearby coast. However, during a Roman civil war in 88-82 BC, a man named Sulla and his forces occupied Naples and massacred many of the inhabitants. Yet with the return of peace, Naples flourished again. In the 4th century, the Roman Empire split in two. Then in the 5th century AD, the western half of the Roman Empire was invaded and it ended completely in 476 AD. Italy was left in the hands of Germanic peoples.

However the eastern half of the Roman Empire survived. (We know it as the Byzantine Empire). The Byzantines were determined to recapture southern Italy. In 536 AD they laid siege to and captured Naples. It then became a duchy with a duke. Gradually Byzantine rule weakened and in 645 a native Neapolitan named Basilio became duke of Naples. In the following centuries, Naples thrived and trade with other places around the Mediterranean flourished.

MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE NAPLES

However the Normans had arrived in southern Italy. In 1139 the Normans conquered Naples and it became part of the kingdom of Sicily (which included southern Italy). Under the Normans, Naples took a back seat to Palermo although it remained prosperous. For a time Naples was ruled by the German emperor. Naples University was founded in 1224. However, in 1265 Charles of Anjou conquered the city. Then in 1442 Alfonso of Aragon (in Spain) became ruler of Naples.

In the 16th century Naples was part of the great Spanish Empire. At first, Naples was prosperous and it grew rapidly. By 1600 Naples was the largest city in Europe and it had a population of around 300,000. However, in the 17th century, the situation turned sour. In the 17th century, Naples suffered an economic depression. Discontent in Naples grew due to heavy taxation. Finally, in 1647 the city rose in rebellion. However, in 1648 the Spanish managed to restore order. Then in 1656 Naples was devastated by the plague.

Then in 1734 Sicily and southern Italy (including Naples) became an independent kingdom again. Once again Naples flourished. However, in the 1790s all of Europe including Italy was rocked by the events that followed the French Revolution. In 1799 the French army occupied Naples and they created a republic.

MODERN NAPLES

With the defeat of Napoleon in 1815 the old order returned to Naples and the rest of Italy. The kings of Naples imposed a repressive regime. In 1820 there was a revolution in Naples and constitutional government was introduced. However in 1821 the Austrian army entered Naples and restored the king's absolute power. Another revolution took place in 1848 but that too failed and in 1849 was able to restore his power. Then in 1860 Italy became unified. The great soldier Garibaldi arrived in Naples on 7 September 1860 and the people flocked to meet him. On 21 October 1860 the people of Naples voted overwhelmingly to join the new united Italy. However Naples now lost much of its former importance. Naples also suffered severely during the Second World War. Allied bombing did great damage to the city. In the late 20th century Naples suffered high unemployment. However in the 1990s the situation changed and Naples was regenerated.

Today Naples is a thriving city. In 2018 the population of Naples was 967,000.

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Royal Palace
of Caserta

The Royal Palace at Caserta and its park, inserted as one of the 55 Italian UNESCO World Heritage Sites in 1997, are treasures of truly incomparable splendor.
Commissioned by Charles III of Bourbon in the 1700s, Luigi Vanvitelli planned this palace, a triumph of the Italian Baroque and one of the most famous and important works by the Neapolitan architect. Everyday visitors are left enchanted by the beauty of its interiors and by the magnificence of its exterior. Highly-curated and pronounced in the details and design of its four monumental courtyards, the Palace is set amidst a beautiful park that today is the destination of thousands upon thousands of tourists. 
The sumptuous palace is an ideal and harmonious fusion of two other royal residences: the Royal Palace at Versailles and the Escorial Palace in Madrid. 
The Royal Palace at Caserta spreads out before observers as a monumental complex of 45, 000 s.q.m. (484,376 sq.ft. or approx. 11 acres) and, with its five floors, stands 36 meters (118 feet) tall. On its principal façade are 143 windows, while inside, 1, 200 rooms and 34 stairways unwind throughout the palace. It is constructed mostly in brick while the first two floors are laid with travertine. The entire structure is crowned by a very wide central dome. Those who see its inside are almost always astonished by its continuous succession of stuccoes, reliefs, frescoes, sulptures, flooring and inlays. Those embellishments that stand out the most are located in the Sala di Astrea, Sala di Marte and Sala del Trono; the Sala del Trono, in fact, is the largest of the interior royal apartments – it was used for the reception and accommodation of important personalities of the day. 
The most scenographic setting in the Palace is probably where the atrium, the grand Royal Staircase and the chapel meet.
The Royal Staircase is an invention of 17th-Century scenographic arts; it connects the lower and upper vestibules, giving access to the royal apartments via the upper. The Palatine Chapel, designed by Vanvitelli, decorations and all, exhibits - more than any other environment here - strong similarities to the precedents left by Versailles. 
Also rather remarkable is the court theatre, a marvelous example of 17th-Century theatre architecture: the horseshoe-shaped hall (as opposed to in the round) is made complete by the particular disposition of the columns (in giant order, or two stories). These are just a few of the environments in the enormous Palace, but all are exceptional. 
The Pinacoteca’s (Painting Gallery's) interior is organized as a series of connected room that display countless works of still lifes, war scenes, and of course, portraits of the members of the Bourbon Dynasty.
In the "old apartment" the Bourbon Nativity is always on show. The Nativity Scene was a great passion of the noble Bourbon Family, and it is thanks to them that the Nativity tradition spread from Naples to the rest of the world. 
The Palatine Library is annexed to the Queen’s Apartments – woman of refinement and culture – and is decorated by reliefs and frescoes that include that of the zodiac signs and the constellations, executed according to Vanvitelli’s design. Also evocative are the rooms dedicated to the four seasons.
Perhaps the most integral aspect of this Palace’s majesty and beauty is its park, composed of numerous fountains and waterfalls. The park is a typical exemplar of the Italian garden, landscaped with vast fields, flower beds and, above all, a triumph of "water games" or dancing fountains. Along the central axis, then, is a succession of pools, fountains and cascades adorned by large sculptural groupings, all which create a unique scenographic impact that culminates with the Grand Cascade. The park extends to the summit of the hill opposite the Palace, where an English garden perfectly frames an arrangement of exotic plants. 
The English Garden, moreover, is very special: wanted by Maria Carolina of Austria, it is less symmetrical in respect to that Italian, but it holds a vast range of indigenous and exotic plants alike, including Cedars of Lebanon. 
Together with the Royal Palace and park at Caserta, UNESCO also inserted the Aqueduct (also realized by Luigi Vanvitelli) on the World Heritage List, along with the nearby complex at San Leucio, cited for its representation of a site that is not only an industrial city, but that served as an additional territorial piece of the Royal enclave.

Capri
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Capri

Capri was first “discovered” by emperor Augustus in the early years of the Roman Empire. He often resided there and built many temples, villas and gardens as a way of having his own private paradise. Modern excavations however show the island to have been inhibited long before Augustus discovered it. Before the Romans, it was the Greeks who settled on Capri from the 8th century BC onwards, as evidenced by the Phoenician steps that connect Marina Grande with Anacapri (now the current town Capri). Despite its name, archaeologists have confirmed from the stone and its epigraphs, that the steps were in fact built by Greek colonists. It remained a Greek colony until Augustus took it in exchange for Aenaria (Ischia), an island in the Tyrrhenian Sea.

We should not blame Augustus too much for his takeover though, as it was his conservation of ancient remains that modern historians were able to trace back Capri’s history. It was the Romans who discovered evidence of human settlement, which Augustus ordered to be displayed in his garden. Amongst their findings, were weapons of stone, giant bones and the remains of animals that had disappeared tens of thousands of years before the Roman Empire, as well as traces of Stone-Age occupants. The Roman historian Suetonius described the interest shown by Augustus in these remains and his eagerness to preserve them. Augustus dedicated a whole museum to their findings.

Modern excavations of Augustus’s villa have traced these remains back to the Neolithic period and the Bronze Age. These time periods are staggering for such a tiny island. Capri is made up of a single block of limestone with an area of 4 square miles, rising to 1,932 feet. The fact that evidence of inhabitants of the island can be traced back to around 12,000 years ago is incredible! The Neolithic period, also known as the New Stone Age, saw the first developments in farming, which might go some way in explaining the large number of animal remains. This might also explain the etymology of the islands name, Capri, which has several meanings. The Romans referred to it as the “goat island”, from the Latin capreae meaning goats. This is similar to the Ancient Greek kapros meaning “wild boar”. The similarities in meaning suggest that the island was inhabited by many farming animals which may have been left behind from the Neolithic period, supported by their development in farming. Unfortunately not much else is known about the Neolithic period or the Bronze Age, as there is only so much that can be discerned over their haggard remains.

The Roman Imperial Era however left behind many ruins which could still be seen in the 19th century and can tell us a little more about the island and its inhabitants. Numerous ancient cisterns for example, show that in Roman, as in early modern times, rainfall was used to provide the island with water, since it has no natural springs. Now the island relies on an undersea aqueduct which brings fresh water from the mainland, thanks to a construction project completed in 1978, most likely to accommodate the island’s rise in tourism. But we’re getting ahead of ourselves, and its time to jump back to the Romans.

Following Augustus’s control of the island, was his successor Tiberius who continued to develop the island, building a total of twelve villas. This development was possible due to Tiberius spending the last ten years of his life on Capri, a move which historians have appointed to Rome’s political manoeuvring at the time and Tiberius’s fear of assassination. Perhaps this is what motivated him to build Villa Jovis, a villa situated at a secluded spot on the island, with Tiberius’s quarters nestled in the north and east of the villa, which were particularly hard to reach and heavily guarded. The rumours surrounding his death, however, imply that this was not enough to save him, and he died in his bed at the age of 77. His cause of death ranges from poison to smothering, as reported by Suetonius. As for the island, Capri seems to have been little visited by other emperors, and we only hear of it as a place of banishment for the wife and sister of Emperor Commodus.

With the end of the Western Roman Empire, Capri returned under the rule of Naples and suffered various attacks by pirates and raiders. Over the years Capri was tossed back and forth between the French and the British, until the end of the Napoleonic era in 1815, when it returned to the Bourbon ruling house of Naples. During the early 19th century the island became popular with wealthy gay men and lesbians, acting as a safe place where they could be more liberal in their sexuality. Its popularity continued in the latter half of the 19th century, when European artists, writers and celebrities flocked to the island for its sun, sea and beautiful flora. One of the most well-known celebrities who resides there today is singer Mariah Carey who owns a villa on the island. Despite the big time gap that separates Mariah to Emperor Augustus, its clear that the island still remains a luxurious jewel in the Bay of Naples, enjoyed by some of the wealthiest of society.

Unlike the Roman Imperial Era however, the island today is visited by tourists from around the world, famous for its magnificent scenery and mild climate, Capri offers a taste of the deluxe in the bluest of seas.

Fleet

 Fleet

WE only use recent Mercedes van the best  vehicles high enough to admire the landscape  beyond the road walls

Mercedes Vito

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  Capacity   8 Pax
  Trunk         6 Suitcases  6 Handbags
  Electronic air condition
  Regular Seats

Mercedes V-class
luxury Van

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   Capacity   6 Pax
   Trunk         6 Suitcases  6 Handbags
   Electronic air condition
   Leather Seats

Gastronomic Tours Description 

Our Private Gatronomic Tour is in true Italian style culinary experience In Italy we live to eat and our gastronomic tour will take you to food heaven as you taste and learn the best of Italy and along the way you will see the breathtaking views of the Sorrento Peninsula and Amalfi Coast. Our Private Gastronomic Tour is between 8-9 hours from Sorrento, Amalfi coast, Naples starting at 8.00am and includes: Olive Oil Factory, Wine Tasting, Pizza Making, Mozzarella Making, Gelato Making Class, Limoncello Factory

Your Private Gastronomic Tour begins with your pivate driver guide greeting you at your hotel Your Driver Guide will take you up one of the hills on the Sorrentine Peninsula where you can see rows of olives and lemon trees before arriving at the olive oil factory. Extra virgin olive oil was born in an old oil mill located in the hills of Sorrento Italy, a land traditionally devoted to the cultivation of olives. Since 1849 the factory we are visiting is dedicated to the production of the best Italian olive oil.

For more than a century, history has changed the technology, but what remains unchanged is passion they devote to their oil and the quality of their products. Among the most significant productions of the company they have many varieties and have won many awards for their culinary properties and health. After discovering the many types and flavours of olive oil your Private Driver Guide will take you to a local family wine cellar where you can learn the whole process of wine making.

Wine Tasting in Sorrento

The local wine cellar we will be visiting has been producing various types of wine for years. To be exact, the cellar dates back to the second half of the last century,

During the Nineties, in Sorrento and Positano, little restaurateurs bought it unlabelled to serve it as their own wine. In 1996, the cellar started to produce wine to send to the whole of Campania region. After the demonstration, there will be a tasting of various wines with some delicious Bruschetta, Salami, Cheese, Olives and Tarallucci.

Your Private Gastronomic Tour will continue on to a farm where they produce Mozzarella Cheese On route your Driver Guide will stop at a couple of scenic spots,

one being the Peninsula point where you can see both Naples bay and Amalfi Coast and the other, top of Sorrento

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Gastronomic.
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