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Pompeii, Sorrento and Naples 2 Days Private Tour from Naples

Pompeii, Sorrento and Naples 2 Days Private Tour from Naples

980€ per person

Join this 2 days trip from Naples to three fascinating Italian sights. First, you’ll enjoy a Pompeii private tour, to discover life in an Ancient Roman town with your expert, local guide. In Pompeii, you’ll see what made Ancient Roman culture so vibrant. From huge communal bathhouses to open-air theaters, fast-food businesses and grand villas, adorned in mosaics and frescoes. Discover the history of the terrible eruption of Mount Vesuvius and see the moving plaster-casts of those who died. Then, continue to Sorrento one of the most famous Italian touristic destinations. You will also visit the vibrant, historic Naples and discover the city’s unique culture, including the famous Archeological Museum. In Naples you’ll see all major sights of the historic city, including Piazza dei Plebiscito, with iconic architecture and a complementary coffee at world-famous Gambrinus and more.

PRIVATE TOUR MINIMUM 2 PEOPLE

EXTRA PERSON €770,00

Includes:

  • Pick-up and drop off with luxury transportation and private chauffeur
  • Private professional guide inside Pompeii and the Museum in Naples
  • Skip the line entrance tickets in the archeological area of Pompeii
  • Entrance tickets in the archeological Museum of Naples
  • Live commentary on board during the panoramic tour
  • Limoncello and other local products free tasting in Sorrento
  • Handcraft demonstration for inlay wood work and cameos

Not Included:

  • 22% vat tax
  • Food and beverages
  • Gratuities. If you are satisfied with the service, a gratuity is customary
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POMPEII
Pompeii (just 16 miles southeast of Naples) is the most-visited archaeological site in the world, due to its many and well-preserved ruins, left behind by a city buried in Vesuvius’s wake in the year 79 A.D. The ancient site was added to the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1997, an excellent repository of details on quotidian life during Antiquity. Although the Osci Tribe originally founded it, the Romans captured Pompeii during the Peninusla’s Social War, transforming it into a Roman Colony and naming it Cornelia Venera Pompeiana. Partly-destroyed by an earthquake in 62 A.D., the entire city and its splendid suburban villas did not last long enough to see complete reconstruction: Vesuvius not only erupted, but spewed enough lava so as to instantaneously cover the city – which also meant that its buildings (down to the decorations and ornamentation) and its people were immediately fossilized as if they had been placed in a sort of time capsule, remaining in large part intact. The eventually-recovered bodies, particularly those belonging to “Julius Polybius’s family,” included Polybius himself (this Polybius being a laundry service owner) and a woman fleeing the volcano’s approaching aftermath with her jewelry in tow. These personages ended up serving as their excavators’ key to reconstructing the Pompeiians’ last moments of life. Amazingly, the inhabitants did not have a clue that they were living in the shadow of a volcano that had been sleeping for over 1,500 years; it is no wonder that they were not able to get away in time (neither did Pliny the Elder, Admiral of the Roman Fleet, while attempting to save them). Pompeii was essentially forgotten for centuries, until the first archaeological explorations in the 18th Century. Pompeii was a thriving Mediterranean port and a resort enclave for wealthy Romans; if it had not been for the remarkable state in which nature happened to maintain its remains, it might not have come to occupy the place in our imaginations that it does today. We know it for its civic buildings that line its wide streets, and for its domestic ones like the Surgeon’s House, the House of the Faun, the House of the Chaste Lovers and the equally-famous Villa of Mysteries (so-named for the interior murals depicting the initiation rites of the Cult of Dionysus). Characteristic graffiti defines the exteriors of many of the buildings here, while refined frescoes narrating daily life are standard interior decor in many of Pompeii’s homes. From them the city’s principal archaeologists have inferred a sense of glamour, luxury, and the appreciation for beauty and art possessed by the ancient Romans that resided here. Other of Pompeii’s treasures that survived long enough to tell the city’s story are its main forum and public structures, such as the Capitolium, the Basilica, the public baths, the triangular forum, its two theatres and the Stabian Baths. Pompeii, along with the disappeared towns of Herculaneum and Torre Annunziata (the suburban community of ancient Oplontis) compose a UNESCO World Heritage Site, well-deserved for their ability like no other to recount the life and times of a fascinating bygone society.
SORRENTO
An expanse of land that juts out towards Capri and the rest of the Mediterranean, it lies just south of the Bay of Naples. It is a sequence of cliffs and overhangs dominating the coastline - with a few small bays along the way – blessed with a view of the enchanting deep blue. This, the Sorrentine Coast, is passable only for its sloping terraces cultivated with oranges, vines, olives and, most of all, lemons, all the way to the sea. Tourists lucky enough to pass through in springtime will be pleasantly overwhelmed with their perfume, while visitors year-round can enjoy the divine consequences of the sour citrus once picked: after all, life gave this Coast lemons, and the people made Limoncello! Man has been spellbound by this spot from the beginning, initiating with the ancient Greeks – they thought that these waters were the home of sirens (legend has it that in Antiquity, Surrentum, as it was known, came about as a site of cult worship dedicated to these mythological mer-people). Later, the Romans built their splendid villas, roads, ports and thermal spas, certain remnants of which are still visible right in Sorrento. Inhabited during the Middle Ages, as well, and despite eventual incursions by the Saracens, the Sorrentine and Amalfi Coasts were prime stops for those 18th-Century European men of means on their traditional Grand Tour.
NAPLES
The Province of Naples is a magical place where colors, flavors, culture and history are intertwined in a charming mix of knowledge, joy and fun.The area is loomed over by Mt. Vesuvius and overlooks a marvelous bay, whose beauty has served as driving inspiration for many an artist.The allure of the landscape, the beautiful islands that dot the blue waters of the Mediterranean like jewels, the energy of a fiery and vivacious people open the doors to that joie de vivre that pervades every inch of this land, whose popular songs and delicious recipes never fade.The multitude of places will excite every type of tourist: from the art and history enthusiast to the nature and sea lover, from the enogastronomy to the ancient traditions. Two places highlight and define the bay: the Sorrento Bay to the south and the magnificent area of Phlegraean Fileds to the north. In the center of this arc lies Naples with the majestic Vesuvius directly behind it.The sites of Pompeii and Herculaneum are of great archaeological value and are famous worldwide for their astounding number of ruiins. The entire area is interspersed with finds from the long-ago past, especially those that saw the presence of the Roman emperors that first recognized the beauty of this terrain. Not to mention the natural masterpiece created over the course of the millennia by the volcanic eruptions and lava flows that have drawn such a unique landscape: it is a reminder of the strength and grandeur of Mother Nature, against which man can do very little.Finally, in a sea so blue that it blends with the sky, three islands - CapriIschia, Procida and a few islets - each boasting unique identities and history. In the Province of Naples, tourists can take on a truly multi-faceted vacation that will leave wondering why they waited so long!
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