Visiting Naples's historic center means traveling through twenty centuries of history. Its streets, piazzas, churches, monuments and castles constitute a jewel box of exceptional importance Read more.
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. Read more.
The ruins of the ancient cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum were buried by the eruption of Vesuvius in 79BC, but they still offer an unparalleled window into the quotidian life of classical antiquity. Read more.
Cilento, terrain in the Region of Campania marked by gently-rolling hills covered in olive trees that see their reflection in the blue of the Tyrhennian, is pure magic! Read more.
Set in a unique environment, it is an exemplar of a Mediterranean landscape and of enormous cultural and natural value due to its topographical characteristics, as well as its historical evolution. Read more.