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Sicily

PALERMO

palermo

Capital of Sicily and crossroads of cultures and traditions, Palermo will make you fall in love with its exciting colors, aromas and flavors. . Palermo is a city full of churches, monuments and pricel...

CATANIA

catania

Catania sits in the long shadow of Mount Etna, a city forged as much by lava as by history. Rebuilt in luminous Sicilian Baroque after the devastating earthquake of 1693, its historic center—carved fr...

SYRACUSE

syracuse

Syracuse is a historic coastal city in southeastern Sicily, Italy. Founded by Greek settlers in 734 BC, it was once one of the most powerful cities of the ancient Greek world and rivaled Athens in wea...

ISPICA

ispica

Ispica lies in the southeastern corner of Sicily, where the landscape begins to soften into sunlit plains and the influence of the sea is never far away. The town carries a warm, lived-in feeling, sha...

PIETRAPERZIA

pietraperzia

Pietraperzia sits atop a gentle hill in the heart of Sicily¢s inland landscape, where rolling fields, olive groves, and distant mountains create a quietly expansive backdrop. The town exudes a sense o...

About Sicily

Sicily is a Mediterranean crossroads where layers of civilization—Greek, Roman, Arab, Norman, and Spanish—remain vividly inscribed in stone, street plans, and cuisine. The island¢s geography is dramatic and elemental: the smoking cone of Mount Etna dominates the eastern skyline, its fertile volcanic soils feeding vineyards and citrus groves that descend toward the Ionian Sea. In Palermo, Byzantine mosaics glitter beneath Arab-Norman arches, while open-air markets pulse with the scent of fried panelle and fresh seafood. Along the northeast coast, Taormina terraces rise above turquoise coves, anchored by a remarkably preserved Greek theatre framing Etna and sea in a single vista. Southward, the honey-colored Baroque towns of the Val di Noto glow at dusk, rebuilt in ornate confidence after the 1693 earthquake. Sicily¢s coastline alternates between sandy stretches and rugged cliffs, from the Aeolian Islands¢ volcanic silhouettes to quiet coves near Agrigento¢s ancient temples. Evenings unfold slowly over Nero d¢Avola and pistachio-laced desserts, as church bells and sea breezes mingle. Sicily is not merely visited; it is absorbed—through its stratified history, seismic landscapes, and a hospitality as warm as its sun.