如何从Sorrento去Amalfi,路上大约多久?Amalfi凤凰古城值不值得去玩多久

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(Sorrentoamalficoast Apartment)
Sorrentoamalficoast Apartment offers pet-friendly accommodation in Massa Lubrense, 500 metres from Marina di Puolo. Free private parking is available on site.
There is a seating area, a dining area and a kitchen equipped with a refrigerator. A TV is featured. There is a private bathroom with a bath.
The nearest airport is Capodichino Airport, 32 km from Sorrentoamalficoast Apartment.
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最早入住时间: 14:00
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意大利必问Top10
求教到Amalfi海岸怎么走啊
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打算早上从napoli到pompeii,中午去从pompeii去amalfi,然后晚上回napoli。看了很多帖子,不过里面提供的网站都是语,还分好多公司,实在是看不懂了。求教中午从pompeii去amalfi怎么样比较方便啊?另外晚上从amalfi回napoli是不是最晚是site的18的车啊?多谢多谢,万望指教
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三天两夜的话建议都住在索伦托,去那里都方便,下面是我2月份刚刚去过的: Day6:早上火车到那不勒斯,下午市内,晚上小火车到索伦托住(那不勒斯脏乱差,狠狠心可以看都不看,实在不好意思不去看,就一定找正宗的pizza店试一下,跟满街的电加热pizza两码事) Day7:早上快船到卡布里岛,下午,回索伦托住(实际上我们在卡布里玩得太爽,干脆放弃了没看) Day8:早上巴士沿阿马尔菲海岸玩positano,amlfi,晚上到萨莱诺座到西西里的夜火车(这条海岸线名不虚传,很震撼)
目前是冬季,SITA没有从索连托到amalfi直达班车,中间有一段需要走路衔接(索连托到p开头的一个地点,问司机都知道)环游火车从napoli到索连托需要1.5小时左右,从索连托到amalfi算上中间走路需要2小时
中午从pompeii去amalfi的话可以乘环游小火车去sorrento,然后换sita去amalfi,也可以乘意铁到salerno,然后换sita去amalfi18是sita直达那不勒斯的末班车,通过sorrento或者salerno转车返回的末班车都比较晚
同问,打算在那不勒斯待3天2夜,主要是想去和Amalfi,这三天两夜如何分配比较好?周边还有啥地方可以顺路一起去的?谢谢哈!
感谢啦。嘿嘿。对了,通过上面两种方法从pompeii到amalfi要大概多久呢?
那六月份车会更多么?呵呵,谢谢!!!
那六月份车会更多么?呵呵,谢谢!!!意大利那不勒斯和锡耶纳哪个比较好玩呢? - 知乎71被浏览21068分享邀请回答203 条评论分享收藏感谢收起21 条评论分享收藏感谢收起查看更多回答1 个回答被折叠()Positano, Amalfi and Sorrento
The West end of the Amalfi coast and the town of Positano (below) - complete with Santa Fe style
The Maritime
was founded in 840, making it the oldest Italian (maritime) Republic.& The Republic enjoyed it's greatest prosperity in the second half of the nine hundreds and the ten hundreds.& The Tavole Amalfitane (Amalfi Maritime Tables), the world's first maritime code*, controlled shipping in much of the Mediterranean, and there were colonies of Amalfians conducting trade in many port cities.&
During the 10 hundreds Amalfi and the rest of Southern Italy
(not to mention a large swag of coastal north Africa) fell increasingly
under the control of Norman warlords, and by the early 11 hundreds (see
they were ruled by a Norman King -
Though their previous position in the world of
Mediterranean maritime trade was being taken over by Pisa and Genoa, this did not prevent Amalfi from benefiting from the opportunities of
, including the acquisition of the
Constantinople via the
* This claim is disputed by
the Puglian Norman
, whose Ordinamenta Maris of 1063 is
claimed as the oldest.&
The town of Amalfi itself is dominated by the fascinating Norman / Arab / Other Things Duomo built in the early twelve hundreds to accommodate the bones of the Apostle Andrew (see below)
which they had souvenired from Constantinople in
also on the
Duomo steps that the last scene of &The Italian Connection& was played out.&
The town has a nice feel to it and is relatively accessible.&
The bell tower was originally built between 1180 and 1276.& The striking facade is a copy of the old one which fell down in 1891.& While we were there
(November 2003), the cathedral was packed with representatives of community organizations, schools and
(volunteer) emergency services
(i.e. mainstream Italy) attending a very moving memorial service for young men of the Italian Carabinieri killed recently in Iraq.
doorway to the cathedral is closed by a pair of bronze doors (with
four silver inlaid panels though it is not obvious here) made
in Constantinople
around 1060 by Symeon of Syria and donated to the church by the merchant Pantaleone of Amalfi, who with his son Mauro ran a
profitable Amalfi-Constantinople trading operation.&
Cathedral Door - Photo
(C) Holly Hayes,
Between 1060 and 1076
Pantaleone and Mauro also gave
bronze doors to the
(1066), the major basilica of
in the Gargano (1076).&&
Nearby Salerno acquired some bronze
doors from Constantinople in 1099 - don't know who paid.
The intimate &Cloister of Paradise&, &combining
Romanesque austerity with Arab fantasy&, dates from 1266.& This now forms the access route to the first Cathedral, put up by Duke Mansone III in the second half of the Nine Hundreds,&which parallels the main one and was known as the Basilica of The Crucifix.& It has recently been reopened after being stripped of all the Baroque &improvements& made in the early seventeen hundreds.& The
resulting large and appealing whitewashed space hosts displays of items from the treasury, as well as fragments of old decorative mosaic works and frescos from the Norman Cathedral and the
even earlier paleo-christian church.& All very appealing and well worth a leisurely wander.&
The wall mounted exhibits include a marble panel with a mini cosmatesque
inlay (below left).
Underneath is the large and extravagantly marbled crypt - the central altar containing the remains of the first Apostle - Saint Andrew (Sant'Andrea) (he who Jesus promised to make a fisher of men).& These were souvenired from Constantinople by the
* in the early 1200s, having previously been souvenired by the Byzantines from Patras.&
*It was the other famous Maritime
Republic of Venice
and who got away with the most
spectacular loot.
- La Tonnarella Hotel and Two Restaurants
Another memorable hotel bedroom (and notebook workstation) view - this time in the friendly and efficient three star La Tonnarella hotel overlooking Sorrento.& The hotel also has a good restaurant -
as a starter try the marinated anchovies on a bed of rucola or one of the home made pasta and seafood combinations, and grilled calamari or prawns to follow.
Via Capo 31, Tel:&081-878-1153, Fax:&081-878-2169
The restaurants in the main part of Sorrento, a bland area catering mostly to English and American Tourists, are
mostly uninteresting and overpriced, though there is some good food to be had (try for example il Buco which is said to be outstanding food wise
though also fully priced)
However, a bit of random urban
walking revealed le Macine (&the millstones& - presumably a vague historical allusion) - excellent home made pasta (try the chunky flat pasta, the grilled cal and the tomato salad made with Naples tomatoes that taste like tomatoes used to!).& Well away from the tourist drag, good food and not a rip off - and (thus)
fun and full of Italians!& To get there from the Piazza Tasso (say 10
minutes) walk away from the sea up via Fuorimura, under the circular road, past the car park piazza to a T junction, turn left, and it's on the left.&
For other Paradoxplace links visit the
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