5050 x 3381 px | 42,8 x 28,6 cm | 16,8 x 11,3 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
octobre 2007
Lieu:
Sedile Dominova, Sorrento, Campania, Italy
Informations supplémentaires:
Sorrento is a small city in Campania, Italy, with some 16, 500 inhabitants. It is a popular tourist destination. The town can be reached easily from Naples and Pompeii, The town overlooks the bay of Naples, as the key place of the Sorrentine Peninsula, and many viewpoints in the city allow sight of Naples itself (visible across the bay), Vesuvius and the island of Capri. The Amalfi Drive (connecting Sorrento and Amalfi) is the narrow road that threads around the high cliffs above the Mediterranean.Ferry boats and hydrofoils provide services to Naples, Amalfi, Positano, Capri and Ischia. Sorrento's sea cliffs are impressive and its luxury hotels have attracted famous personalities, including Enrico Caruso and Luciano Pavarotti. Sorrento is famous for the production of limoncello, made from lemon rinds, alcohol, Wood craftsmanship is also developed.The most important temples of Surrentum were those of Athena and of the Sirens who gave their name to the promontory. In antiquity Surrentum was famous for its wine (oranges and lemons which are now so much cultivated there not having been introduced into Italy in antiquity), its fish, and its pottery; In the pre-Roman age Sorrento was influenced by the Greek civilization:, according to the legend, a temple was founded by Ulysses and originally devoted to the cult of the Sirens, whence Sorrento's name. It is one of the most renowned tourist destinations of Italy, a trend which continued into the 20th Century. Famous people who visited it include Lord Byron, Keats, Goethe, Henrik Ibsen and Walter Scott Sorrento was the birthplace of the poet Torquato Tasso (1544-1595), author of the Gerusalemme Liberata.The town was quite famously featured in the early-20th-century song "Torna a Surriento" (Come Back to Sorrento) with lyrics by Giambattista De Curtis, brother of the song's composer, Ernesto De Curtis.In the 1920s, famous Soviet writer Maxim Gorky lived in Sorrento
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