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ALONG THE MESSINA COAST LINE DAY TOUR
TO TINDARI, SANTO STEFANO DI CAMASTRA & CEFALU'
We have chosen a magnificent
drive today along the northern coast line with wonderful roads overlooking
the Ionian sea and over the Eolie's Islands. We will stop first
and visit Tindaris, which began as a settlement back in the Bronze
Age (about 1500 B.C). The town suffered the effects of a landslide
at the end of the 1st Century AD, and an earthquake in 365 AD. Tindaris
was the most important Greek city in this vicinity, though most
of what the visitor sees today was constructed during the Roman
period. We will visit the amphitheatre, which was built in the 4th
century BC. It has the ruins of simple temples and the so-called
basilica, a fine example of Greco-Roman architecture begun in the
4th century B.C. and successively modified for use as a meeting
place. We will also see the very important Christian Sanctuary that
sits high on the hill above the city. It is famous for its black
Madonna statue that draws visitors from afar, and gives it its name,
the Sanctuary of the black Madonna.
We then take a drive by a wonderful toad by the Ionian sea through
charming villages, in particular, the famous Santo Stefano di Camastra
village, filled of several ceramic shops and colored pottery. We
the get to Cefalù, a charming unspoiled village with winding,
narrow, medieval streets and delightful restaurants overlooking
a rocky coast. It is dominated by a huge rock known as "La
Rocca" - once the site of a Temple of Diane and one of the
finest Norman-Arab-Byzantine Cathedrals. The Duomo of Cefalù
was begun in 1131 by Roger II and it was intended as the principal
religious seat in Sicily. Though it failed to fulfill this function,
the building's magnificence has never been eclipsed. Its fine mosaics
(1148), which feature an image of Christ Pantocrator in the apse,
are often celebrated as the purest Byzantine works of art on Sicilian
soil.
Also of interest is the museum "Mandralisca" which houses
an "Antonello da Messina" painting and a collection of
coins, ceramics, vases and so on...
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