Lonely Planet Southern Italy
By Cristian Bonetto, Stefania D'Ignoti, Paula Hardy and
3/5
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About this ebook
Lonely Planet's Southern Italy is our most comprehensive guide that extensively covers all the region has to offer, with recommendations for both popular and lesser-known experiences. Hike to the top of Mount Etna, take an epic road trip along the Amalfi Coast and indulge in an authentic Neapolitan pizza; all with your trusted travel companion.
Inside Lonely Planet's Southern Italy Travel Guide:
Lonely Planet's Top Picks - a visually inspiring collection of the destination's best experiences and where to have them
Itineraries help you build the ultimate trip based on your personal needs and interests
Local insights give you a richer, more rewarding travel experience - whether it's history, people, music, landscapes, wildlife, politics
Eating and drinking - get the most out of your gastronomic experience as we reveal the regional dishes and drinks you have to try
Toolkit - all of the planning tools for solo travellers, LGBTQIA+ travellers, family travellers and accessible travel
Colour maps and images throughout
Language - essential phrases and language tips
Insider tips to save time and money and get around like a local, avoiding crowds and trouble spots
Covers Naples, the Amalfi Coast, Puglia, Basilicata, Calabria, Sicily and more!
About Lonely Planet:
Lonely Planet, a Red Ventures Company, is the world's number one travel guidebook brand. Providing both inspiring and trustworthy information for every kind of traveller since 1973, Lonely Planet reaches hundreds of millions of travellers each year online and in print and helps them unlock amazing experiences. Visit us at lonelyplanet.com and join our community of followers on Facebook (facebook.com/lonelyplanet), Twitter (@lonelyplanet), Instagram (instagram.com/lonelyplanet), and TikTok (@lonelyplanet).
'Lonely Planet. It's on everyone's bookshelves; it's in every traveller's hands. It's on mobile phones. It's on the Internet. It's everywhere, and it's telling entire generations of people how to travel the world.' Fairfax Media (Australia)
Cristian Bonetto
Cristian Bonetto ha contribuido a más de 30 guías Lonely Planet, de ciudades, regiones y países que abarcan cuatro continentes, incluida su tierra, Australia. Sus consideraciones sobre viajes, gastronomía, cultura y diseño han aparecido en numerosas publicaciones y otros medios de todo el mundo. Tras escribir guiones para televisión y obras de teatro, dedica mucho tiempo a viajar; de lo contrario, es fácil encontrarlo tomando café en su querida ciudad, Melbourne. Se pueden seguir sus aventuras en Instagram (rexcat75) y Twitter (@CristianBonetto)
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Book preview
Lonely Planet Southern Italy - Cristian Bonetto
SOUTHERN ITALY
MapHow To Use This eBookPLAN YOUR TRIP
The Journey Begins Here
Map
Our Picks
Regions & Cities
Itineraries
When to Go
Get Prepared
The Food Scene
The Outdoors
The Guide
Naples & Campania
Naples
Beyond Naples
The Islands
Beyond the Islands
The Amalfi Coast
Beyond the Amalfi Coast
Salerno & Cilento
Beyond Salerno
Puglia
Alberobello
Beyond Alberobello
Lecce
Beyond Lecce
Vieste
Beyond Vieste
Calabria & Basilicata
Matera
Beyond Matera
Maratea
Beyond Maratea
La Sila
Beyond La Sila
Costa degli Dei
Beyond Costa degli Dei
Reggio di Calabria
Beyond Reggio di Calabria
Sicily
Palermo
Beyond Palermo
Lipari
Beyond Lipari
Catania
Beyond Catania
Syracuse
Beyond Syracuse
Agrigento
Trapani
Beyond Trapani
Toolkit
Arriving
Getting Around
Money
Accommodation
Family Travel
Health & Safe Travel
Food, Drink & Nightlife
Responsible Travel
LGBTIQ+ Travel
Accessible Travel
Shopping Locally
Nuts & Bolts
Language
Storybook
A History of Southern Italy in 15 Places
Meet the Southern Italians
The South: A Muse to Creative Minds
On Napoletanità
Change: A Southern Renaissance?
This Book
SOUTHERN ITALY
THE JOURNEY BEGINS
jpgCapri | ISOGOOD_PATRICK/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
It’s a view I never tire of: that first glimpse of Mt Vesuvius from the high-speed train to Naples. Looming large in the distance, it signals that I am home. Despite my northern Italian blood, my heart will always belong to the south. Nowhere else do I feel so in the moment, so intensely alive. Everything in the Mezzogiorno is cranked up to 11: the flavours of its produce, the baroque flourishes of its churches, the passion and generosity of its people. The beauty of southern Italy’s sun-bleached villages, ethereal coastlines and wild mountains borders on the sublime. It’s a magnificence not lost on a new generation of southern Italians, whose efforts at restoration and innovation are invigorating this long struggling half of the country with renewed self-belief and spark.
Cristian Bonetto
@CristianBonetto
A reformed TV soap writer and playwright, Cristian has been writing about travel, culture and food for almost two decades.
My favourite experience is riding the chairlift to Monte Solaro on Capri, sugar-cube houses beneath my feet and the bluest of bays stretched towards Naples in ethereal silence.
WHO GOES WHERE
Our writers and experts choose the places which, for them, define Southern Italy
Puglia is a sunny region located in the heart of the Mediterranean. But it’s beyond just a land of warm hospitality – it’s a magical combination of cultural history, wild nightlife and unspoilt nature. Here, small villages shine through a unique light, and the flavours of a simple cuisine are reminiscent of a past where each civilisation that has come and gone left its indelible traces.
Stefania D’Ignoti
@stef_dgn (Twitter)
Stefania is a journalist and writer specialising in Italian culture and society.
jpgAndrew Mayovskyy/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
The Calabrian village of Badolato is fascinating because it encapsulates both the struggles and potential of this unsung part of Italy. Staying here not only gives you an insight into the intense close-knit relationships of a mountain town, but makes you think deeply about the urgent issue of migration and how that shapes places.
Paula Hardy
@paulahardy (Instagram)
A travel journalist for over 20 years, Paula contributes regularly to Lonely Planet and newspapers.
jpgmonticelllo/GETTY IMAGES ©
Naples may have a rough exterior, but scratch beneath its graffiti-streaked surface to unearth treasures beyond your imagination. You’ll find Roman ruins layered upon 3000-year-old Greek streets, magical saints’ blood, frilly baroque palaces, and the best pizza you’ve ever had in your life. Take it slow; Naples is a Russian doll to be pried open one layer at a time, lest its contents overwhelm.
Eva Sandoval
@ieatmypigeon (Twitter + Instagram)
Eva writes about food and travel for publications like Condé Nast Traveler, BBC Future and Fodor’s Travel.
jpgStrippedPixel.com/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
When the island vibe beckons, I head to Favignana in Sicily’s Egadi Islands. I can’t get enough of its unpretentious cuisine and the nonchalance with which quarried tufa blocks are scattered around like Lego bricks. Islanders here make no attempt to manicure their island. Favignana is, first and foremost, their home where the day’s catch ends up in brown-paper cones of deep-fried frittura mista (mixed seafood) and wild botanicals end up in Isola di Favignana craft gin.
Nicola Williams
@tripalong (Twitter + Instagram)
Nicola is a travel writer, trail runner and mountain addict.
jpgelesi/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Country MapBEACH BELLES
From Capri’s precipitous shores to Vulcano’s thermal waters, Italy’s southern coasts have seduced everyone from Odysseus to Onassis. Sole e mare (sun and sea) is the life force of the southern Italians, for whom summer beach time is sacrosanct, whether it be sharing trays of pasta al forno with relatives on the city seafront, partying on Puglia’s sandy sweeps, or hopping between Aeolian islands on a chartered yacht. August means peak crowds and heavy traffic.
jpgBaia delle Zagare | Maurizio De Mattei/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Ferry Services
A whole fleet of ferries serve southern Italy’s islands. Services run year-round but summer sees a surge in sailings and ticket prices.
jpgFrank Lambert/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Beach Clubs
Many beaches are cordoned off into public and private sections. Entrance to a private lido or bagno includes a parasol-shaded sunlounger for the day.
jpgLongJon/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
What to Wear
Cover up when going to the bathroom or sitting down to eat. Water shoes are a good idea at pebble beaches.
BEST BEACH & ISLAND EXPERIENCES
Boat around the bays and beaches of the Costa degli Dei 1, home to summer hotspot Tropea and crystal-clear turquoise waters.
In Puglia’s wild, verdant Gargano, hike the Path of Love to the Baia delle Zagare 2, one of Italy’s finest beaches.
Party till dawn with the bronzed and hedonistic at the beach clubs of Gallipoli 3, Puglia’s summertime playground.
Switch between black-sand beaches, therapeutic mud baths and the turquoise waters of a partially collapsed crater on Sicily’s volcanic Aeolian Islands 4.
Island hop across the Gulf of Naples 5, from chic Capri to lemon-scented Procida and thermal Ischia, the largest and most developed island.
Ancient Relics
On plateaus, at the foot of volcanoes and behind museum glass they lie: veritable time machines catapulting travellers back millennia to an era of chitons, Cyclopses and Cicero. Southern Italy’s archaeological treasures are among the best preserved and most evocative in Europe, marked with the flames of pillaging invaders, the grooves of chariots and the graffiti of slaves and gladiators. Some are crowded and celebrated, others forlorn and overlooked: all have revealing tales to tell.
jpgTempio dei Dioscuri, Valley of the Temples | Maurizio De Mattei/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Good Timing
Visit big sites in the early morning or late afternoon to avoid the worst heat and crowds. Spring and autumn are the best periods for sightseeing.
jpgFrank Lambert/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Tour Guides
Beware of unauthorised tour guides at the entrance to archaeological sites. Ask to see their official licence and confirm the tour price beforehand.
jpgLongJon/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Fragile Goods
Ancient ruins are fragile; never use a flash when photographing frescoes and don’t climb on columns and other relics.
Best archaeological experiences
Snoop around the frescoed bath houses, shops, villas and brothel of ancient Pompeii 1, frozen in time since 79 CE.
Marvel at underground Naples 2, the original Greek city of Neapolis and the impressive Roman aqueduct system.
Gaze out to sea and picture Carthaginian troops sailing to shore at the Valley of the Temples 3, Sicily’s most important classical site.
Take in a vivacious suite of Roman floor mosaics at Villa Romana del Tellaro 4, among the best preserved and most colourful in existence.
Applaud classical Greek dramas at Syracuse’s sweeping Teatro Greco 5, once the stomping ground of Aeschylus, the so-called father of tragedy.
Into the Wild
Less populated than Italy’s north, the Mezzogiorno has a wealth of raw landscapes to hike, bike, raft or forage. This is especially true of the ‘Deep South’. Here, huge national parks cover large swathes of Calabria and Basilicata, their dizzying gorges and torrents snaking through forests of beech, silver fir and rare Bosnian pines. Of course, you could always opt for a shorter amble high above the Amalfi Coast, making it back in time for aperitivo.
jpgSentiero degli Dei | ValerioMei/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Hiking Tips
The best weather for hiking is in spring (April to June) and early autumn (September). Trails are generally marked with daubed red and white symbols.
jpgCiro Orabona Creative/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Minority Villages
The mountains of Calabria and Basilicata are home to two of Italy’s historic ethno-linguistic minorities, the Arbëreshë (Italo-Albanians) and the Griko (Italo-Greeks).
jpgDionisio iemma/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Parks Online
Southern Italy claims nine parchi nazionali (national parks). Check parks.it for useful information.
Best wilderness experiences
Hike Italy’s largest national park, the Parco Nazionale del Pollino 1, where steep canyons and thick forests meet ancient mountain villages.
Wander somewhere between sea and clouds on the divine Sentiero degli Dei 2, within easy reach of the Amalfi Coast and its earthy pleasures.
Slow the pace among Aleppo pines, bone-white cliffs and coveted beaches on the Path of Love, a panoramic trail in Puglia’s Gargano 3.
Dive offshore from Lipari 4 to study the natural habitats of octopuses, eels, groupers and other sea creatures up close.
Plunge through frothing white-water rapids in the gorges of Gole del Raganello 5.
Village Life
Southern Italy’s towns and villages come in all shapes and colours, from sunny, pastel-hued fishing enclaves to brooding, cliff-clinging stone hamlets. Some are lapped by topaz waters, others encircled by forests. Stay a while, amble sleepy streets and country trails, strike up a conversation at the local bar, learn a few words in dialect. Connect.
jpgPietrapertosa | STEVANZZ/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Best Borghi
The association I Borgi più belli d’Italia (borghipiubelliditalia.it) offers a handy directory of beautiful small towns and villages (borghi) throughout the south.
Park & Walk
As a general rule, it pays to find a car park on the edge of a town’s historic centre and continue on foot.
Best small-town experiences
Visit sherbet-coloured Marina Corricella 1, an impossibly gorgeous fishing village on sleepy Procida.
Bask in soul-stirring views of the Amalfi Coast from Ravello 2.
Devour famous pastries and catch a glimpse of Africa from super-snug Erice 3.
Keep your head in the clouds in Basilicata’s highest village, Pietrapertosa 4.
Cycle, quaff local wines and learn to make orecchiette pasta in Puglia’s fairy-tale town of Alberobello 5.
In the Piazza
The piazza is Italy’s communal living room, a place where locals prod market produce, sip spritzes and flaunt their threads. In the warmer months, many squares lure residents and visitors alike with concerts, films or even runway shows. Some are sweeping and silver-screen famous, others sleepy and raffish. All are portholes into southern life.
Size Matters
The difference between a piazza and a piazzetta is size – the latter is the diminutive form of piazza. The plural of piazza is piazze.
jpgWestend61/GETTY IMAGES ©
Clue Up
Some piazze sit on ancient acropolises; others have witnessed uprisings and mass executions. A little research can dig up a wealth of anecdotes.
jpgJackKPhoto/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Beyond Aperol
There’s more to a piazza-side spritz than Aperol. Consider ordering a delicately spiced spritz con Montenegro, or a bitter-sweet spritz con Campari, instead.
Best piazza experiences
Channel your inner Monica Bellucci on Syracuse’s cinematic Piazza del Duomo 1.
Spend a night with bohemians, students and party people on Naples’ Piazza Bellini 2, a convivial jumble of cafes, bars and ancient Greek ruins.
Slip on your designer sunglasses and strike a pose like a ’60s Hollywood icon on Capri’s see-and-be-seen Piazza Umberto I 3.
Enjoy Noto’s architectural jewel box, Piazza Municipio 4.
Sip a Puglian primitivo wine in the shadow of a baroque church on Piazzetta Castromediano 5, a heart-stealing square in the ‘Florence of the South’, Lecce.
Dolce Vita
In Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather, Castellano ad libs: ‘Leave the gun. Take the cannoli’. Wise words. Whether it’s Sicilian cassata or Campanian delizia di limone, the glutinous south serves up a plethora of luscious dolci (sweets). Every family has its favourite pasticceria, from where they order a vassoio (tray) of treats for Sunday lunch.
jpgFiocco di neve, Pasticceria Poppella | RealyEasyStar/Pasquale Sorrentino/Alamy Stock Photo©
Gelato Basics
Gelato is usually offered in a coppa (cup), cono (cone) or brioche bun. Often, you’ll be asked if you’d like it topped with panna (cream).
Holiday Treats
Festive specialities include zeppole di San Giuseppe (fried choux pastry topped with pastry cream) in March and Neapolitan mostaccioli (chocolate-glazed biscuits) at Christmas.
Best sweet experiences
Test the limits of your self control at Pasticceria Poppella 1.
Celebrate the happy marriage of babà and tiramisu with a babamisù at Minori’s Sal de Riso 2.
Get your mitts on rare Sicilian treats at I Segreti del Chiostro 3.
Drool over Latte Pa’s 4 brioche oozing mulberry, pistachio or watermelon gelato on Mondello’s beachfront.
Hit Lecce’s in-the-know Caffè L’Incontro 5 to sample the Salento region’s famous pasticciotto.
The Wine List
Italy’s vineyards don’t stop in Tuscany. The Mezzogiorno harbours some of the country’s most exciting and underrated wine regions. Some straddle coveted coastlines, others menacing volcanoes or far-flung, fig-strewn hills. Book a tour of a next-gen winery or simply kick back at a neighbourhood enoteca (wine bar) and quaff a blend you’ve likely never heard of.
Vineyard Visits
Make sure to book ahead as walk-ins are not always accepted. Note also that tasting fees might be waived if you buy some wine.
jpgROSARIOSCALIA/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Classifications
Italy’s wines are classified: DOCG (Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita); DOC (Denominazione di Origine Controllata); IGT (Indicazione Geografica Tipica); vino da tavola (table wine).
jpgELENA.KATKOVA/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Tastings
In towns and cities, almost every enoteca offers a degustazione (tasting) of at least one or two local wines.
Best viticultural experiences
Book a private vineyard tour and fine-dining lunch high above the Amalfi Coast, home to Cantine Marisa Cuomo 1.
Discover the delicious, dusty flavour of Calabria’s rare Gaglioppo grape and the revolutionary winemakers helping it shine in Cirò 2.
Savour sweet Malvasia dessert wine with a winemaker in a family-run winery on the Aeolian island of Salina 3.
A sunset aperitivo at beautiful vineyard, Soffio sulle Isole 4, glass of volcanic red or sweet Malvasia in hand, is out of this world.
Trundle by train through winemaking villages on the slopes of Mt Etna along Strada del Vino dell’Etna 5 wine route
Saints & Saviour
Religion has inspired many of southern Italy’s most magnificent works of art and architecture, from Byzantine mosaics and deeply poignant sculptures, to gloriously frescoed cathedrals. For centuries, chapels and churches were constructed as the status symbols for religious orders and rulers, who commissioned the day’s greatest artists and artisans to realise their lofty ambitions. Today, these monuments to faith and favour are dazzling testaments to the passion and genius of the southern Italians.
jpgCattedrale di Monreale | elesi/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Cover Up
Some churches may refuse you entry if ‘inappropriately dressed’. Regardless of gender, cover your shoulders and knees and wear shoes.
jpggodongphoto/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Holy Shindigs
Southern Italian towns celebrate their patron saints in spectacular fashion. Top events include Catania’s Festa di Sant’Agata and Syracuse’s Festa di San Sebastiano.
jpgMarco Crupi/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Out for Lunch
Churches often close for an hour or more at lunch. Many also prohibit sightseeing visits during Mass.
Best sacred experiences
Relive biblical episodes in the meticulously detailed mosaics of Sicily’s Cattedrale di Monreale 1, commissioned after the Virgin’s apparition to a Norman king.
Marvel at the wafer-thin marble veil shrouding Christ in Giuseppe Sanmartino’s Cristo velato in Naples’ Cappella Sansevero 2.
Crack the symbolism carved into the facade of the Basilica di Santa Croce 3, a poster child for Lecce’s exuberant take on baroque.
Enjoy the colour pop of rare Lombard-era frescoes inside Matera’s Cripta del Peccato Originale 4, one of the most spectacular of Basilicata’s curious chiese rupestri (cave churches).
Lose yourself in Italy’s biggest monastery, the Certosa di Padula 5, a mega Carthusian charterhouse.
Battlements & Ballrooms
For centuries, emperors, kings and queens from across Europe battled over the Mezzogiorno, conquering, shaping and losing territories in a long waltz of kingdom making and breaking. While the lights have long come up on their courts, their lives, tastes and triumphs live on in the mighty castles and palaces they’ve left behind. Seek out stories, scandals and legends in southern Italy’s suite of mosaicked bedrooms, Gothic halls, baroque ballrooms and brooding castle prisons.
jpgReggia di Caserta | Sergey Berestetsky/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Special Events
Castles and palaces are often used to host concerts and cultural events, particularly in the summer festival season. It’s always worth checking.
jpgValeria Cantone/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Audio Guides
It’s often worth paying the extra couple of euros for an audio guide to better appreciate a building’s history, architecture and art.
jpgNomad_Soul/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Golden Hour
Many buildings look their best in the early evening when the sun dips and the light takes on a soft golden hue.
Best castle & palace experiences
Wear out the soles of your shoes at King Charles VII’s gargantuan, fresco-pimped Reggia di Caserta 1, Italy’s gobsmacking answer to Versailles.
Revel in the exoticism of Arab-Norman architecture at Palermo’s glittering Cappella Palatina and Palazzo dei Normanni 2.
Ponder Saracen raids, festering nuns and political prisoners at Ischia’s stoic Castello Aragonese 3, looming high above the Tyrhennian Sea.
Wander Palazzo Reale’s 4rooms and be awed by the opulent marble scalone d’onore staircase and the gilt and marble Royal Chapel.
Scan the surrounds for marauding pirates at Castello di Lipari 5, the island’s impressive clifftop citadel.
Big-city Rush
Italy’s big southern cities are a full-throttle rush of grit and glam: unruly traffic, soul-stirring architecture, cracked footpaths, coveted boutiques and indie-spirited, bar-jammed lanes. Whether it’s Naples, Palermo or Catania, dive into a torrent of boisterous street markets, art-jammed palaces and see-and-be-seen squares. Your reward: a taste of southern spirit at its most visceral and downright fun.
jpgLa Pescheria, Catania | javarman/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Street Art
In Naples, seek out mega murals by Jorit. In Palermo and Catania, keep your eyes peeled for works by Nicolò Amato, Tutto e Niente and Ligama.
jpgLittleaom/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
City Passes
You can save money on sightseeing and transport by buying an Artecard (campaniartecard.it) in Naples, or a Palermo Tourist Card (pmocard.it) in Sicily’s capital.
jpgFortgens Photography/SHUTTERSTOCK ©
Shopping
Hit the shops for stylish clothes and shoes, along with handmade leather goods and glassware. You could also stock up on homeware and deli treats.
Best urban experiences
Dress up and enjoy a night of world-class arias or pirouettes at Naples’ illustrious Teatro San Carlo 1.
Immerse yourself in gob-smacking metro station installations 2 in Naples, designed by world-renowned artists.
Honour heroes who’ve died in Sicily’s anti-Mafia fight on a DIY street-art tour 3 in Palermo’s Il Capo ’hood.
Hop between local artisan studios 4 and stock up on creative, one-of-a-kind pieces one-of-a-kind pieces off Palermo’s main strip.
Work up an appetite ambling La Pescheria 5 (A’ Piscaria), Catania’s operatic fish and produce market.
REGIONS & CITIES
Find the places that tick all your boxes.
ITINERARIES
Southern Highlights
Allow: 7 Days
Distance: 480km
This whistle-stop tour takes in many of southern Italy’s most extraordinary assets, from vibrant, art-crammed cities to impossibly beautiful coastlines that have seduced emperors and poets. Dive into cerulean blue seas, descend into a mystical gorge, and cycle between storybook villages.
jpgAlessandro Tortora/SHUTTERSTOCK ©