Discover the best top things to do in Marinella di Selinunte, Italy including Prune-Rosa Ceramica, Pescaturismo Selinunte, Pensiero Contemporaneo, Oleificio Siciliando, Lido porta del sole, Parco Archeologico Selinunte, Agorazein, Selinunte Pesca, Voglimi, Ufficio Turistico Marinella di Selinunte.
Restaurants in Marinella di Selinunte
5.0 based on 2 reviews
Craft workshop of ceramic everything done by hand. Creation of decorative and utility objects at all prices. Sales of souvenirs. Opportunity to visit the workshop and see the work done on site.
5.0 based on 3 reviews
fishing tourism, we offer boat trips that will give anyone the chance to participate in a real fishing trip tasting good wine and typical local products. Admiring the majestic temples of Selunte from the sea from the sea.
5.0 based on 43 reviews
5.0 based on 3 reviews
4.5 based on 3,643 reviews
Breath-taking archaeological park; the largest of its kind in Europe, even more spectacular than the better known Valley of the Temples, 95 kms to the south east. Parco Archeologico Selinunte is a vast, captivating place covering over 650 clifftop acres and requiring a 3 to 4 hour visit. Once a Greek outpost city of 30,000 people, today its scattered, razed footprint contains a stunning assembly of ancient temples. The very best way to see the famous Acropolis, the Agora, Temple of Hera and the other temples described simply as E.F. & G. is by electric buggy which you pick up at the entrance. It charges about €10 per person; on warm summer days it’s a Godsend. The hop on- hop off buggies wends their way around the huge clifftop site allowing visitors to spend as much time as they wish at the seven surviving Doric temples and the different archaeological locations. Selinunte, the city, was twice destroyed; first in 409 BC and the finally c250 BC when it was levelled by a Carthaginian army. Its historic importance remained largely unknown until a Dominican monk, Tommaso Fazello, began to probe its story in the 16th century and two English archaeologists, William Harris and Samuel Angel, began excavations which continue to the present day, in 1825. Their work and Dom. Tommaso’s allow us a dramatic window on 2,500 years of Greek/Sicilian/Carthaginian history. Well worth the visit and don’t miss the opportunity to reflect on the magnificence of it all over a tub of glorious Sicilian ice cream at the clifftop café.
4.5 based on 2 reviews
Get on a fishing boat and get closer to the sea and to the world of professional fishing, a world of pain but also of love and respect for nature. Enjoy an aperitif with local products from the sea, admiring the majestic temples of Selinunte To closely observe the fish and other marine organisms, the beauty of the landscapes, the sights, the smells and flavors of the place
ThingsTodoPost © 2018 - 2024 All rights reserved.