Campania (Italian pronunciation: [kamˈpaːnja]) is a region in Southern Italy. As of 2014, the region had a population of around 5,869,000 people, making it the third-most-populous region of Italy; its total area of 13,590 km (5,247 sq mi) makes it the most densely populated region in the country. Located on the Italian Peninsula, with the Mediterranean Sea to the west, it includes the small Phlegraean Islands and Capri for administration as part of the region.
Restaurants in Campania
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There are many ways to visit Naples. One is by crossing its space, walking on the Megellina boardwalk, wandering onto the decumani or going in and out the churches and the shops of the old city center. Another way is to cross the city across time, to learn, by images, its history and its fortunes.
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SPACE MAO, a hidden corner in the magnificent Amalfi, where art, nature and relax blend together, between the reading corner, the silent garden, the space of thought and the white terrace.
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75 minuscule works of art born in the Neapolitan spirit of Twentieth Century: the smallest sculptures in the world of Nativity and Dante’s Divine Comedy. The SAME collection has been discovered ten years ago and we are pleased to show to visitors from all around the world a new jewel of the Neapolitan art: these miniatures are so tiny that you will need a magnifying lens to see them! And they are so beautiful that even those who don’t love miniatures get captured. The author Antonio Maria Esposito (1917-2016) did not want to be known, and only after his death this splendid collection is getting the attention that it deserves. The smallest of these works is the sculpture of a Nativity in a seed of hemp of less then three millimeters ... You will also see dozen of characters living in a in a chestnut, in a pistachio, in a cherry pit - and then, you will travel through Hell, Purgatory and Heaven with Dante’s masterpiece of Italian Literature contained ... in a chestnut.
What an amazing experience! we received a guided tour from a lovely lady who was in charge of the museum. She was obviously very passionate about hosting the collection of Priest Antonio Esposito's works and took such time and detail to explain the works to us and the cultural context and the story of Dante's divine comedy around which a lot of the works are based. The most amazing thing about this place is not just the size of the pieces (there is a nativity scene set in a 3mm wide seed!) but the fact that all this was done by the artist not for the outside world but just for personal meditation and contemplation. And the deep thought and reflection on religion, morals and society that has gone into each piece is therefore very evident. There is so much movement and feeling in the figures despite being made out of blobs of dried paint and just a few millimetres big!
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great b&w photographies of Italians in the style of Henrie Cartier Bresson and access to a stunning terrace with e great view. The photographer was present himself and had a short chat with us, really nice experience.
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