Top Sicily beaches ✽ Italy
My best (top) list of Sicily beaches, Italy:
0:05 Lido Burrone
0:28 Spiaggia di Mondello
0:46 Spiaggia dei Conigli
1:05 Tonnara di Scopello
1:23 Cala Pulcino
1:41 Cala Rossa
1:59 Riserva Naturale di Vendicari
2:18 Spiaggia di San Vito lo Capo
2:36 Spiaggia Fontane Bianche
2:52 Spiaggia Guidaloca
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Luoghi da ri...Scoprire: Sambuca di Sicilia
Sambuca di Sicilia è un comune di 5.878 abitanti della provincia di Agrigento
E' stato proclamata Borgo dei Borghi 2016
Dista 89 km da Agrigento e 78 km da Palermo
L'odierna Sambuca fu fondata dagli Arabi intorno all'830
Sul monte Adranone sorge il complesso archeologico del IV secolo a.C.
La Madonna dell'Udienza è la patrona di Sambuca di Sicilia
Si festeggia la terza domenica di maggio con una processione cinquecentenaria
L'economia della zona è principalmente a carattere agricolo-pastorale. (Fonte Wikipedia)
Music: Adventure by bensound.com
futuravision.it
Realizzazione video:
Ignazio Ficano
Giuseppe Rizzo
1 Euro House In Italy - Time to move to Italy?
So you want a 1 euro house in Italy? Does the idea of a 1 Euro home in Italy sound like your dream come true? Many people are looking for a a life in the Italian countryside and to live a simpler life. If your dream has been to move to Italy and buying property in Italy to make your own memories in this country, this could be a great opportunity to not only get something for yourself but to help and help breath life back into these places. To buy a house in Italy for 1 Euro isn't just the expense of 1 Euro... these homes are projects, projects that you can invest into not only financially but emotionally and to have a base for your life in Italy. There are expensive places not only in Italy but if you're looking for cheap places in Europe and cheap places in Italy, these programs may offer you some interesting options to look into to become an expat living in Italy.
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Italy/Sambuca/Chianti/Tuscany/ Part 62/84
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Sambuca:
The small town of Sambuca in Val di Pesa is documented from 1053, but due to bombing during WW II is now mostly modern and forms a centre of light industry. However, the ancient bridge and some nearby mediaeval buildings are still extant and worth noting as you pass through the area.
Ponte di Ramagliano, the mediaeval bridge over the river Pesa at Sambuca Val di Pesa. Bridge over the Pesa River in the frazione of Sambuca.
Emanuele Repetti in his Dizionario locates the village of Sambuca on the left bank of the Pesa and at the head of the bridge, which is called Ramagliano.
Historical documents regarding the Chianti village of Sambuca are few, but the castle of Romagliano, located here on the ancient Roman road, is mentioned in documents from 1053 and the earliest extant documents regarding the Sambuca bridge date to 1179. From an ecclesiastical point of view, Sambuca belonged to the parish of San Pietro in Bossolo. Thanks to its strategic and geographic location, particularly as a good crossing place over the River Pesa, Sambuca always managed to maintain a certain autonomy from the nearby castles of Semifonte and Barberino Val d' Elsa, but not from the Abbey of Passignano.
In the territory of Sambuca there was a small church dedicated to San Jacopo and called La Canonica. The church was located in position dominating the area near the Castle of Romagliano. It is mentioned twice in documents at the Abbey of Passignano, first 1166 (actum in castro de Sambuca) and then in 1168 when the Abbot of Passignano bought duo modiora et quattuor stariora terre que sunt in corte de Sambuco. In addition to these purchases, the same document refers to a further acquisition consisting of the piazza del Castello with the obligation to the tenant to build himself a house et habitare in la semper.Further evidence dates from 1215, when the Abbot of Passignano ceded part of a house in castro Sambuca. From the documents of the 12 C, it is noted that the Castle of Sambuca assumed considerable importance from its position at the intersection of the road leading from Florence to Sienna and then on to Rome and another road that led from the Chianti to the Val d' Elsa.The bridge of Romagliano, which still exists today and which carried the ancient Roman Via Regia over the River Pesa, already existed in the 12 C since it is mentioned in a document dated 29 October 1179. Subsequently, in June 1219 and 8 January 1295, in addition to the bridge, the existence of a village of Ponte della Sambuca is mentioned. Near the bridge even today there are buildings with architectural features dating from the 12 C and the 13 C. One of these buildings may have been used as a defense tower on the bridge and later was converted into a tavern, as is clear from the papers of the Capitani del Ponte.
On 20 September 1301, Sambuca is mentioned in a document which states a license was given by the Commune of Florence to two master masons to build houses in the village of Sambuca, indicating that the village was slowly developing. The same masons' license was confirmed on 5 January, 1302, and a number of houses were built along the two banks of the river Pesa, both upstream and downstream of the bridge Ramagliano. In 1415 the bridge was rebuilt and widened, paid for by a tax levied on the inhabitants of Sambuca and Tavarnelle by the Florentine Signoria. The bridge was strategically important enough to be drawn by Leonardo da Vinci on his map of Tuscany, now housed in the Royal Library at Windsor.
An additional bridge over the Pesa, called the Ponte Nuovo, was built at the end of the 18 C and was constructed two miles down the hill opposite the fabbrica where the Via Cassia currently passes. The old Ramagliano bridge was enlarged in 1843 but damaged during the Second World War and rebuilt in 1946-1947.
In common with other road and/or railway junctions that were severely bombed during the Second World War, such as Pontassieve and Poggibonsi, Sambuca developed as a light industrial area. Between 1953 and 1975 the new church in the centre of town was constructed and works of art from the old church were relocated here. Of particular interest are a small Gothic pietra serena tabernacle perhaps of the early 15 C Florentine school, and a Madonna with Saints by a late 18 C Florentine painter.
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Sambuca di Sicilia Living Agrigento
Sambuca di Sicilia, situata nell’entroterra sud-occidentale della Sicilia, ai margini della Valle del Belice e alle pendici del Monte Genuardo, fu fondata dagli Arabi intorno all'830. La cittadina è inclusa nel club de I borghi più belli d'Italia, l'associazione dei piccoli centri italiani che si distinguono per la grande rilevanza artistica, culturale e storica, per l'armonia del tessuto urbano, la vivibilità e i servizi ai cittadini. Fa parte inoltre dell'Associazione Nazionale Città del Vino, dell'Unione dei comuni Terre Sicane e del Distretto turistico regionale “Vini & Sapori di Sicilia”.
Video realizzato da Strategica Adv (
Living Agrigento canale youtube
Sicily best place ever
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Corleone, Sicily. Do you want to see the real place the GodFather comes from? www.mammasicily.com
Welcomes to Corleone, city of churches and of the Godfather !!! Believe us: you're in one of the most beautiful places in Sicily. Among churches, typical narrow Sicilian-Arab streets, castles, enormous corn fields... But don't forget to buy the Coppola, the typical Sicilian cap ! MammaSicily: Sicily told by the motorwriter Giovanni Vallone and the chef Silvana Recupero
Ecco Corleone, la città delle chiese e del Padrino ! Uno degli angoli più incantevoli di Sicilia dove storia e paesaggio si fondono perfettamente. Ma i viaggiatori qua ci vengono per il clamore eterno suscitato dal film Il Padrino. Roba da matti. MammaSicily: la Sicilia raccontata dal motoscrittore Giovanni Vallone e dalla chef Silvana Recupero.
Taormina's Corso Umberto in Sicily
Wander Corso Umberto, the main street of Sicily's beautiful town Taormina. Set up high on the cliffs, Taormina overlooks the tantalising blue coast. We go down a few side lanes to look for restaurants. Background music is Sweet as Honey by Topher Mohr and Alex Elena.
Mussomeli - Typical Sicily - sub eng
Typical Sicily is a project realized by UNPLI Sicilia to promote and value the sicilian area and culture.