The Taormina Greek Theatre is not the largest ancient theatre in Sicily but it has the finest view. Here is the complete guide.
Plan my Italy trip โThe Teatro Greco di Taormina has the finest setting of any ancient theatre in the world โ the view through the stage's surviving brick columns frames the Etna volcano (3,357m, snow-capped through most of the year) and the Ionian Sea simultaneously. The theatre itself is not the largest ancient theatre in Sicily (Siracusa's holds more people) but the combination of architecture, view, and the specific quality of Taormina's light makes it the most extraordinary. Here is the complete visit guide.
The theatre's physical description: The Teatro Greco di Taormina (technically a Greco-Roman theatre โ the Greek original of the 3rd century BC was substantially rebuilt by the Romans in the 2nd century AD, who modified it for gladiatorial combat by deepening the orchestra pit and adding the brick stage building) has a diameter of approximately 109m and seated approximately 10,000 spectators. The original Greek theatre faced northeast โ the specific orientation that gave the stage backdrop the view of Etna and the sea. The Roman rebuilding preserved this orientation and added the brick scene building (scaenae frons) whose columns survive today and create the specific frame for the Etna view. The specific photographic moment: from the orchestra level, looking through the three surviving columns of the scaenae frons (framing the bay below Taormina and the Etna cone above), the image requires no photographic processing to appear extraordinary. This specific view โ documented from the first Grand Tour paintings of the 18th century onward โ is the most reproduced single image from Sicily in European art and travel history. Getting to Taormina and the theatre: Taormina town is at 204m altitude above the Taormina-Giardini train station (at sea level). Access: the cable car (funivia, โฌ3.50 single, 5-minute ride from the lower station adjacent to the Taormina-Giardini rail station) to the town, then 10 minutes walk to the theatre. Alternatively, public bus from Catania airport (approximately 1h45, โฌ4.90, leaves from the airport bus terminal). Theatre opening: typically 9am to 1 hour before sunset. Entry โฌ10 (no advance booking required outside the Taormina Arte festival season). Taormina Arte festival (June-August): The summer festival that has operated in the Teatro Greco since 1983 brings international artists to one of the world's most extraordinary performance venues. Performances range from rock and pop concerts (โฌ40-120) to opera (โฌ40-90) to cinema (the Taormina Film Festival, held in the theatre, is one of the oldest film festivals in the world โ founded 1955). During the festival, access to the theatre for sightseeing is restricted on event days; check taormina-arte.com before planning.
Taormina's specific role in European cultural history is tied to the Grand Tour โ the educational journey through Italy, France, and sometimes Greece that was the culmination of an upper-class northern European education from the late 17th to the early 19th century. Sicily was added to the standard Grand Tour itinerary in the 1770s, largely through the publication of Patrick Brydone's "A Tour Through Sicily and Malta" (1773) โ a widely read travel narrative that described the island's antiquities, volcanic landscape, and social conditions for the first time in an accessible popular format. Taormina appears in Brydone's account as the most dramatically sited ancient theatre ruins in Italy, combining the qualities that the Grand Tour's aesthetic philosophy (the Picturesque โ the 18th-century taste for landscape that combines natural beauty, historical ruin, and dramatic geological features) most valued. The painting tradition: from the 1780s onward, British, German, and French landscape painters (Jacob Philipp Hackert, Thomas Ender, Franz Ludwig Catel) made Taormina and its theatre a reference subject โ the combination of ancient ruin, volcanic mountain, and Mediterranean sea in a single frame gave a landscape that could satisfy both the Picturesque aesthetics (the ruin as evidence of historical depth) and the Sublime (Etna as geological power). The photographs that replaced the paintings from the 1850s onward reproduced the same view from the same position. The view is genuinely extraordinary โ but the specific cultural weight it carries in European art history is the reason it was already the most visited sight in Sicily before the age of mass tourism.
Italy has 58 UNESCO World Heritage Sites โ the most of any country in the world. The famous ones (Colosseum, Venice, Cinque Terre, Pompeii) receive 90% of the visitors; the remaining 47 are often extraordinary and almost empty. Ten of the finest UNESCO sites that most international visitors have never heard of: (1) Su Nuraxi di Barumini (Sardinia): the most complete Bronze Age stone tower complex in the Mediterranean โ 1500 BC, built without mortar, the nuraghe tower and surrounding village still structurally intact. 3,000 visitors per year vs 4 million at the Colosseum. (2) Certosa di Pavia (Lombardy): the most ornate Renaissance facade in Italy โ the monastery church built 1396-1542 for the Visconti dynasty of Milan, with a facade of colored marble inlay, hundreds of sculpted figures, and relief panels that approach the density of illuminated manuscript decoration scaled to architectural size. 30 minutes from Pavia by bus. Free entry to the church. (3) The Late Baroque Towns of the Val di Noto (Sicily): eight towns rebuilt in identical Baroque style after the 1693 earthquake โ Noto (the finest, most coherent single-style Baroque town in Italy), Modica (two hills of Baroque with the finest chocolate tradition in Italy โ the Aztec-origin cold-process chocolate from the Antica Dolceria Bonajuto), Ragusa Ibla (the most dramatically sited, descending into a valley). (4) Sacri Monti of Piedmont and Lombardy: nine Alpine pilgrimage routes with life-size terracotta sculptures in chapel sequences โ the Sacro Monte di Varallo (Vercelli province, 1486 โ the first and most elaborate, with 45 chapels and 800 terracotta figures) is the reference site. (5) The Longobards in Italy (568-774 AD): seven sites across 6 Italian regions documenting the Lombard period โ the most accessible is Santa Sofia church in Benevento (the octagonal Lombard church of 762 AD, now a museum of the Lombard cultural moment between Rome and the medieval period). (6) The Vineyard Landscape of Piedmont: Langhe-Monferrato-Astigiano: the Barolo, Barbaresco, and Moscato d'Asti vineyard landscape, inscribed for its 2,000-year viticulture continuity โ walk or drive through the Barolo communes (Serralunga, Barolo village, Castiglione Falletto) for the specific hill landscape that UNESCO is protecting. (7) Aquileia (Friuli): the ancient Roman city near Trieste โ the floor mosaic of the Basilica (the largest early Christian mosaic floor in the western world, 4th century AD, 700mยฒ) is visible under the church floor on raised walkways; the Foro Romano adjacent is almost entirely unexcavated. Population 3,500; annual visitors approximately 50,000. (8) Villa Romana del Casale (Piazza Armerina, Sicily): the most complete and finest Roman mosaic floor complex in the world โ a late Roman villa (4th century AD) with 3,500mยฒ of intact mosaic depicting hunting scenes, the famous "bikini girls" (female athletes in two-piece swimwear, the oldest known depiction of this clothing type), and mythological narratives. โฌ10 entry. (9) Crespi d'Adda (Bergamo, Lombardy): the most complete surviving 19th-century company town in the world โ Cristoforo Crespi's cotton mill village (1878-1930, complete with workers' housing, church, school, cemetery, and the owner's villa at the top of the social hierarchy) preserves the specific social geography of industrial paternalism. Free entry; 30 minutes from Bergamo. (10) Medici Villas and Gardens of Tuscany: 14 villas and 2 gardens of the Medici family, inscribed 2013 โ the Villa La Petraia (10 minutes from Florence by bus, free entry) and the Villa di Poggio a Caiano (near Prato, free entry to the garden) are the most accessible.
Fifteen Italian food products with DOP (Protected Designation of Origin) or IGP (Protected Geographical Indication) status that are worth seeking at source: (1) Aceto Balsamico Tradizionale di Modena DOP (minimum 12-year-aged balsamic): not the generic balsamic vinegar sold in supermarkets worldwide but the specific product aged for 12-25 years in a battery of decreasing barrels (cherry, chestnut, ash, mulberry, juniper) โ dense, complex, sold in 100ml bottles at โฌ50-150 from the acetaia (the attic aging space of Modenese farmhouses). The Consorzio Produttori Antiche Acetaie in Modena (Via Ganaceto 134) organizes visits. (2) Parmigiano-Reggiano DOP (aged 24+ months): the "summer" and "mountain" versions (vacche rosse โ the red cow variant, the most complex flavored Parmigiano) available directly from the Consortium dairies near Parma and Reggio Emilia. The Caseificio 4 Madonne in Modena (Via Rivoluzione d'Ottobre 26) gives morning production visits at 8am (free, call ahead). (3) Lardo di Colonnata DOP (Carrara, Tuscany): white cured lard from the marble-quarrying village of Colonnata โ aged in Carrara marble basins with herbs and spices for 6-10 months; paper-thin slices on warm bread are the specific application. Available only in Colonnata village and specialty food shops. (4) Nduja di Spilinga (Calabria โ IGP): the spreadable fermented spicy pork paste from the Vibo Valentia province village of Spilinga โ the 'Nduja is made from shoulder, cheeks, and innards of the Calabrian pig with a high proportion of Calabrian chili (the 'Ndrangheta level of heat). The specific Spilinga production (available directly from the village producers and at the Spilinga market) is significantly more complex than the supermarket version. (5) Pecorino di Pienza DOP (Val d'Orcia, Tuscany): the specific sheep's milk cheese aged in the Pienza caves โ the cave aging gives a specific mineral quality from the tufa environment. Available at the cheese shops on the Pienza main street (Via dell'Amore) for โฌ14-20/kg. (6) Provolone del Monaco DOP (Sorrento Peninsula): the aged cow's milk cheese made only in the Sorrento and Agerola mountain farming communities โ a semi-hard stretched-curd cheese with the specific mineral quality of milk from cows grazing on the Lattari mountains above the Amalfi Coast. (7) Crudo di Cuneo DOP: the Piedmontese prosciutto from the Cuneo province โ the specific microclimate of the Cuneo plain (dry cold Alpine air from the Maritime Alps) gives a salt-reduction and aging characteristic that distinguishes it from Parma ham. Available at the Cuneo market and the Langhe delicatessen shops. (8) Miele della Lunigiana DOP: the honey from the Lunigiana area (Massa-Carrara province, between Liguria and Tuscany) โ acacia and chestnut variety, the only honey in Italy with DOP status; available from the producers in the Lunigiana hill villages. (9) Sedano Bianco di Sperlonga IGP: the white celery grown only in the Pontine coastal area near Sperlonga (Latina province, Lazio) โ larger, less bitter, and more tender than standard celery, due to the specific sandy coastal soil and the natural blanching from the sand covering. (10) Patata della Sila IGP: the specific mountain potato of the Sila plateau in Calabria โ grown at 1,000-1,400m altitude in the specific volcanic clay-loam soil, with an extremely high dry matter content (26-28%) that gives a floury texture appropriate for gnocchi and the Calabrian potato specialties unavailable from flatland varieties.
Eight Italian evening traditions that are as worth experiencing as the daytime attractions: (1) The Milan aperitivo hour (6-9pm): Milan invented the modern concept of the aperitivo-with-food โ from the 1980s onward, the Navigli district bars and subsequently the entire city developed the tradition of a single drink price (โฌ8-12) that includes access to a substantial buffet of food. The Navigli (Naviglio Grande and Naviglio Pavese canals) at aperitivo hour on a summer evening is the finest version of a specifically Milanese social institution. The Negroni (Campari, sweet vermouth, gin) was invented in Florence but Campari itself (the specific bitter orange aperitivo, invented by Gaspare Campari in Milan in 1860) is the Milan drink. (2) The Bolognese passeggiata under the porticoes (7-9pm, any evening): Bologna's evening walk under the 38km portico network is the specific social institution of a city where walking between venues is comfortable regardless of weather. The Quadrilatero (the market neighborhood between Via Rizzoli and Via Farini) at aperitivo hour has the finest food shop concentration in Italy โ Tamburini (the historic salumeria), Paolo Atti (the pasta shop), Majani (the chocolate shop) all open late. (3) The Palermo Vucciria market evening (7-11pm): The transformation of the historic fish market into an outdoor social space from approximately 7pm โ the specific Palermo quality of a 1,000-year-old market square being used as a social gathering point by Palermitani of all ages simultaneously. (4) The Naples passeggiata on the Lungomare (sunset, any evening): The Via Partenope and Lungomare Caracciolo along the Bay of Naples at sunset, with Vesuvius visible across the water and the Castel dell'Ovo on its peninsula โ the most cinematically Neapolitan public space. The specific quality: the Neapolitan passeggiata is more vigorous and more theatrical than the northern Italian version. (5) The Siena Campo at midnight (any clear evening): The Campo at midnight, empty of day tourists, with the Palazzo Pubblico's tower illuminated and the specific acoustic quality of the piazza (the scallop shape amplifies sounds at the center) โ one of the finest European public spaces experienced in its least-visited condition. (6) The Venice Rialto market fish section (6:30-11am, Tues-Sat): not evening but the inverse โ the finest morning market experience in Venice, with the day's catch from the Venetian lagoon displayed on the marble counters before the tourist crowds arrive. (7) The Matera Sassi by night (after 9pm): The cave-city illuminated at night โ the specific quality of thousands of cave windows lit from within, the rock face of the Murgia Plateau visible across the Gravina ravine, and the almost complete absence of tourists after 9pm in the Sassi neighborhoods. (8) The Florence Piazzale Michelangelo at sunset (specific timing: approximately 30 minutes before official sunset): the Florentine tradition of watching the city from the Piazzale at the moment when the Duomo's cupola catches the last direct sunlight before the city floor falls into shade โ the specific light quality of 10-15 minutes when the terracotta dome is orange-red and the Arno river is silver โ is the finest single daily visual event in Tuscany.
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