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HOTEL ROOMS ACCOMMODATIONS OFFERS IN APULIA 
STAY BY GEOGRAPHICAL DESTINATION IN COASTAL MOUNTAIN OR RURAL AREA 
 
Food & Wine    
Local Traditions & History    
History and Backgrounds    
  
The Gargano    
The Salento    
Tremiti Islands    
Castellana Grottoes    
 
 
          Apulia, a land located in the centre of the Mediterranean at the southern extremity of Europe, 
          offers splendid views from commanding positions, over fertile 
          valleys towards the sparkling Adriatic, delicious food and wine 
          and a wonderful warm climate.
  
          This region extends into the sea toward the East and is only few hours 
          away from other splendid locations of Southern Italy like Calabria, 
          Amalfi Coast, Sorrento, Capri, Maratea, Sicily, Agrigento, Taormina.
  
          Here, Nature imposes itself with a wonderful 
          variety of rich colours: red earth, dark green pine, silvery 
          green olive trees and lush vineyards; sparkling white labyrinths of 
          towns which seem to glisten in the sun; milky white medieval centres 
          with tangles of streets and alleyways, all against a backdrop of the 
          deep blue Mediterranean Sea.
  
          What culture and knowledgeable hand of man have built, refined and shaped 
          to their measure across the millennium, blends with the favourable climate, 
          limpid sea, ever present sunshine, sandy and rocky coastlines, verdant 
          islands, characteristic grottos and other beauties generously profused 
          by nature on this land.
  
          In this land you will find gems of architectural and historical 
          interest: Romanesque, Byzantine and  Baroque churches, cathedrals, 
          castles, towers, prehistorical remains and last but not least the Trulli 
          Houses. These are built out of dry stone with thick solid walls 
          and conical roofs, you may sometimes find them gathered around each 
          other or even simply scattered in a picturesque way surrounded by the 
          wonderful countryside.
  
          The kind southern character, the natural openness of the people, a truly 
          typical cuisine, exquisite wines, religions, and popular festivals, 
          historical commemorations, cultural events and endless hospitality facilities 
          create a particularly warm atmosphere.
          
  
         
        
        Local Traditions and Uses    
        
          
         
          The dialects, traditions and cultures which still today characterize 
          the Apulian people, seem to be reflected in the geo-morphological features 
          of the areas they inhabit. Profound historical-cultural and geographical-environmental 
          diversities distinguish the areas of Capitanata, the Land of Bari, of 
          Salento and the Ionic Land which compose the Apulian territory, and 
          which correspond more or less to the present day provinces of Foggia, 
          Bari, Brindisi, Lecce and Taranto; in fact, the area was long known 
          as "the Apulias", and in some foreign languages it is still 
          designated with the plural.
          
          
        
        History and Backgrounds
          
          
         
          Apulia has always been an ideal region for human settlement and a zone 
          of commercial and cultural exchange thanks to its geographic position, 
          its gently sloping terrain and particularly pleasant climate.
  
          Seat of populations which reached the highest levels of civilization since 
          earliest times, its prehistory is a cornerstone for studies on the more 
          recent Palaeolithic Mediterranean and European civilizations. Coveted 
          by East and by West, easily accessible by sea or by land, it was inhabited 
          in the historical period by the Illyrian populations of the Japigi, 
          the Dauni, the Peucetii and the Messapi, was the site of numerous Greek 
          colonies, was a Roman territory, an ally of Hannibal against Rome, was 
          included by Augustus in the "Apulia et Calabria" region.
  
          This region on the eastern coast of Southern Italy, suffered barbarian 
          invasions, passed under the domination of Byzantium, obtained a certain 
          independence with the advent of the Longobards and subsequent Frankish 
          domination. Exposed to Saracen raids, it rebelled against Byzantium 
          in the 11th century with the interested help of the Normans, who made 
          it a principality. It was part of the Reign of Sicily, the Reign of 
          Naples, and the Reign of the Two Sicilies prior to Italian unity.
  
          The history and culture of Apulia bear profound marks of the Greeks, Romans, 
            Byzantines, Arabs, Normans, Franks, Spanish and other populations 
            which left indelible traces of their presence. The contact with such 
            different ethnic groups and cultures has strewn the Apulian territory 
            with archaeological finds, castles, towers, cathedrals, urban 
            and rural buildings and other monuments built in a vast range of styles, 
            reinterpreted by the peoples of Apulia, who created an authentic "stone 
            culture" of their own. 
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