';
Preloader logo

La Spezia

Charming Cinque Terre

After meeting your guide at the pier you will walk to your private motor boat and begin your picturesque, one-hour coastal cruise to Monterosso. En route, take in the scenic beauty of the Cinque Terre (Five Villages).

Tall cliffs dropping down into the cobalt-blue sea, cosy beaches at Riomaggiore and Vernazza, and small ports like Manarola highlight the severe, wild landscape of this UNESCO World Heritage Site. Today, the Cinque Terre is also a National Park and protected marine area.

Monterosso:

Lovely beaches, rugged cliffs, crystal-clear turquoise water, and many small hotels and restaurants make Monterosso al Mare, the largest of the Cinque Terre villages (population 1,730), the busiest in midsummer. The village center bustles high on a hillside. Below, connected by stone steps, are the port and seaside promenade. The medieval tower, Aurora, on the hills of the Cappuccini, separates the ancient part of the village from the more modern part. The village is surrounded by hills covered with vineyards and olive groves, and by a forest of thin bushes and small trees.

After a short-guided visit and some free time you will reboard the boat to Vernazza.

Vernazza:

With its narrow streets and small squares, Vernazza is probably the most charming of the five towns. Because it has the best access to the sea, it became wealthier than its neighbors—as evidenced by the elaborate arcades, loggias, and marblework. The village’s pink, slate-roof houses and colorful squares contrast with the remains of the medieval fort and castle, including two towers, in the old town. The Romans first inhabited this land in the 1st century.

Afterwards return to La Spezia by boat.

 

Highlights of Lucca

You will meet your tour leader at the port of La Spezia and will depart by AC deluxe coach to Lucca.

Lucca, a living testimony to past times, kingdoms and dominions, lies in a green valley north-west of Florence.  This almost impeccably preserved jewel of medieval architecture emanates charm and shows history from every corner of its narrow winding streets. Beginning in Roman times, continuing through the Middle Ages, on to the Napoleonic era and finally to the Risorgimento, Lucca’s monuments, churches, palaces and roads, even its very shape have a story to tell. Each layer blending with preceding ages marking the growth and changes of the city. The broad, high walls, which characterize the city, are a feature of its past, and a pleasant element of its present. Surrounding the ancient city, the ramparts we see today date back to the 16th century. No longer used for defence, they are crowned by 2.5 miles of green parkland. The quaint Piazza dell’Anfiteatro, in the heart of the city, maintained the shape of the Roman Amphitheatre and shows the outline of the ancient arena. The majestic church of San Michele in Foro, with its medieval façade, and signs of refurbishment carried out during the Risorgimento, is built where Lucca’s Roman forum once stood. In the Early Middle Ages, Lucca was an important Lombard duchy and became the capital of Tuscia (the ancient Tuscany). With the creation of the pilgrim route Via Francigena / Romea, Lucca became one of the main “resting stations” on route to Rome, as it is evident in the crosses engraved by passing pilgrims on the walls of St. Martin’s Cathedral arcade. The combination of numerous churches and the line of medieval towers, the most impressive and original being the Guinigi Tower (with its hanging garden made of 5 secular holm oaks) give Lucca a distinctive profile.

The famous composer Giacomo Puccini was born in Lucca in 1858, into a family with a long history of music. The house where Puccini was born is now a museum, which houses portraits, scores, sketches and other memorabilia related to this famous composer’s life and career.

After the guided tour you will have some free time for shopping and individual sightseeing.

Return to the port of La Spezia afterwards.

 

Pearls of the Gulf of Tigullio: Portofino and Santa Margherita Ligure

Genoa City Tour

Monuments of Pisa

Florence on your own

Florence and Pisa

Highlights of Florence

Lucca and Pisa

Lucca and Lunch in a Local Farmhouse

Lucca and Villa Torrigiani

Carrara and the Marble Quarries

Medieval Sarzana

Wine Tasting in Liguria

Lucca by Bike

Recommend
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google Plus
  • LinkedIN
  • Pinterest
Share
Tagged in