Agrigento & Taormina (Sicily)
Valley of the Temples, Agrigento (first) and Taormina’ (min 4:24) 1. The famous Valle dei Templi (Valley of the Temples, a misnomer, as it is a ridge, rather than a valley) comprises a large sacred area where seven monumental Greek temples in the Doric style were constructed during the 6th and 5th centuries BC. They constitute some of the largest and best-preserved ancient Greek buildings outside Greece and are listed as a World Heritage Site. The best-preserved of temple is attributed to the goodness Concordia; it is remarkably intact, due to its having been converted into a Christian church in 597 AD. The area around it was later re-used by early Christians as a catacomb. The temple of the goddesses Juno Lacinia is equally stunning. The other temples are much more fragmentary, having been toppled by earthquakes long ago and quarried for their stones. The largest by far is the Temple of Olympian Zeus and it is believed to have been the largest Doric temple ever built (its construction was abandoned after the Carthaginian invasion of 406 BC). The marks of the fires set by the Carthaginians in 406 BC can still be seen on the sanctuary’s stones. 2. The charming town of Taormina occupies an ancient site about 250 m above the sea, while a very steep and almost isolated mountain crowned by a Saracen castle, rises about 150 m higher. Numerous fragments of ancient buildings are scattered around, such as water reservoirs, walls, sepulchres and pavements. Taormina’s first …
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