A Quick Tour Of Italy - Southern Sardinia

I love touring Italy so much that I am doing a series on both the well known and the rarely visited tourist attractions of Italy's twenty regions. This short article explores sights in the southern part of the island of Sardinia in southern Italy including some history, local food, and Sardinian wine. Please join me on this quick tour.
If you are looking for a European tourist destination, consider the island of Sardinia, a region of southern Italy. Depending on your interests, this beautiful area can be an ideal vacation spot. You can get classic Italian food, and wash it down with fine local wine. Some parts of the island remain undiscovered by tourists, while others are jet-setter favorites and priced accordingly. This article presents southern Sardinia. Companion articles present northern Sardinia and central Sardinia.

Cagliari has been inhabited since prehistoric times. The old city, called the Castle, lies on a hilltop and offers an excellent view of the Gulf of Cagliari. The old white limestone city walls are mostly intact. Look for two Thirteenth Century white limestone towers, the St. Pancras Tower and the Elephant Tower. D.H. Lawrence, who wrote Sea and Sardinia and Lady Chatterly’s Lover compared Cagliari to a "white Jerusalem".

You will find the fairly well-preserved Second Century Roman Amphitheatre, an aqueduct, ancient cisterns, and the ruins of a small temple. Summers the amphitheatre hosts open-air concerts, operas, and concerts. The Archeological Museum located in a Fourteenth Century castle contains many artifacts coming from unique Sardinian stone structures called Nuraghe discussed in the companion article I Love Touring Italy – Central Sardinia. The nearby the Poetto beach is an amazing 8 miles (13 kilometers) long.

Pula is known for its lovely beaches, bays, and coves. Admire the flocks of flamingos in the marshes. Nearby lies the Phoenician site of Nora, perhaps Sardinia’s oldest city. Ongoing excavations have uncovered many ruins from ancient Carthage and Rome.

In early May Nora and Cagliari host perhaps the greatest and most colorful religious procession in the world, the Festa di Sant’Efisio, honoring a martyr beheaded by a Roman soldier in 303 in Nora. According to popular belief this saint’s intervention stopped a deadly Seventeenth Century plague. In gratitude thousands of traditionally costumed marchers transport his statue back and forth from a Cagliari church to one in Nora. The festivities end with a torchlight parade.

Despite its magnificent coastline, native Sardinians aren’t very devoted to fish and seafood. Look for burrida, a fish soup sometimes based on shark. See our companion article I Love Touring Italy – Southern Sardinia for a sample menu and more information on local wines as well as an in-depth examination of the area’s tourist attractions. Carignano del Sulcis DOC is produced in the southwestern tip of Sardinia mostly from the red Carignano grape.

By Levi Reiss
Published: 1/23/2008
 
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