Italy
Teatro Romano di Catania

Discover travel destinations of travelers writing a travel journal on FindPenguins.
Travelers at this place
    • Day 31–32

      Catania

      April 12 in Italy ⋅ ☁️ 22 °C

      Heute ging es für uns ganz entspannt los, wir schlafen ja wieder am selben Platz wie gestern, deswegen müssen wir auch nichts verräumen und können gegen kurz nach 11 in die Stadt spazieren um uns mit Mama Anita und Tülin zu treffen. Wir treffen uns vor ihrem Hotel und da die beiden schon einen langen Anreisetag hatten suchten wir uns gleich mal einen Platz, um eine Kleinigkeit zu essen. Dann begann für uns das erkunden der Stadt, wir gingen die Sehenswürdigkeiten ab und wollten es uns irgendwo am Meer gemütlich machen. Leider fanden wir kein Plätzchen da der Hafen hier sehr groß ist und nicht sehr zum verweilen einlädt. Wir spazieren wieder zurück und finden vorm Theater Massimo Bellini ein nettes Café wo es für uns ein wohlverdientes Eis gibt 😍 unsere Runde geht dann noch weiter, wir essen dann am Abend noch gemeinsam, für Mama, Tülin und Christian gibt es eine leckere Vorspeisenplatte und Evelyn gönnt sich Nudeln mit Meeresfrüchten. Danach machten wir uns alle auf den Weg „nach Hause“. Vielleicht sehen wir uns morgen noch einmal in Taormina.Read more

    • Day 2

      Castello Ursino

      April 2, 2023 in Italy ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

      Das "Bären-Kastell" war im 13. Jhd. Sitz des sizilianischen Parlaments und beherbergt heute das Stadtmuseum.

      Wiki: "Die Eruption des Ätna von 1669 zerstörte die Stadt, aber nicht das Kastell. Die Lava umfloss das Kastell, und dieses liegt seitdem mehrere hundert Meter landeinwärts."

      https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castello_Ursino
      Read more

    • Day 2

      Teatro Antico greco-romano

      April 2, 2023 in Italy ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

      Das auf griechischen Fundamenten erbaute römische Theater besteht hauptsächlich aus schwarzem Lavastein. Wir haben Glück und dürfen gratis eintreten.

      Auch dieses Theater wirkt etwas ungepflegt. Wir vermuten, dass es hauptsächlich an Geld mangelt um die uralte Bausubstanz zu erhalten.

      https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Römisches_Theater…
      Read more

    • Day 3

      Mietauto? Heute? 🤔

      April 3, 2023 in Italy ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      Wir warten gerade auf unser Mietauto. Um 11 Uhr wäre die Übergabe. Der Typ kommt um 5 nach 11 und fragt, ob wir ein Mietauto wollen? Ja! Heute? Äh ja, wir haben eines reserviert. Aha. Er öffnet das Geschäft und möchte die Reservationsbestätigung sehen, dann beginnt er zu telefonieren.

      Bei der Autovermietung hat es keine Autos vor Ort. Es hat auch keinen Platz für Mietautos. Das Mietauto muss zuerst in die Stadt gefahren werden, vermutlich vom Flughafen. Und das dauert...

      Um halb zwölf fährt der graue Fiat vor, ein ziemlich neues Auto, mit Hybridantrieb.

      Martina muss trotz der Online-Reservation noch weitere Formulare ausfüllen und unterschreiben. Und ID und Fahrausweis werden nochmals fotografiert und fotokopiert.

      Geschafft. Jetzt zum Auto, welches in zweiter Reihe parkiert auf der Strasse steht. Martina erhält eine kurze Instruktion, dann können wir einsteigen und losfahren.
      Read more

    • Day 29

      Catania – Ruins, Escher & Fish

      September 17, 2017 in Italy ⋅ 🌙 25 °C

      I woke feeling sad and sooky – call it the Birthday Blues, I don’t know but if I could have magic’d myself home would have done it in a flash. However birthday wishes from Sam and then Kirstin brightened my day and we meandered off to breakfast, something, we were to discover, not to be missed. They certainly take the “breakfast” part of B&B very seriously here as there was soooo much lovely food.
      Once we had eaten, we ventured out into the city. Catania is both old and young – old in that there is evidence of Greek settlement 100’s of years BC but young in that most of the city was destroyed following an earthquake in the late 1600’s. We visited many of the significant sites of the city, several churches as well as the Roman Theatre – the latter was a fascinating archaeological site - originally constructed by the Greeks in approx. 730BC, it was subsequently rebuilt and then modified by the Romans in the 1st through 4th Centuries AD before being abandoned around the 5th or 6th Century. It was completely built over in the 11th and 13th Centuries but rediscovered after the 1693 earthquake – excavations followed intermittently from the late 18th Century and have been steadily ongoing since the 1960’s. The site is now used frequently for live performances and was really quite amazingly intact, although it was much smaller than the theatre we saw at Verona (9 sections with a capacity of about 12,000) and was only used for theatre rather than Gladiatorial activities. We also visited the Castle Ursino – this was originally a fortress and strategic military position built between 1239 and 1250. When it was built it was on the edge of the sea, however during an eruption of Mt Etna in the mid 1600’s the moat filled with lava and the shoreline shifted such that the castle is now more than a kilometre inland, it is also one of the few buildings to have survived the 1693 earthquake which caused more than 60,000 deaths (about 2/3 of the population of Catania at the time). We didn’t go into the castle as we were a bit over looking at old things but had a wander around outside admiring the lava flow that surrounded it.
      We moved on to the Duomo (Cathedral of St Agata) where the local Indian community was celebrating what appeared to be a first communion – it was vibrant and noisy and the Cathedral was thronging with people posing in family groups to take celebratory photos. The Cathedral itself is massive and certainly the largest of the many many churches (there seems to be at least 2 on every corner!) in Catania. Originally built between 1078 and 1093 the structure was battered by earthquakes and volcanic eruptions of Mount Etna several times and had to be rebuilt. The original cathedral was then totally destroyed in 1693 and is an interesting mix of Norman and Baroque architecture. Most of the churches we visited were similarly decorated ornate but less over the top than those we had seen in other cities – they reminded me of an old-fashioned wedding cake or as Kirstin suggested Wedgewood plates – gold scroll work, cream plaster, cream and pale pink marble and soft hued ceiling frescos.
      It was a lovely warm to hot morning but with a pleasant breeze. We wandered past fountains and an open air market until about 1pm when we called in at a café called Prestepino which had been recommended as serving tasty snacks aimed at locals rather than tourists. I enjoyed a birthday been and a pistachio cannoli.
      While exploring the previous afternoon we had noticed that there was a MC Escher (the Dutch graphic artist who made mathematically inspired woodcuts, lithographs, and mezzotints) exhibition at Plazzo della Cultura (about 3 minutes’ walk from where we are staying. It was only 12euro to visit and we spent about 2 hours enjoying the pieces – really a fantastic exhibition with over a hundred works, a free audio guide and even some interactive stations – just great. With full brains we headed back to the B&B to fill our stomachs with left over pizza and calzone.
      With a such a lovely afternoon and several hours to spare we decided to head down to “free beach number one”, that really is the name of the beach, it isn’t far from “free beach number two” and, you guessed it… “free beach number three”. It was about a 2.2km walk but the google maps directions made for some hairy road crossings as the Italian ideas about what constitutes a safe foot path are well…interesting to say the least! We arrived to find a fairly grubby beach but still it was nice to sit on the sand in the sun for an hour and I even went for a quick dip before we headed back to the B&B for a shower and change.
      Federico (one of the B&B staff had recommended Corte dei Biscari as a local fish restaurant for good (non tourist) food, seeing as he had been spot on with Locanda Cerami where we ate last night and Prestipino (mmmm that cannoli) we decided this would be a good place for my birthday tea (I only wish we had been hungrier!!) It was lovely, the service was fantastic and it was 50euro for the best meal that I have eaten in Italy so far. There was eggplant and zucchini bruschetta to start (complimentary, along with the fizzy mineral water and a HUGE basket of delicious bread and grissini), we then chose swordfish croquettes (me) and tuna with black and white sesame, almonds and a type of marmalade (for Kirstin) plus a huge plate of delicious grilled veggies AND Wine (plus I got a free glass of prosecco because it was my birthday! There was also a visit by the restaurant cat - they were amazed when I said I really liked the cat, but that it wouldn’t be allowed in Australia!
      After all that food I needed a walk and went for a stroll up into the centre of town – the place was absolutely humming 930 at night and people just seemed to be getting going, streets clogged, restaurants packed, cars going everywhere! Amazing … but apparently that’s Sicily for you.
      Read more

    • Day 54

      Teatro Romano, Catania

      October 22, 2018 in Italy ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      Next stop for today was a visit to the Teatro Romano, the Roman theatre built with successive enlargements over a period of time ranging from the 1st to the 4th century AD. With a diameter of about 80 meters, the orchestra, the cavea (which rests on high vaulted corridors) and some parts of the scene are still visible today.

      The theatre was stripped of the marble and stone that it was made of in 1098, at the behest of Count Ruggero, in order to speed up the construction of the Cathedral of Sant’Agata, and in the 5th century inhabitants of the city were allowed to strip the theatre for building material for the construction of stone buildings, on the grounds that the monument had been abandoned for a long time. In 1550 measures were taken to secure the ruins and it was finally buried by the 1693 earthquake.

      In the 18th century excavations begun to establish beyond doubt that the amphitheatre had actually existed, a point that some people of the time strongly denied. What remains today, represents about a tenth of the amphitheatre with most of the amphitheatre being below the streets. Due to different lava eruptions and earthquakes, the ground level has dropped over time and today the lower part of the building, especially the orchestra area, is washed by the waters of the river Amenano, the river that flows underground to the city, which prevents the use of the theatre for contemporary performances.

      After some of the amazing historic sites we have visited this one really didn’t impresses us too much, although it is always great to learn about the history of the cities and towns we are visiting.
      Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Teatro Romano di Catania

    Join us:

    FindPenguins for iOSFindPenguins for Android