Structure
5-star historic in the Syracuse area, I Monasteri Golf Resort is housed in a villa that was once a Benedictine monastery, then the home of some noble families, including the Catalan and the barons of Melilli. Subsequently converted into a receptive structure, it is today a refined refuge on the outskirts of Syracuse, a city with a thousand-year history, immersed in the green of citrus groves, palm trees, carob trees and olive trees.
Rooms
The rooms are all on the ground floor and overlook the lush garden or the golf course and are distributed in the three different buildings of the structure. From the rooms you can enjoy a splendid view of the greenery, among citrus trees, palms, carob trees, ancient pines, laurel, myrtle and olive trees. All with private entrance, are spacious, comfortable, bright, the rooms have air conditioning, telephone, television, private bathroom, radio, wi-fi, minibar, hairdryer, safe.
Services
24 hour reception, porter service, restaurant, bicycle storage, bar, pool bar, garden, terrace, congress hall, parking, baby-sitter service, baby bottle service, outdoor pool with sun beds and umbrellas, beach service, bike rental, fitness center , health centre.
Friends of animals
Admission free of small size upon notification at the time of booking.
Conditions
Check in: from 2.30 pm
Check out: before 10.00 am
Syracuse and surroundings
Syracuse, fascinating and suggestive place that Cicero called "the most beautiful city of Magna Graecia", brings intact the signs of its history of cultural capital from the Greek age up to the Renaissance and Baroque periods.
Unesco heritage since 2005, the city rises in the frame of an evocative natural harbor, closed to the east from the island of Ortigia and behind the Epipoli plateau.Frequented since ancient times by Greek and Phoenician merchants, Syracuse was founded in 734 BC by Corinthian settlers and enjoyed a period of great political and cultural fortune like Athens and Alexandria. With the advent of the Dinomenidi the city was enlarged and, although targeted by the Carthaginians, it passed a period of particular splendor until the Roman conquest of 212 BC.
Since then the decadence of Syracuse began that in the following centuries conquered by Arabs, Byzantines, Normans, Swabians and in the XIV century by the Aragonese. The city preserves the testimonies of its past in every corner. Greek, Roman and Baroque styles come together in an irresistible setting that tells millennia of history. Starting from the ancient nucleus on the island of Ortigia, you can admire the cathedral, with a Baroque façade that rises on the peristyle of the Doric temple of Athena of the century. V aC, remodeled in the Norman period and subsequently. Other important churches are that of San Giovanni alle Catacombs with the crypt of San Marziano, and the Church of Santa Lucia alla Badia with the painting by Caravaggio "Burial of Saint Lucia".
In Piazza Pancali, on the other hand, there are the ruins of the temple of Apollo, a Doric sanctuary from the beginning of the century. Street. C. The wonder increases when you move in the district of Neapolis, where there are the remains of the Greek theater, the Roman amphitheater, the great altar of Gerone - the largest Greek age altar that has come down to us - and the cave of the Cordari, the most famous among the latomie.
The splendor of the Renaissance and Baroque buildings must be added to the archaeological richness.
da Dante V. - 02/08/2018, alle 07:05
da Dante V. - 02/08/2018, alle 07:04