BasilicataBasilicata is a region in the south of Italy surrounding with Campania to the west, Apulia (Puglia) to the north and east, Calabria to the south, having one short south-western coastline on the Tyrrhenian Sea between Campania in the north-west and Calabria in the south-east. It is also known as Lucania, a region with predominantly mountainous territory, which has conditioned all the social and industrial development. The tourists will enjoy visiting this land in fact lots of cereal crops to shore up the landscape, down to the sea, also offers the vineyards and plantations of fruit trees. The visitors willing to visit the Basilicata can do the surfing log on the site Top-holidays.com for detail information. The region offers tourists the chance to visit many small towns, rural centers and villages which are often very different from each other, because of the divisions imposed by geographical territory, maintaining in this way all their charm and their tradition. The recipes are widely used white meat, beef and lamb, eggs, local spices such as chili pepper and a variety of vegetables grown or, very often spontaneous. Surely the site more important and famous of Basilicata are the Sassi in Matera, declared as World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1993, representing a unique urban ecosystem, testimony of the way places to live, perfectly preserved throughout its charm. |
