The property is adjacent to the sea
Bright and welcoming, combine the warm and sunny colors of the Mediterranean landscape with sober and modern furniture, all featuring an en suite bathroom with a shower or wrap-around. Simply furnished, they all come with air conditioning, satellite TV and a balcony. Some rooms offer beautiful views of the sea or the mountains. Free Wi-Fi is available in public areas
24-Hour Front Desk, Express Check-In / Check-Out, Luggage Storage, Room Service, Meeting / Banquet Facilities, Currency Exchange, Tour Desk, Fax / Photocopying, Restaurant, Bar, Fitness Center, Sauna, ' open
Animals are not allowed
The Campania's tourist destination has always been for its natural and artistic beauty and its traditions, Sorrento is the largest center for the number of services offered and also the most well-known and named of the whole Sorrento Peninsula. The foundation is traditionally and legendally attributed to the Greeks, but Sorrento had as the first inhabited inhabitants the Italic peoples, the Etruscans and then, from 420 BC, the influence of the Osci was important. In Roman times it is remembered that he participated in the uprising of Italics (90 BC); a colony was then deduced from Silla, to which later an appropriation of veterans of Ottaviano followed. It was then the town hall of the Menenia tribe. It was a bishopric of at least 420. During the crisis of Byzantine rule in Italy, Sorrento acquired autonomy as a Duchy, first under the supremacy of the Dukes of Naples, then with their arcs and dads, always struggling with Amalfi, Salerno and the Saracens. The story of Sorrento is confused with that of the other bell towns; took part in anti-Muslim leagues; he battled the Longobards of Benevento; he knew familiar struggles among the local nobles. Obliged in the sec. IX by Guarimar Prince of Salerno to accept as his own Duke his brother, Guido, the Duchy of Sorrento resumed his autonomy after the death of the latter and then lost it definitively in 1137, absorbed in the new reign of the Normans. Sorrento followed the fate of the kingdom, not without rebellion and conflict, especially at the beginning of the Aragonese era. In 1558 it was taken and plundered by the Turks; in the winter of 1648, the city supported valiantly the siege of John Grillo, General of the Duke of Guisa.