Highlights of Apulia

Destination Puglia
Cost From €2,000/pp
Duration 7 days
Departure dates Flexible
Highlights of Apulia

Tour overview

Experience the magic of Apulia on this immersive 7-day tour, exploring charming villages, ancient landscapes, and local culinary delights. Begin in Matera, known for its stunning Sassi cave dwellings, a UNESCO World Heritage Site carved into limestone cliffs. Wander through this historic underground city, rich in culture and history.

Continue to the coastal town of Monopoli, where whitewashed buildings and crystal-clear Adriatic waters create a picture-perfect setting. Discover the nearby gem of Polignano a Mare, famed for its dramatic cliffs, sea caves, and the world-renowned Grotta Palazzese restaurant, where you’ll enjoy an unforgettable dinner experience in a cave by the sea.

Explore the ancient olive groves of Apulia, with trees dating back thousands of years, followed by a visit to the breathtaking Castellana Caves. In Lecce, known as the “Florence of the South,” admire the ornate Baroque architecture and indulge in a wine-tasting experience.

Delight in a hands-on bread-making class at a traditional Apulian farmhouse, learning age-old recipes and savouring local specialities. Throughout your journey, enjoy private transfers, authentic experiences, and the warmth of Apulian hospitality. This tour captures the heart of Apulia’s rich heritage, scenic beauty, and gastronomic treasures.

Tour information

DestinationPuglia
CostFrom €2000 per person
Duration7 days
Departure datesFlexible
ActivitiesModerate walking
StartsBari
EndsBari

Itinerary

Arrive Bari and Transfer to Hotel

Welcome to Italy! At the airport, you will meet your private English-speaking driver who will accompany you to your centrally located hotel in Matera.

Matera is a city in the region of Basilicata, in Southern Italy. The town lies in a small canyon carved out by the Gravina. Known as la città sotterranea ("the underground city"), its historical centre "Sassi", along with the park of the Rupestrian Churches, was awarded World Heritage Site status by UNESCO since 1993.

Matera has gained international fame for its ancient town, the "Sassi di Matera". The Sassi originated in a prehistoric troglodyte settlement, and these dwellings are thought to be among the first-ever human settlements in what is now Italy.

The Sassi are habitations dug into the calcareous rock itself, which is characteristic of Basilicata and Apulia. Many of them are really little more than small caverns, and in some parts of the Sassi a street lies on top of another group of dwellings.

The ancient town grew up on one slope of the rocky ravine created by a river that is now a small stream, and this ravine is known locally as "la Gravina". In the 1950s, as part of a policy to clear the extreme poverty of the Sassi, the government of Italy used force to relocate most of the population of the Sassi to new public housing in the developing modern city.

Until the late 1980s, the Sassi was still considered an area of poverty, since its dwellings were, and in most cases still are, uninhabitable and dangerous.

The present local administration, however, has become more tourism-orientated, and it has promoted the regeneration of the Sassi as a picturesque touristic attraction with the aid of the Italian government, UNESCO, and Hollywood. Today there are many thriving businesses, pubs and hotels there, and the city is amongst the fastest growing in southern Italy.

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