Along the Queen of Roads - Via Appia Antica

From about 312 BC. she was built by the Roman censor Appius Claudius and should serve strategic, communicative and commercial purposes and help the Romans to expand their empire. It became, and remains so to this day, the queen of all streets: Via Appia Antica.
On and along this famous street, we follow the great traces that Roman inventiveness and an incomparable architectural skill have left to our day and which prompted Goethe to write enthusiastic writings during his trip to Italy.
You will experience a part of Italy that has not been hit by tourist flows once you have left Rome behind. An Italy that is not served on a silver platter for tourists, but shows largely unadulterated terrain.
The guest is fascinated by the changing landscape and the incomparable monuments. You don't have to be an archaeologist to enjoy this trip because it combines the ancient and the modern, the culture and culinary delights of southern Italy, the known and the unknown.