Executive summary by darmansjah
Amafali Coast is a stretch of coastline on the southern
coast of the Sorrentine Peninsula in the Province of Salerno in Southern Italy.
The Amalfi Coast is a popular tourist destination for the region and Italy as a
whole, attracting thousands of tourists annually. During the 10th–11th
centuries, the Duchy of Amalfi existed on the territory of the Amalfi Coast,
centered in the town of Amalfi. The Amalfi coast was later controlled by the
Principality of Salerno, until Amalfi was sacked by the Republic of Pisa in
1137. Since then the Amalfi coast has experienced a crisis. But after the
unification of Italy the Amalfi coast has enjoyed a huge economic revival,
prompted even by the international tourism. In 1997, the Amalfi Coast was
listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site as a cultural landscape.
Like the rest of the region, the Amalfi Coast lies in a
Mediterranean climate, featuring warm summers and mild winters. It is located
on the relatively steep southern shore of the Sorrentine Peninsula, leaving
little room for rural and agricultural territories. The only land route to the
Amalfi Coast is the 40 kilometres (25 mi) long Strada Statale 163 which runs
along the coastline from the town of Vietri sul Mare in the east to Positano in
the west. Thirteen municipalities are located on the Amalfi Coast, many of them
centered around tourism.
The Amalfi Coast is known for its production of limoncello
liqueur as the area is a known cultivator of lemons, known as sfusato
amalfitano in Italian, which are grown in terraced gardens along the entire
coast between February and October. Amalfi is also a known maker of a hand-made
thick paper which is called bambagina.[8] Other renowned local products are a
particular kind of anchovies (local Italian: alici) from Cetara, and the
colorful handmade ceramics from Vietri.
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