Duration

2 Hours

Category

Walking Tour

Tour Type

Private

Season

ALL YEAR

This is a Private Tour

THIS TOUR IS ONLY OFFERED IN COMBINATION WITH OTHER SERVICES INCLUDING TRANSPORTATION FROM OTHER SICILIAN CITIES

Agrigento Guide Tour at Valley of the Temples

Visit the finest of all ancient Greek sites—the complete Doric Temples (Admission fee: not included) with a private licensed local Guide.
The appointment will be set directly at Valley of the Temples ticket office. More details will be provided at time of booking.

Please note:
The Guide will be at Your disposal for maximum 2 hours.

 

TRANSPORTATION:
Private transportation is not included in this service. In case you do need to move using cab (taxi) feel free to ask to the Local Guide to help you to orchestrate this service. You can pay the amount cash on the spot.

LICENSED LOCAL GUIDE:
This walking tour does include Licensed Local Guide.

MAXIMUM GROUP SIZE: 50 people

LANGUAGE:
Italian, English, French, Spanish, German.
Subject to availability at time of booking.

TOUR DETAILS & BOOKING INFORMATION

ADMISSION FEES:
The price of this walking does not include the Admission Fees (around eur 10,00 per person per entrance). If you are under 18 years old the admission fees are free of charge for you showing your document (or copy of your document) on the spot.

DISABLED TRAVELERS:
Disabled Travel are not recommended for a walking tour.

TOUR CODE: AGRWALK

AS REGARDS VALLEY OF THE TEMPLES:

Agrigento & the Temples Valley of the Temples (Admission fee: not included): two hours walking tour on the Valley of the Temples (Admission fee: not included), a Unesco World Heritage site. Covers the Temple of Hera, the Temple of Concordia, the Temple of Hercules and the Temple of Zeus. Agrigento, according to legend, was founded by Daedalus and his son Icarus after they had fled from Crete “by air”. Historically, however, its origins date back to 582 B.C. when it was founded by Rhodian-cretan colonist from the neighbouring Gela who named their city Akragas after the nearby river of that name. It rapidly increased in size, importance and military strength under Phalarides, the first tyrant, and later under Theron, who extended his sway over northern Sicily as far as Himera.Agrigento was a city of artists and illustrious personages, amongst whom the philosopher Empedocles. Pindar defines it as “the most beautiful of mortal cities” and, in fact, in the Vth century B.C., those famous temples, whose beauty we still admire today, were built.

The Temple of Concord: almost in the centre of the ridge of temples, conspicuous for its nobility and integrity, has defied the centuries. It is, in fact, the best preserved example of Doric art in Italy and conveys a vivid impression of the stateliness and harmony of that art which reaches its loftiest form in western Hellenism. Built in the second half of the Vth century B.C., it has 6 columns on the façade and 13 on either side and stands on a pedestal 4 steps high, 40 metres long and 17 metres wide.

The original dazzling polychromatic decoration, which used to act as a facing to the sandstone structural framework of the temple and completed, and perfected, its architectonic aspect, has all disappeared. In the VIth century A.D. the temple was transformed into a Christian church and of this traces still remain. Every year, in front of its western façade, on the first Sunday in February, folklore groups from many nations gather to celebrate the “Festival of the Almond in Blossom”, a festival in honour of friendship among peoples and the birth of spring.

The Temple of Hercules: dedicated to the mythical hero, son of Jove, was built in the VIth century B.C. and is the most ancient of those existing in Agrigento. Destroyed, it seems, together with the other temples of Agrigento and Selinunte, by an earthquake in the late post-classic age, it is at present a heap of ruins but, in recent years, 8 columns of the southern side have been re-erected. Mighty and massive, these columns are each made up of 4 drums and surmounted by Doric capitals with a sweeping curve.

The Temple of Olympic Jove: built in 480 B.C. after the Agrigentine victory over the Carthaginians at Himera, was an enormous building, the largest in ancient Greece after the Artemision of Ephesus and the Didymeon of Miletus. The base of its imposing ruins measure 112,60 metres by 56,30 and they house a copy of the “telamones”, gigantic Atlases 7,5 metres in height which used to support the architrave. In its architecture, in fact, the temple departed from tradition and introduced an innovation for the period. The architect, in order to sustain the enormous weight of the trabeation to which the columns were submitted, resorted to the ingenious expedient of reinforcing them with these enormous figures of Atlases mounted on semi-columns erected in the intercolumnar spaces of the peristyle. Around the perimeter of the temple one can see the massive semi-columns and half-capitals dispersed by earthquakes. During the 1926 excavations the remains of four other telamones came to light; Agrigento has used these figures in its coat-of-arms.

Included
  • Booking Fee
  • Legal Invoice
  • Licensed Local Guide
  • Local Assistance
  • VAT
Not Included
  • Admission fees
  • Beverages and meals
  • Gratuities and tips
  • Private Transportation
Contact us for more information