Palermo HOTELS

Travel to Palermo, - hotels selection and destination guides

You can choose and book suitable hotels in Palermo from the TOP Palermo HOTELS list or make search for hotels using the form. Our destination guides will provide you with information about Palermo life, entertainment, history and other useful things for travel to Palermo.

TOP Palermo HOTELS

Hotel Casena Dei Colli
Rating: 3
Rates: 79 to 199 
Hotel Casena Dei Colli
Grand Hotel Et Des Palmes
Rating: 4
Rates: 188 to 422 
Grand Hotel Et Des Palmes
AMARCORD HOTEL
Rating: n/r
Rates: 90 to 194 
AMARCORD HOTEL
HOTEL PLAZA OPERA
Rating: n/r
Rates: 263 to 527 
HOTEL PLAZA OPERA
San Paolo Palace Hotel
Rating: 4
Rates: 103 to 259 
San Paolo Palace Hotel
Centrale Palace Hotel
Rating: 4
Rates: 183 to 532 
Centrale Palace Hotel
Excelsior Palace Hotel
Rating: 4
Rates: 163 to 369 
Excelsior Palace Hotel
Best Western Ai Cavalieri Hotel
Rating: 4
Rates: 184 to 336 
Best Western Ai Cavalieri Hotel
HOTEL PONTE
Rating: n/r
Rates: 119 to 147 
HOTEL PONTE
Jolly Hotel Palermo
Rating: 4
Rates: 159 to 180 
Jolly Hotel Palermo
ALL HOTELS in Palermo...

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Palermo guide

 In its own wide bay underneath the limestone bulk of Monte Pellegrino, and fronting the broad, fertile Conca d'Oro (Golden Shell) Valley, PALERMO is stupendously sited. Originally a Phoenician, then a Carthaginian colony, this remarkable city was long considered a prize worth capturing. Named Panormus (All Harbour), its mercantile attractions were obvious, and under Saracen and Norman rule in the ninth to twelfth centuries Palermo became the greatest city in Europe - famed for the wealth of its court, and peerless as a centre of learning. There are plenty of relics from this era, but it's the rebuilding of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries that shaped the city as you see it today.

It's worth making Palermo your first stop in Sicily. It's the island's main transport centre, and it boasts Sicily's greatest concentration of sights. Quite apart from the Arab influence in its finest churches, there's more than a hint of the city's eastern past in its undisciplined centre, a sprawling, almost anarchic mass with no real focus: great pockets of medieval alleys, nineteenth-century piazzas, twentieth-century bombsites and contemporary office blocks all conspire to confuse what is essentially a straightforward street grid. Money from Rome and from the European Union has been earmarked for a redevelopment of the city centre, and, despite signs of improvement, the obstacles remain huge: this is partly due to the age-old system of kickbacks for contracts and tenders to bent politicians and the Mafia, which have creamed off much of the money. One of the few to stand up against this state of affairs has been Leoluca Orlando , who, following his deposition by his own Christian Democrat party in 1990, went on to found and lead the anti-Mafia and anti-Masonic party, La Rete , and he continues to make progress against the forces of graft and corruption as Palermo's mayor. While doubtless retaining his place on the Mafia's hit list, Orlando's prominence on the national stage has helped to focus attention on reform of the city's institutions and reverse the tendency of neglect and decay that has characterized the city for centuries.

The essential sights are all pretty central, and if you are disciplined enough you could get around them in a couple of days. Paramount are the hybrid Cattedrale and nearby Palazzo dei Normanni (Royal Palace), with its superb, mosaic-decorated chapel, the Cappella Palatina ; the glorious Norman churches of La Martorana and San Giovanni degli Eremeti ; the Baroque opulence of San Giuseppe dei Teatini and Santa Caterina ; and three magnificent museums - inspiring collections of art, archeology and ethnography.

This historical jumble of treasures has its downside. Many people have continued to live in their medieval ghettos, unemployment is endemic, the old port largely idle and petty crime commonplace. Some areas - La Kalsa and area around La Cala in particular - can be positively dangerous if you're not careful, and every pensione owner will warn you to watch your money and camera. Don't be paranoid, though: things are not significantly worse than any other European city, and the only rule is to avoid any quiet neighbourhood, especially at night.

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