The best views of the coast can be had inland, high above Amalfi in RAVELLO: another renowned spot "closer to the sky than the seashore", wrote André Gide – with some justification. Ravello was also an independent republic for a while, and for a time an outpost of the Amalfi city-state. Now it's not much more than a large village, but its unrivalled location, spread across the top of one of the coast's mountains, makes it more than worth the thirty-minute bus ride through the steeply cultivated terraces up ... More
Overview of Ravello, Italy
Information by Rough Guides
The best views of the coast can be had inland, high above Amalfi in RAVELLO: another renowned spot "closer to the sky than the seashore", wrote André Gide – with some justification. Ravello was also an independent republic for a while, and for a time an outpost of the Amalfi city-state. Now it's not much more than a large village, but its unrivalled location, spread across the top of one of the coast's mountains, makes it more than worth the thirty-minute bus ride through the steeply cultivated terraces up from Amalfi – although, like most of this coast, the charms of Ravello haven't been recently discovered. Wagner set part of Parsifal, one of his last operas, in the place; D.H. Lawrence wrote some of Lady Chatterley's Lover here; John Huston filmed his languid movie Beat the Devil in town; and more recently the writer and political polemicist Gore Vidal lived here for many years.