Conference venue
The 15th SITIS Conference will be held at the Imperial Hotel Tramontano, Via Vittorio Veneto, 1 Sorrento, Italy.
The Imperial Hotel Tramontano, overlooking the most beautiful part of the Gulf of Naples, nourished the romantic culture of the picturesque, sublime and landscapes of 19th-century travellers visiting Sorrento. Along with the classic, refined and elegant style: the oldest wing dates back to the 16th century, and its architecture represents the most viewed image of Sorrento worldwide.
The Imperial Hotel Tramontano is located in the town centre and it’s an ideal mixture both for business and leisure.
Sorrento
Sorrento is perched high on the cliffs overlooking the Gulf of Naples offering breathtaking views of the spectacular landscape, which captivates visitors. The town gives its name to the Sorrentine peninsula, a large area of land extending from Vico Equense to Massa Lubrense, that is suspended between green mountains and transparent blue sea. The town has been a popular vacation and cultural destination of the Campania region in southern Italy for centuries. It offers a wide selection of accommodation in hotels of different categories.
The convenient geographical location makes it an ideal departure point for excursions to Capri, Ischia, Pompeii, Amalfi, Positano, Herculaneum, Paestum, and Vesuvius, all located within a 50 km radius. Sorrento was first a Phoenician Colony. Then it became a Port frequented by the Greeks for commercial activity with Naples and other southern cities. The Greeks named Sorrento “Syrenusion” or “Syreon”, which means “Land of the Sirens” named after the mythological creatures that were half-women and half-fish. The sirens were mentioned in Homeros great epic poem, The Odyssey, as the beings that lured sailors to the Sorrentine shore with their seductive songs. Historically, the Oscans and Samnites first ruled Sorrento, then the Romans dominated it for a long time. They appreciated the natural beauty and climate of the area, and during the imperial period, it became a holiday destination for patricians who built villas along the coast. Sorrento is the birthplace of the sixteenth-century poet Torquato Tasso. The town was included among the main destinations of the Grand Tour in Italy in the eighteenth century. This natural paradise has attracted many foreign poets and writers, such as Robert Browning, James Fenimore Cooper, F. Marion Crawford, Norman Douglas, Henrik Ibsen, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Alexis de Tocqueville. Other famous visitors include composer Robert Wagner, philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, film director Vittorio De Sica and tenor Enrico Caruso.