Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
Perugia sits high on a hill in Umbria, a city of Etruscan foundations and medieval towers where chocolate hangs in the air as surely as history does. This is the home of Perugina, the company behind Baci chocolates, and the annual Eurochocolate festival draws sweet-toothed travellers from across Europe. But Perugia is more than confectionery. […]
Tags: behin, central-italy, chocolate-lovers, city, comfortable-shoes, corso-vannucci, etruscans-romans, fontana-maggiore, giovanni-pisano, italian-art, italian-painter, italian-province, italy, medieval-heart, medieval-influences, nicola-and-giovanni, papal-state, pedestrian-zone, perugia, pietro-vannucci, public-traffic, renaissance-artist, splendid-monuments, tiber-river, town
Categories: Italy, Sights
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
Golden limestone glows in the Mediterranean sun as you approach Valletta, a fortified city built by the Knights of St. John. The streets form a grid of narrow lanes that climb steeply from the Grand Harbour, each corner revealing another Baroque palace, another ornate church, another sweeping sea view. St. John’s Co-Cathedral conceals a breathtaking […]
Tags: bay-windows, beautiful-bay, capital-city, cinema-theater, city, defending-the-island, floriana, fortification, government-ministry, historical-monuments, historical-sights, history-lovers, jean-parisot, la-valette, malta, military-museum, national-war, natural-harbors, ottoman-invasion, representative-buildings, second-world-war, sightseeing, st-elmo, town, valletta, war-museum
Categories: Malta, Sights
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
Spoleto rises from the Umbrian hills like a stone secret waiting to be discovered. Narrow medieval alleys twist past Roman arches and Renaissance palaces, each corner revealing a fresh vista of olive groves and distant mountains. The air carries the scent of wild herbs and sun-warmed stone. Come summer, the entire city transforms into a […]
Tags: ancient-city, archaeological-findings, architectural-modifications, architectural-treasures, aristocratic-families, arts-festival, broad-valley, central-italy, city, current-view, festival-of-two-worlds, french-occupation, geographical-position, italy, occupation-period, political-significance, prehistoric-times, revivals, rich-villas, roman-architects, roman-colony, romanesque-churches, spoleto, target, the-festival-dei-due-mondi, town, umbri, unification-of-italy
Categories: Cities, Italy, Sights, Sights
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
Copenhagen is the Scandinavian capital that does everything well, blending royal history, cutting edge design, world class cuisine, and a cycling culture that puts most cities to shame. The compact city centre rewards exploration on two wheels or on foot. Nyhavn colourful harbour front draws cameras from every angle, its seventeenth century townhouses housing restaurants […]
Tags: amalienborg, beautiful-city, black-diamond, borsen, capital, capital-and-largest-city-of-denmark, capital-of-denmark, castles-and-palaces, christiania, christiansborg-palace, city, copenhagen, culture-thanks, danish-design, denmark, denmark-copenhagen, garden-restaurants, independent-state, karen-blixen-museum, long-walks, modern-architecture, new-library, opera-house, pedestrian-zone, rosenborg-castle
Categories: Denmark, Sights
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
Salty harbour breeze carries the sound of bicycle bells and clattering dishes across the Copenhagen waterfront. The colorful 17th-century townhouses of Nyhavn lean like a row of painted postcards, their reflections wobbling in the canal below. Tivoli Gardens whispers with the laughter of children and the creak of antique roller coasters. This Danish capital balances […]
Tags: admission-fee, ancient-churches, art-lovers, baltic-sea, cacti, capital, capital-of-denmark, city, copenhagen, crown-jewels, danish-painters, denmark, eiffel-tower, european-art, half-a-million, interesting-places, kobenhavn, marble-hall, most-beautiful-place, nature-lovers, palm-house, palm-trees, rosenborg-slot, statens-museum-for-kunst, underground-treasure, wetland-plants, what-to-see
Categories: Denmark, Sights
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
Positano cascades down a steep cliffside like a waterfall of pastel houses. Lemon trees burst from terraced gardens above the sea. The narrow steps that serve as streets demand a certain surrender from every visitor. You cannot rush here. The town refuses to be hurried. Every descent toward the sparkling Tyrrhenian water offers another postcard […]
Tags: 16th-century, amalfi-coast, antiquity, assunta, beautiful-town, campania, celebrations, city, duomo, festa, inhabitants, italian-coast, italy, monastery, picturesque-town, positano, premio, renowned-beaches, rocky-beach, sandy-beach, sant-andrea, seaside-resort, small-town, spiaggia, steep-hillside, town
Categories: Cities, Italy, Nature, Nature, Sea Sites, Sights, Sights
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
A city built on a hill beside the Mondego River, where one of Europe oldest universities still operates within ancient stone walls. Students in black capes hurry through arched passageways. The Joanina Library holds gilded shelves and resident bats that eat the book-eating insects. Below the university, the old town spills down narrow streets lined […]
Tags: capital, capital-of-portugal, celebrations-and-festivals, city, education-sciences, faculty-letters, first-friday, fitas, gala-ball, history, jesuits, medicine-sciences, monasteries, nova-coimbra, oldest-university, portugal, portuguese-kings, sciences-technology, second-semester, sport-activities, sports-sciences, town, velha, vibrant-city
Categories: Portugal, Sights
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
Siracusa was once the most powerful city in the ancient Greek world, greater even than Athens. Its Greek Theatre is one of the largest and best preserved anywhere. The Ear of Dionysius, a limestone cave with incredible acoustics, still echoes with whispered words. On the island of Ortigia, the old city core, layers of history […]
Tags: ancient-theaters, city, italy, siracusa, syracuse, unesco
Categories: Cities, Islands, Italy, Nature, Sicily, Sights, Sights
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
Silver built this town and death decorates its chapel. Kutná Hora once rivalled Prague in wealth and importance. The Sedlec Ossuary contains the bones of over forty thousand people arranged into chandeliers, coats of arms, and a giant bell. It is strange and solemn and unforgettable. Beyond the bone chapel, the town offers the Gothic […]
Tags: 13th-century, baroque-architecture, cathedral-of-our-lady, cistercian-monastery, city, czech-republic, fortification, german-miners, gothic-church, historic-town, italian-court, jesuit-college, kutna-hora, middle-ages, pany, patron-saint, st-james, town, underground-city, unesco, unesco-world-heritage, unesco-world-heritage-list, ursuline-convent
Categories: Czech Republic, Sights, Sights
Updated June 10, 2026 by europeexplored
The shrill whistle of a vintage steam locomotive echoes across the platform at Mechelen station, a sound that transports you straight back to 1835. This unassuming Belgian city witnessed something extraordinary: the very first railway journey on the European continent. Iron wheels clattered against steel tracks as the inaugural train departed, forever changing how people […]
Tags: banks-of-the-river, beguines, belgium, capital-brussels, capital-of-the-netherlands, cities-in-belgium, city, city-of-antwerp, de-groote, diamond-area, dijle, first-railway-on-the-european-continent, fish-market, flanders-prominent-art-city, flemish-region, gothic-cathedral, grote-markt, high-tower, hot-chocolate, irish-missionaries, iron-age, louvain, malines, mechelen, renaissance-buildings, tourist-place, town, two-bells, typical-atmosphere, unesco, unesco-world-heritage, unesco-world-heritage-site, world-heritage-site
Categories: Belgium, Sights